Layers of Fear 2 (2019) (PC/PS4/XBONE/SWITCH) – Review

Layers of Fear 2 is a first person psychological horror game that follows a Hollywood actor who heeds the call of an enigmatic director to take on the lead role in a film shot aboard an ocean liner. Along the way you explore the story of a girl named Lily and her little brother James as they try to hide on the boat and escape from it’s crew.

Initially, Layers of Fear 2 seems to take the gameplay concepts and presintation from the first and refine them, but it doubles down on everything that made the first game tedious.

The gameplay mechanic of opening doors by having to turn their handles manually, like the first game had and had taken from Amnesia back when that game was all the rage, but it’s made worse by the fact that some sections now have you rushing to try and get away from a creature chasing you, just like Amnesia. It worked in Amnesia because that game gave you ample space to get away from creatures most of the time, but in Layers of Fear 2, it just feels clunky because every space is a small space that can lead you to easily be caught by the monster the first time since it often takes you by surprise.

Layers of Fear 2 also brings a whole host of new neat graphical tricks that give it a distinct visual flair from the first game, but since the game is much longer than the first one, even the new visuals get tiresome by the end of the game.

The game actually references several popular and well known films, shorts, and music videos. But instead of just having those references be either brief scenes, shout-outs, or simple references in the form of a poster or as a brief visual gag, they’re just lifted wholesale. These movies include Metropolis (1927), The Wizard of Oz (1939), and The Shining (198), short film A Trip to the Moon (1902), short film and music video Rubber Johnny (2005), and a whole section dedicated to the movie Se7en (Seven) (1995).

They’re so blatant that you don’t even have to have seen some those films to know what they’re referencing.

The only compliment that I can give this game is that it has actor Tony Todd, who plays the titular director of the game, and I can’t get enough of Tony Todd and his amazing voice.

The best way that I can describe Layers of Fear 2 is that it’s more of the same from the first game, just with a new coat of paint. And while that might be appealing to fans of the first game, it still has little to offer beyond a few neat visual tricks buried deep within a tedious gameplay loop and mediocre story.

https://store.steampowered.com/app/1029890/Layers_of_Fear_2/

https://www.gog.com/game/layers_of_fear_2

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