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'The Variable' | |||
---|---|---|---|
Lost episode | |||
Episode no. | Season 5 Episode 14 | ||
Directed by | Paul Edwards | ||
Written by | Edward Kitsis Adam Horowitz | ||
Production code | 514 | ||
Original air date | April 29, 2009 | ||
Running time | 43 minutes[1] | ||
Guest appearance(s) | |||
Nestor Carbonell as Richard Alpert | |||
Episode chronology | |||
| |||
Lost (season 5) | |||
List of Lost episodes |
'The Variable' is the 14th television episode of the fifth season of Lost, and the 100th episode overall.[2] It originally aired on the American Broadcasting Company (ABC) in the United States on April 29, 2009. The hundredth episode milestone was celebrated by cast and crew on location in Hawaii. In the episode, Daniel Faraday (Jeremy Davies) returns to the island in order to warn its inhabitants of a catastrophe involving the Dharma Initiative research station, The Swan. Jack (Matthew Fox), Kate (Evangeline Lilly) and Daniel begin a gun fight with Dharma, leading Dharma to go after Sawyer (Josh Holloway) and Juliet (Elizabeth Mitchell). In flashbacks, Daniel's relationship with his parents, Eloise Hawking (Fionnula Flanagan) and Charles Widmore (Alan Dale), is shown.
The episode was written by executive producers Edward Kitsis and Adam Horowitz and directed by Paul Edwards. It serves as a companion piece to the season four episode 'The Constant', another episode that heavily features the character Daniel, and the third Lost episode to deal directly with the concept of time travel. Since airing, the episode has received generally positive reviews from television critics, mostly complimenting Davies's performance.
- 1Plot
Plot[edit]
Flashbacks[edit]
At a young age, Eloise asks Daniel if he knows what destiny is and then tells him that he has a special gift — his brilliant mind — and that his destiny relies on this. After Daniel graduates from Oxford University, Eloise gives him a new journal as a gift and again reminds him of his destiny. Meanwhile, Daniel has received an enormous research grant from Charles, who Daniel does not know is actually his father. Years later, following the crash of Flight 815, Daniel has suffered severe psychological effects from performing experiments on himself; he has lost his mental acuity, and now lives with a caretaker. While watching the news coverage of the discovery of the Flight 815 wreckage in the Sunda Trench, Daniel is visited by Charles, who tells him that he faked the found wreckage and that the real plane actually landed on the island. Charles invites Daniel to go to the island, which Charles claims will cure his psychological problems. Eloise later visits Daniel and further encourages him to go to the island.
1977[edit]
Following the events of the previous episode, 'Some Like It Hoth', Daniel has returned to the island, having spent three years in Ann Arbor, Michigan, conducting research for the Dharma Initiative. He has returned because Jack, Kate and Hurley (Jorge Garcia) have managed to travel back in time and become part of the Initiative. After learning from Jack that they were sent to the island by Daniel's mother, Eloise (younger: Alice Evans; older: Fionnula Flanagan), Daniel visits Dr. Pierre Chang (François Chau) at the Orchid station and warns him of a catastrophic event that is to occur at the Swan station in six hours. Dr. Chang does not believe Daniel when he says that he is from the future, and Miles (Ken Leung) does not affirm Dan's story, even after Daniel informs Dr. Chang that Miles is his son from the future.
At the Barracks, Sawyer, Juliet, Jin (Daniel Dae Kim), Hurley and Miles decide that they will flee to the survivors' original beach, abandoning Dharma. But Kate, Jack and Daniel decide to visit the island's native population, the 'Others', and get help to prevent the impending disaster. They arouse suspicion from Dharma's head of research, Radzinsky (Eric Lange), while trying to steal weapons and a gun fight ensues. The survivors are able to escape; however, Radzinsky brings his team to Sawyer and Juliet's house, where they find Dharma member Phil (Patrick Fischler) tied up. Meanwhile, Daniel explains to Jack and Kate that he intends to detonate the hydrogen bomb that had been buried on the island in 1954 in order to prevent the construction of the Swan, which in turn will ensure that Oceanic Flight 815 never crashes on the island, which means it never becomes visible to Widmore's team, so he never sends the freighter which brings himself and Charlotte, therefore Charlotte doesn't die. Daniel enters the Others' camp with his gun drawn and demands that Richard Alpert (Nestor Carbonell) take him to see Eloise; Eloise shoots Daniel in the back as they argue, to Richard's disapproval. As he dies, Daniel tells Eloise that he is her son, and comments that she (referring to her older self) knew he was going to die on the island and sent him anyway.[3]
2007[edit]
Following the events of 'Dead is Dead', Desmond (Henry Ian Cusick) is brought to a hospital, having been shot by Ben (Michael Emerson). While waiting, his wife Penny (Sonya Walger), is visited by Eloise, who apologizes for involving Desmond in everything that has happened. Penny later visits Desmond, who is expected to make a full recovery. Charles, who is also Daniel's father, speaks with Eloise outside the hospital, but does not visit his daughter.
