You can feel two ways about something at the same time. The feuding academics of Life Is Strange: Double Exposure might call this “emotional superposition”. But the word “ambivalent” already exists. So let’s say I’m ambivalent about this new adventure featuring Max Caulfield, the returning hero of Life Is Strange, and time-travelling photographer whose powers have resurfaced after years of off-screen atrophy. I’ve been deeply moved by individual scenes in this sequel. By the end I was sorry to leave its characters behind. At the same time (please now imagine my face is splitting into a second, colour-washed expression with wobbly VFX) I am relieved it’s over, so I don’t have to deal with the inconsistent behaviour of those characters, the flimsy plot, and a convoluted approach to murder mystery.
Life is Strange: Double Exposure review: a disappointing finale
Sometime Life is Strange: Double ExposureIn the third episode, Max Caulfield tried to talk to Loretta, another student on campus, about the well-being of a student named Reggie. Loretta was a little confused when she asked Max who exactly she meant. That's when Max realized, much to her chagrin, that she had confused Loretta's two … Read more