Production[edit]
'The Variable' was written by Edward Kitsis and Adam Horowitz and directed by Paul Edwards. Like most season five episodes, it features elements of time travel. It serves as a companion piece to the season four episode 'The Constant', another episode that heavily features the character Daniel, and the third Lost episode to deal directly with the concept of time travel after 'Flashes Before Your Eyes' from the third season and The Constant' from the fourth season. In 'The Constant', Desmond and Sayid (Naveen Andrews) are on their way off the island when their helicopter hits turbulence, causing Desmond's 1996 consciousness to take over his 2004 body and switch uncontrollably between 1996 and 2004. Lost show runner Damon Lindelof said the fifth season of the show has 'flung major characters across decades, leaving them — and the audience — feverishly attempting to keep events straight and the end game in sight.'[4] In 'The Variable', the viewers would get a few more pieces of the puzzle, Lindelof said, and added: 'We're not promising any big whiz-bang flash pyrotechnics, but it does serve as a companion piece to another memorable episode, last season's 'The Constant', in which Desmond endured vicious, turbulence-caused side effects from traveling in time.'[4] Lindelof also commented that the fifth season is about the rules of time travel as explained by Daniel, and said, 'We've never done a flashback story for Daniel, so he's very mysterious. Some of those mysteries will be answered in this episode.'[4] Since Lindelof and his show runner partner Carlton Cuse wrote 'The Constant', they thought the 'sister episode' should be written by someone other than them, which led to Kitsis and Horowitz writing it. The two show runners were pleased with the outcome of the episode. Cuse thought it was one of the best episodes of the season.[5]
The episode features the death of Jeremy Davies character Daniel Faraday. Daniel was introduced in the fourth season and was originally intended to be a minor character only. However, his quiet demeanor and seemingly good heart made him a favorite with the fans, so Lindelof and Cuse decided to expand Daniel's role, which has led to him being a key player in Lost's eventual resolution.[6] In response to Daniel's death, Cuse said, 'It was an incredibly painful thing to kill this beloved character, but we feel that’s what this show has to do. His death is kind of the culminating event in the entire season. It really ends one chapter and commences the start of the final chapter of the entire series.'[7] Once the show runners explained that to Davies, he was saddened that his full-time status on Lost was coming to an end, but put the story 'above his own personal self'.[7] Damon seconded Carlton's emotions, adding that Jeremy took the news well: 'When Carlton and I called Jeremy to explain what was going to be happening with Daniel, we’ve never had a more awesome exit interview with somebody on the show. For us, Daniel really was the cornerstone of the fifth season – he really shined. I can’t imagine what Season 5 would have looked like without Jeremy Davies. When you think about all the crazy stuff that had to come out of that guy’s mouth, for him to be as interesting and emotional and poetic as he was is really extraordinary.'[7] The cast of the show said Davies would be missed, though he may not be done with Lost — Carlton commented that Jeremy's 'full-time' status was over, but dead characters have been known to reappear on the show. Michael Emerson, who plays Ben, said Davies was 'a great sensitive guy who got deep into his character, he really lived it.'[7]
'The Variable' was the hundredth episode of the show to be produced and aired on television. Josh Holloway, who plays the role of Sawyer, said, 'Just statistically speaking, to hit a hundred episodes doesn't happen very often, especially on a show where everyone is saying 'Lost on an island? What are you gonna do after a season or two?', so the fact that we've lasted not only a season or two but flourishing still at this time... it's shocking... it's amazing to me.'[8] In an interview with The News & Observer, Lindelof recalled meeting with the ABC executives in 2004 to pitch the idea of a plane crash and survivors stranded on an island full of mystery and danger. When Lindelof was asked by the executives where the Lost saga would stand in the future, he replied, 'We're probably not going to get past episode thirteen. Let's all be honest about that up front.' Lindelof added that if he had 'traveled back in time to tell myself after that meeting that we were going to make it to a hundred and still have a season beyond that, I would have laughed in my face.'[4] The hundredth episode milestone was celebrated by the cast and crew on location in Oahu, Hawaii. Duff Goldman and his crew from the Food Network's American television show Ace of Cakes made a special Lost cake for the party to commemorate the milestone. The cake featured replicas of a Dharma beer bottles, the computer from the Swan station, a suitcase and a miniature Oceanic Flight 815. The Ace of Cakes episode ('LOST in Hawaii') featuring the making of the cake aired on the Food Network in the United States on May 9, 2009.[9]
Reception[edit]
'The Variable' was watched live or recorded and watched within five hours of broadcast by 8.8 million viewers in the United States, achieving a 3.9/10 in the coveted adults aged eighteen to forty-nine demographic. Lost was that Wednesday's number one scripted television show in the aforementioned demographic for its thirteenth straight original telecast.[10] In Australia, the episode was watched by 296,000 people, ranking forty-sixth for the night.[11]
Since airing, the episode has received generally positive reviews from television critics, mostly complimenting Davies's performance as Daniel. Chris Carabott of IGN commented that if this is the last appearance of Davies on Lost, which he 'somehow' doubts, then, 'I'm glad he had the opportunity to leave on such a strong note. He delivers in some really great, emotional, moments this week – especially in the scenes in which he is suffering from memory deterioration. I've become a huge fan of Davies over the course of the last couple of years thanks to his performance on this show.'[12] Rachel Dovey of Paste said the episode revealed 'a whole different' side of Daniel: 'We've oscillated before about the true nature of the physicist, whether it's good or evil [...] We decided he's mostly a decent guy, barring the whole experimenting-on-his-girlfriend-then-running-away-when-her-brain-turned-to-mush thing. In the past, he's just seemed lost and confused, and, since he has those big, earnest puppy eyes, we decided to forgive him. But 'The Variable' showed us the dynamic at the heart of Daniel's stuttering vulnerability. Like all broken superheroes and Freudian beings, the man has mommy issues. This week we dove inside the dynamic between Daniel and his mother growing up.'[13]
Adam Sweeney of Film School Rejects was positive about the episode, 'For anyone who has been complaining that Lost had been too slow lately, here you go. Those who watched 'The Variable' saw more action than (basketball player) Wilt Chamberlain. They, and by they I mean we, also got a clear explanation of how the islanders got onto the island. You wanted answers, you got them.'[14] Sweeney also believed Davies's acting was the 'high point' of the episode.[14] David Oliver of CHUD.com gave the episode an 8.6 rating out of 10, and commented that it was a 'good' episode, though he was 'bummed' to see Daniel go. Oliver also said that while the episode did 'very little' to advance the season storyline significantly, there were 'some significant' developments and revelations in it.[15] TV Verdict's Stephen Lackey said the episode was 'fast paced' and featured 'one exciting twist after another'.[16]
The episode also received some criticism. Dan Compora of Airlock Alpha said after a run of 'several strong' episodes, Lost 'has slipped into mediocrity. While none of the recent episodes have been bad, they haven't been anything special. For a hundredth episode, average simply isn't good enough. While the shooting of Daniel at the end was stunning, I expected something much more from the rest of the episode than learning the identity of Daniel's parents.'[17] A reviewer for TVoholic.com thought the episode was good, though not as good as 'The Constant', and he thought 'it came with lots of answers and references to past episodes from this season and the ones before it, making it all the more exciting.'[18] The reviewer would, however, have 'loved any sort of explanation as to why [Daniel] changed his mind about changing the past or how he thought this could work. There must have been something that made Daniel think this was possible, but he was in such a rush that he never took care to explain.'[18] Jon Lachonis of TVOvermind said that as an internal character piece, 'The Variable' was not 'so much a great ending for Daniel. We brushed up against many key events and people – Theresa, Daniel’s ‘nurse’, and the Widmore and Eloise parental connection, etc. – but these forays into the geniuses’ past events were more to thread Daniel through the plot than to establish their connection to who Daniel truly was.'[19]
References[edit]
- ^'Lost - Netflix'. Netflix. Retrieved 24 November 2017.[permanent dead link]
- ^'Lost (4/29)'. ABC Medianet. April 13, 2009. Archived from the original on April 15, 2009. Retrieved April 13, 2009.
- ^'Lost - Episode Recaps - 'The Variable''. American Broadcasting Company. Retrieved April 30, 2009.
- ^ abcd''Lost' celebrates 100 mind-twisting episodes'. The News & Observer. April 29, 2009. Archived from the original on October 2, 2012. Retrieved 2009-05-04.
- ^Lindelof, Damon & Cuse, Carlton, (April 23, 2009) 'The Official Lost Audio Podcast', ABC. Retrieved on May 4, 2009.
- ^Strachan, Alex (April 29, 2009). 'Lost has high hopes for its 100th episode'. The Gazette. Archived from the original on July 28, 2010. Retrieved 2009-05-14.
- ^ abcd''Lost' Producers Talk Surprising Death'. Access Hollywood. April 30, 2009. Retrieved 2009-05-04.
- ^''Lost' 100th Episode'. Variety. Retrieved 2009-05-04.
- ^Toomey, Jonathan (April 21, 2009). 'Lost celebrates 100th episode with Ace of Cakes' Duff Goldman'. TV Squad. Retrieved 2009-05-04.
- ^ABC Medianet, (April 30, 2009) 'ABC Overnight Ratings'. Retrieved on May 14, 2009.
- ^Dale, David (May 21, 2009). 'The Who We Are update: 200,000 dropouts return to see a wedding and a breakdown'. The Sun-Herald. Retrieved 2009-05-21.
- ^Carabott, Chris (April 30, 2009). 'Lost: 'The Variable' Review'. IGN. Retrieved 2009-05-04.
- ^Dovey, Rachel (April 30, 2009). 'Lost Review: 'The Variable''. Paste. Retrieved 2009-05-10.
- ^ abSweeney, Adam (May 1, 2009). 'TV Review: Lost - The Variable'. Film School Rejects. Archived from the original on May 5, 2009. Retrieved 2009-05-10.
- ^Oliver, David (April 30, 2009). 'Thud Review: Lost - 'The Variable''. CHUD.com. Archived from the original on May 3, 2009. Retrieved 2009-05-10.
- ^Lackey, Stephen (April 30, 2009). 'LOST 5.14: The Variable'. TV Verdict. Archived from the original on August 21, 2009. Retrieved 2009-05-10.
- ^Compora, Dan (May 2, 2009). ''Lost' - The Variable'. Airlock Alpha. Retrieved 2011-05-04.
- ^ ab'Lost: The Variable'. TVoholic.com. April 30, 2009. Archived from the original on February 7, 2010. Retrieved 2009-05-10.
- ^Lachonis, Jon (April 30, 2009). 'LOST 'The Variable' - Lose a Geek, Gain a Plan'. TVOvermind. Retrieved 2009-05-10.
External links[edit]
Wikiquote has quotations related to: 'The Variable' |
- 'The Variable' at ABC
- 'The Variable' at Lostpedia
- 'The Variable' on IMDb
- 'The Variable' at TV.com
The Walking Dead | |
---|---|
Genre(s) | |
Developer(s) | Telltale Games Skybound Games[a] |
Publisher(s) | Telltale Games |
Composer(s) | Jared Emerson-Johnson |
Platform(s) | |
First release | Season 1 – 'A New Day' April 24, 2012; 7 years ago |
Latest release | The Final Season – 'Take Us Back' March 26, 2019; 2 months ago |
The Walking Dead is an episodic, graphic adventurevideo game series developed and published by Telltale Games and Skybound Games, based on The Walking Dead comic book series. First released in April 2012, the series currently spans three main five-episode seasons, an additional episode as downloadable content, and a mini three-episode season, with the fourth and final season being released in 2018 and ending in 2019. The games have been released to personal computers, game consoles, and mobile devices and have had both digital and physical releases.
The series, like the comic, starts with an epidemic that turns the dead into zombie-like 'walkers' that decimates civilization, and takes place along the United States eastern seaboard. The series has focused on the character of Clementine, a young girl found alone by Lee Everett at the start of the epidemic. Lee helps teach Clementine how to survive in the chaotic world, and sacrifices himself to try to reunite Clementine with her parents. Clementine continues to travel with other survivor groups for several years, eventually becoming the adoptive parent of the infant Alvin Jr. (AJ) when his parents are killed. She has a run-in with a survival group known as the New Frontier that strips AJ from her, and she works with Javier Garcia to help rescue his family from the New Frontier and learns where AJ has been taken and makes plans to rescue him. Some of the characters from the comic series, such as Shawn Greene, Glenn Rhee, Hershel Greene, Michonne, Siddiq and Paul 'Jesus' Monroe, have appeared during the video game series.
The games in The Walking Dead series eschew typical puzzles and exploration found in most adventure games and instead offer a stronger narrative and interaction with other characters. The game mixes such scenes with more action-oriented ones based on quick time events to elicit excitement during the games. Telltale introduced the feature of having numerous determinants that could result from the player's choices, such as which of two characters to save during an attack, that influenced the story in later episodes and seasons, and the company has used this aspect of player choice in its subsequent adventure games.
The series has been praised for its strong narratives and impact of player choices. The first season was particularly noted as having been considered as revitalizing the waning adventure game genre, which had been languishing since around 2000.[1]
- 3Series overview
- 3.1Season 1 (2012)
- 5Reception
Concept[edit]
The Walking Dead series is based on the comic series of the same name. The game's events run concurrently to the comic, starting at the onset of a zombie apocalypse, where dead humans have become undead 'walkers' that feed on the living which quickly overwhelmed most of the population. As established in the comic and show, this is a result of a virus that all living humans possess that takes over the brain of the body once the person dies, and the only way to stop this is to destroy the brain.
The game series initially starts in Georgia, with the whole of the first season and the events of 400 Days content taking place within the state. The second series follows the protagonists as they move north along the United States' eastern seaboard, believing there to be a human encampment in the north as well as the colder temperatures slowing the walkers' speed.
Gameplay[edit]
The Walking Dead games follow the same point-and-click adventure game approach that other Telltale Games episodic series have followed. Within an episode, the player controls a protagonist as the story progresses through several scenes. Within a scene, the player can move the character to explore the area, examine items, and initiate conversation trees with non-player characters; in these dialogs, the player has the option of selecting a number of options to reply to characters, including the option to stay silent. Other scenes are based on cinematic elements using quick time events in which the player must hit a controller button or a keyboard command as indicated on screen to react to an event. Failure to do so in time can lead to the character's death or other undesirable ending, and the game will restart just prior to these scenes.
All choices made by the player in The Walking Dead are tracked by the game, and certain choices ('determinants') will influence later scenes across the episodes and the series to date, when the player continues from the same saved game state. For example, in the first episode of the first season, the player has an option to save one of two non-player characters from a walker attack; the other character is killed, while the surviving character will uniquely impact other aspects of the story. Other times, selection of certain dialog options will influence the attitude of a non-player character towards the protagonist, and can manifest in later scenes as providing additional options for the player to select from. Telltale Games tracks these decisions, including five main choices made during the course of each episode, allowing players to compare their choices to others.
Series overview[edit]
Season | Episodes | Originally aired | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
First aired | Last aired | ||||
1 | 5 | April 24, 2012 | November 20, 2012 | ||
2 | 5 | December 17, 2013 | August 26, 2014 | ||
3 | 5 | December 20, 2016 | May 30, 2017 | ||
4 | 4 | August 14, 2018 | March 26, 2019 | ||
400 Days | July 2, 2013 | ||||
Michonne | 3 | February 23, 2016 | April 26, 2016 |
Season 1 (2012)[edit]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original release date | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Main series | ||||||||||||
1 | 1 | 'A New Day' | Sean Vanaman Jake Rodkin | Sean Vanaman[2] | April 24, 2012 | |||||||
2 | 2 | 'Starved for Help' | Dennis Lenart | Mark Darin[3] Story by:Chuck Jordan | June 27, 2012 | |||||||
3 | 3 | 'Long Road Ahead' | Eric Parsons | Sean Vanaman[4] Story by: Sean Vanaman Jake Rodkin Harrison G. Pink | August 28, 2012 | |||||||
4 | 4 | 'Around Every Corner' | Nick Herman | Gary Whitta[5] | October 9, 2012 | |||||||
5 | 5 | 'No Time Left' | Sean Vanaman Jake Rodkin Sean Ainsworth | Sean Vanaman[6] | November 20, 2012 | |||||||
Downloaded content | ||||||||||||
– | – | '400 Days' | Sean Ainsworth | Sean Ainsworth Nick Breckon Mark Darin Sean Vanaman Gary Whitta | July 2, 2013 |
At the onset of the zombie apocalypse, Lee Everett rescues young Clementine whose parents had traveled to Savannah prior to the apocalypse. They join with other survivors in Macon, Georgia to protect themselves from the undead, taking shelter in a defensible motel. When their position is overrun by both walkers and scavengers, the group flees and heads towards Savannah hoping to find boats to flee the mainland. Lee promises to reunite Clementine with her parents while teaching her rules of survival in this new world. In Savannah, they find no boats, and a strange man communicating to Clementine via walkie-talkie. When Clementine goes missing, Lee in his panic searching is accidentally bitten by a walker. With his time short, Lee assures the safety of the remaining survivors and goes to rescue Clementine, held by a man who has blamed Lee directly for the death of his family. Lee and Clementine overwhelm the man, and as they escape, they witness Clementine's parents, who have already become walkers. Clementine drags a weakening Lee to a safe location, and Lee, in his final moments of rationality, directs her to find the other survivors, before telling her to kill him or leave him before he fully becomes a walker.
400 Days (2013)[edit]
400 Days is a downloadable special episode. It focuses on five different protagonists and it serves as a bridge between Season 1 and Season 2. In the final scene, the survivors of each story are offered to be taken into a safe camp.
Season 2 (2013–14)[edit]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original release date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
6 | 1 | 'All That Remains' | Dennis Lenart | Nick Breckon Andrew Grant | December 17, 2013[7] |
7 | 2 | 'A House Divided' | Eric Parsons | Nick Breckon | March 4, 2014[8] |
8 | 3 | 'In Harm's Way' | Graham Ross | Pierre Shorette | May 13, 2014[9] |
9 | 4 | 'Amid the Ruins' | Jason Latino | J.T. Petty Eric Stirpe | July 22, 2014[10] |
10 | 5 | 'No Going Back' | Sean Ainsworth Dennis Lenart | Nick Breckon Pierre Shorette | August 26, 2014[11] |
More than a year after the first game, Clementine is separated from the other survivors and forced to fend on her own. She meets up with another group that are attempting to flee a man named Carver, who runs the human survivor camp at a strip mall, as alluded to in 400 Days. Clementine learns Carver seeks to capture Rebecca believing her to be carrying his child while she insists it is her husband Alvin's. They come into another group, discovering that Kenny, one of the survivors that Clementine traveled with from the first season and who had lost his wife and son to walkers, has managed to survive. In the midst of a walker attack, they are captured by Carver. Learning that a massive walker horde is approaching the strip mall and will readily overrun it, the group manages to escape with other prisoners, killing Carver in the process after he kills Alvin. During their escape, a woman that Kenny had taken a romantic interest in is bitten by a walker, forcing Clementine to intercede to kill her before she can turn, angering Kenny. As they regroup, Clementine becomes close to Jane, a loner that was part of the prisoners at Carver's camp and who teaches Clementine survival skills. Later, Rebecca dies after giving birth to a child, which they name Alvin Jr. (AJ) As winter sets in, Jane and Kenny become hostile towards each other, and Kenny's distrust of the group leads to a fraction of them fleeing from Kenny, Jane, Clementine, and Alvin Jr.. Jane forces Clementine to see what Kenny has become from witnessing the deaths of his loved ones by faking the death of Alvin Jr., and Clementine is forced to intercede, killing one of them and opting to continue with the other while overseeing to Alvin Jr. herself.
Michonne (2016)[edit]
No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original release date |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 'In Too Deep' | Kent Mudle | Meghan Thornton Nicole Martinez | February 23, 2016[12] |
2 | 'Give No Shelter' | Sean Manning | Zack Keller Andrew Hanson | March 29, 2016[13] |
3 | 'What We Deserve' | Jason Latino | Nicole Martinez Erica Harrell Desirée Proctor Joshua Rubin | April 26, 2016[14] |
In June 2015, Telltale announced a three-episode series The Walking Dead: Michonne. The mini-series released on February 23, 2016 for PlayStation 4 and Xbox One; February 25, 2016 for iOS and Android; and March 1, 2016 for PC, and serves as a tie-in between the first two The Walking Dead seasons developed by Telltale. The series mostly focuses on Michonne's untold story on what took Michonne away from Rick, Ezekiel, and the rest of Rick Grimes' trusted group and what brought her back.[15]Samira Wiley voiced Michonne in the game. The mini-series was originally scheduled to be released as downloadable content for Season 2.[16] However, in December 2015, Telltale announced that the game would be released as a standalone title that would not require any previous game in the series to play[17]
Season 3: A New Frontier (2016–17)[edit]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original release date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
11 | 1 | 'Ties That Bind - Part One' | Jason Latino | Brad Kane Nick Breckon Adam Esquenazi Douglas Laura Jacqmin Dan Martin Desiree Proctor Pierre Shorette | December 20, 2016[18] |
12 | 2 | 'Ties That Bind - Part Two' | Rebekah Gamin Arcovitch | Brad Kane Nick Breckon Michael Choung Adam Esquenazi Douglas Laura Jacqmin Dan Martin Evan Skolnick Timothy Williams | December 20, 2016[18] |
13 | 3 | 'Above the Law' | Chris Rebbert | James Windeler Patrick Kevin Day Adam Esquenazi Douglas Laura Jacqmin Adam Miller Evan Skolnick | March 28, 2017[19] |
14 | 4 | 'Thicker Than Water' | Chris Rieser | Luke McMullen Theresa Cooley Patrick Kevin Day Laura Jacqmin Adam Miller | April 25, 2017[20] |
15 | 5 | 'From the Gallows' | Jason Pyke | Adam Esquenazi Douglas | May 30, 2017[21] |
The third season of The Walking Dead launched with two episodes on December 20th of 2016.[22] The season plans to tie in all the possible endings from previous seasons without compromising the story to avoid pushing away new players to the series. In an interview with IGN, Kirkman stated that the third season would bring the video game closer to the comic book's time frame. It takes place a few years after the second season, and includes a somewhat older Clementine along with AJ, the infant she rescues at the end of Season 2 who is now a toddler.[23][24][25] Clementine is a playable character along with a new character, Javier.[26]A New Frontier uses the updated Telltale Tool, the same game engine Telltale used for Batman: The Telltale Series.
During the 2016 PAX Expo, Telltale revealed the third season will be released in November 2016, with the subtitle 'A New Frontier'.[27] Telltale later had to delay the first episode's release until December 20, 2016.[28]Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment will publish retail versions of Season 3 as part of a deal with Telltale for Batman that was released in August 2016.[29] The physical edition is expected to release on February 7, 2017, featuring the first episode on disc and download codes to obtain all future episodes of the series.
The Walking Dead Collection (2017)[edit]
Announced in November 2017, The Walking Dead Collection includes all episodes from the first three seasons, as well as '400 Days' and The Walking Dead: Michonne. The collection was released on PlayStation 4 and Xbox One on December 5, 2017.[30] The content of the first two seasons and '400 Days' has been visually improved, reflecting on improvements Telltale has made in their engine since these seasons were first released, including high-definition texture mapping for all survivor characters, improved dynamic lighting, and upgrading the game's graphics to use DirectX 11 over DirectX 9. The older games also use the user interface elements developed for the third season as to provide a consistent interface to the players.[31]
The Walking Dead Collection was nominated for the Tappan Zee Bridge Award for Best Remake at the New York Game Awards 2018.[32]
Season 4: The Final Season (2018–19)[edit]
Download Game Lost Saga Season 5 Full
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Release date [33] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
16 | 1 | 'Done Running' | Chris Rebbert, Vahram Antonian | Jessica Krause, Adam Esquenazi Douglas, Mary Kenney, Lauren Mee | August 14, 2018 |
17 | 2 | 'Suffer the Children' | Chris Rieser | James Windeler, Mary Kenny | September 25, 2018 |
18 | 3 | 'Broken Toys' | Ryan D. Chan, Chris Rieser | Lauren Mee, Mark Darin | January 15, 2019[34] |
19 | 4 | 'Take Us Back' | Chris Rebbert | Adam Esquenazi Douglas, James Windeler, Michael Kirkbride, Chris Rebbert | March 26, 2019[35] |
Announced during the July 2017 San Diego Comic Con, The Walking Dead: The Final Season, launched as four-episode series on August 14, 2018 for Windows, PlayStation 4, and Xbox One, with a Nintendo Switch version to launch later that year.[36] Episodes are expected to launch roughly each month through December 2018.[37] Clementine will return as the lead character, voiced by Hutchinson, as Telltale found that fans of the series were not pleased with how little interactivity there was with Clementine in A New Frontier. Telltale wanted to have the final season call back to what fans had praised about the first season, and knew they needed to make Clementine the focus. With this direction, Telltale decided to make this the final season for The Walking Dead series so that they can create a satisfactory conclusion to Clementine's story arc.[38] For this purpose, Telltale brought back Gary Whitta, the writer for the first season and '400 Days' content, to help close out Clementine's story.[39][38]
The story follows from A New Frontier with Clementine having rescued AJ from the McCarroll Ranch, with a timeskip a few years ahead, where AJ is now a young boy. With diminishing resources amid the apocalypse, Clementine and AJ find the importance of staying with communities of vital importance, meeting other characters who have little memory of the time before the downfall of society. Clementine starts to teach AJ the essentials of survival as Lee had taught her. Telltale had initially considered writing a version of Clementine that had become more jaded, but found this was far too different from the established version of the character, and reworked her to be more sympathetic.[38][40][41]
The final season used the updated version of the Telltale Tool first introduced in Batman: The Telltale Series, along with improvements in the visual style to approach the style used in The Walking Dead comic.[38] Some scenes will feature 'unscripted' zombies who may attack Clementine if the player is not careful, creating new freeform combat sequences, while other parts of the game will continue to use quick-time events as from previous games.[40]
Despite the title The Final Season, Telltale did not rule out future The Walking Dead games; Creative Director Kent Mudle said that The Final Season title represented the end of Clementine's journey from Telltale's view, but could revisit the franchise through other characters.[42]
However, due to the sudden near-closure of Telltale Games on September 21, 2018, only two of the four episodes were released and production on the latter two were cancelled, effectively leaving the season half-finished. With fans longing for another company to turn to, Skybound Entertainment who were creative directors for the first and second seasons stepped in with a 'Still Not Bitten' team and saw out the remaining entries to the series, as Kirkman had felt it necessary to properly complete Clementine's story.
The Walking Dead: The Telltale Definitive Series (2019)[edit]
Announced in April 2019, The Walking Dead: The Telltale Definitive Series will include all episodes from all four seasons, as well as 400 Days and The Walking Dead: Michonne. The collection will be released on Playstation 4, Xbox One and Epic Games Store in September. It will include graphical enhancements, behind the scenes bonus features and faithful recreations of classic menus. The collection will be available in three Collector’s Packs – Protector, Guardian, and Signature – each containing exclusive digital and physical bonuses, available exclusively for a limited time only.[43]
Main cast and characters[edit]
Character | Season One (2012) | Season Two (2013/14) | A New Frontier (2016/17) | The Final Season (2018/19) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Clementine | Melissa Hutchison | |||
Lee Everett | Dave Fennoy | Dave Fennoy | ||
Alvin 'AJ' Jr. | Appears | Unknown actor | Tayla Parx | |
Javier 'Javi' Garcia | Jeff Schine | |||
Kenny | Gavin Hammon | |||
Lilly | Nicki Rapp | Appears | Nicki Rapp | |
Katjaa | Cissy Jones | |||
Kenny 'Duck' Jr | Max Kaufman | |||
Larry | Terry McGovern | |||
Carley | Nicole Vigil | |||
Doug | Sam Joan | |||
Glenn Rhee | Nick Herman | |||
Mark | Mark Middleton | |||
Ben Paul | Trevor Hoffman | |||
Chuck | Roger L. Jackson | |||
Omid | Owen Thomas | |||
Christa | Mara Junot | |||
Molly | Erin Ashe | |||
Vernon | Butch Engle | |||
Andy St. John | Adam Harrington | |||
Danny St. John | Brian Sommer | |||
Brenda St. John | Jeanie Kelsey | |||
Luke | Scott Porter | |||
Nick | Brian Bremer | |||
Pete | Brian Sommer | |||
Carlos | Kid Beyond | |||
Sarah | Louisa MacKintosh | |||
Alvin | Dorian Lockett | |||
Rebecca | Shay Moore | |||
William Carver | Michael Madsen | |||
Bonnie | Erin Yvette | |||
Sarita | Julia Farmer | |||
Walter | Kiff Vanden Heuvel | |||
Matthew | Wylie Herman | |||
Jane | Christine Lakin | |||
Mike | Dan White | |||
Arvo | Michael Ark | |||
Kate Garcia | Shelley Shenoy | |||
David Garcia | Alex Hernandez | |||
Gabriel Garcia | Raymond Ochoa | |||
Mariana Garcia | Vale de la Maza Brenda Lorena Garcia | |||
Tripp | Troy Hall | |||
Eleanor | Kelley Crowder | |||
Conrad | William Christopher Stephens | |||
Francine | Valerie Arem | |||
Paul 'Jesus' Monroe | Brandon Keener | |||
Max/Rufus | Sean Lynch | |||
Badger | Jon Curry | |||
Lonnie | Charles Halford | |||
Ava | Ally Johnson | |||
Joan | Jayne Taini | |||
Clinton Barnes | Andrew Heyl | |||
Paul Lingard | Yuri Lowenthal | |||
Abel | Alex Fernandez | |||
Marlon | Ray Chase | |||
Brody | Hedy Burress | |||
Louis | Sterling Sulieman | |||
Tennessee | Zaire Hampton | |||
Violet | Gideon Adlon | |||
Mitch | Robbie Daymond | |||
Aasim | Ritesh Rajan | |||
Omar | Keith Silverstein | |||
Ruby | Ali Hillis | |||
Willy | Justin Cowden | |||
James | Johnny Yong Bosch | |||
Sullene | Stephanie Sheh | |||
Yonatan | Keith Silverstein | |||
Dorian | Debra Wilson | |||
Minerva | Cherami Leigh |
The Walking Dead video game series introduces new characters developed by Telltale for the games. Season One is based around Lee Everett (voiced by Dave Fennoy), a Georgia college professor who had been charged with murder, and was in the midst of being sent to prison at the start of the walker outbreak. Lee escapes and encounters young Clementine (voiced by Melissa Hutchison), hiding in her treehouse after her babysitter had turned and her parents not yet back from vacation. Lee becomes a protective figure to her to help reunite her with her parents. Within Season Two taking place about a year later, Clementine is now the central character, struggling to find a place in several survivor groups.
Other major characters include Kenny, a fisherman who has suffered numerous losses of family and loved ones and has become emotionally unstable, Luke, a former entrepreneur who carries himself logically than emotionally, Jane, a young lone-wolf woman that teaches Clementine the values of self-preservation that a person's life comes first than anybody else, Carver, a principle antagonist of Season Two that seeks out the group of survivors that Clementine has joined believing one carries his child, and A.J., the newborn infant that Carver seeks who Clementine takes care of after his mother succumbs to the elements. The fate of several characters are determinant based on the actions that the player has taken in previous episodes, or otherwise unresolved within the narrative of the games. As the game takes place within the comic's universe, there have been some character crossovers with the series; Hershel Greene, Shawn Greene and Glenn, three characters from the comic series, have appeared briefly in Season One. Michonne, a prominent comic character, is featured as the playable-character in the Michonne mini-series, which also features comic characters Pete, Siddiq, Elodie, Dominic and Colette (the latter two are mentioned, but not seen, in the comics). Jesus makes an appearance in The New Frontier.
Reception[edit]
Sales[edit]
According to Telltale, the combined games in the series have sold over 50 million episodes worldwide by July 2017.[41]
Season 1 and 400 Days[edit]
The Walking Dead has received critical acclaim, with reviewers giving praise for the harsh emotional tone, the characters, story and the resemblance to the original comic book, although criticizing the graphical glitches. The game received over 80 Game of the Year awards and many other awards.
'Episode 1 – A New Day' received positive reviews. Aggregating review websites GameRankings and Metacritic calculated scores of 85.14%[44] and 84/100,[45] respectively, for the PlayStation 3 version, 83.87%[46] and 79/100[47] for the Xbox 360 version, and 83.38%[48] and 82/100[49] for the PC version. The game received various accolades including the IGN 'Editors' Choice', PC Gamer 'Editors' Choice', Xbox Editors' Choice Award, and the PlayStation Gold Award.
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'Episode 2 – Starved for Help' received positive reviews. GameRankings and Metacritic calculated scores of 86.53%[50] and 84/100,[51] respectively, for the PC version, 86.26%[52] and 84/100[53] for the Xbox 360 version, and 85.90%[54] and 84/100[55] for the PlayStation 3 version. The game won the GameSpyE3 2012 award for 'Best Adventure Game'.[56]
'Episode 3 – Long Road Ahead' received positive reviews. GameRankings and Metacritic calculated scores of 88.47%[57] and 88/100,[58] respectively, for the Xbox 360 version, 86.11%[59] and 87/100[60] for the PlayStation 3 version, and 85.41%[61] and 85/100[62] for the PC version. IGN's Greg Miller gave the game a 9 out of 10, saying 'It's a disturbing, depressing and entertaining entry in a journey that's been nothing short of excellent so far.'[63]GameSpot gave the game an 8.5, saying 'The Walking Dead has passed the midway point of its series of five episodes with every indication that the game will keep getting better right through to its inevitably depressing and unsettling conclusion.'[64]MTV also gave it a positive review, saying 'Telltale has created a series of wrenching, emotional decisions in the middle of a collection of not-too-hard puzzles in a visually-impressive adaptation of the Robert Kirkman comic series (with some nods to the TV show).'[65]
'Episode 4 – Around Every Corner' received positive reviews, but to a lesser extent than the previous episodes. GameRankings and Metacritic calculated scores of 84.00%[66] and 80/100,[67] respectively, for the PC version, 82.50%[68] and 82/100[69] the Xbox 360 version, and 78.94%[70] and 81/100[71] for the PlayStation 3 version.
'Episode 5 – No Time Left' received critical acclaim. GameRankings and Metacritic calculated scores of 94.75%[72] and 89/100,[73] respectively, for the PC version, 88.15%[74] and 89/100[75] for the Xbox 360 version, and 87.75%[76] and 88/100[77] for the PlayStation 3 version.
400 Days received positive reviews. GameRankings and Metacritic calculated scores of 78.20%[78] and 78/100,[79] respectively, for the PlayStation 3 version, 78.00%[80] and 78/100[81] for the PC version, and 76.88%[82] and 80/100[83] for the Xbox 360 version.
Season 2[edit]
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The Walking Dead: Season Two overall received generally positive reviews from critics earning praise for its atmosphere, tension, and Clementine's newly appointed role as the protagonist, but earned criticism for its lack of hubs and certain aspects of its storytelling.
Episode 1 – All That Remains received positive reviews. Aggregating review websites GameRankings and Metacritic gave the PlayStation 3 version 81.29%[84] and 82/100,[85] the PC version 78.76%[86] and 78/100[87] and the Xbox 360 version 77.50%[88] and 80/100.[89] Matt Liebl from GameZone gave the episode an 8.5/10, stating that it '...is just a taste of what's to come -- a mere setup for the horror that awaits us in the final four episodes.'[90]
Episode 2 - A House Divided received positive reviews. Aggregating review websites GameRankings and Metacritic gave the PlayStation 3 version 87.29%[91] and 82/100,[92] the PC version 81.39%[93] and 81/100[94] and the Xbox 360 version 79.44%[95] and 80/100.[96] Mitch Dyer from IGN gave the episode a 9.5/10, saying it is one of the best episodes Telltale Games has ever made.[97]
Episode 3 - In Harm's Way received positive reviews. Aggregating review websites GameRankings and Metacritic gave the PlayStation 3 version 82.43%[98] and 80/100,[99] the Xbox 360 version 82.25%[100] and 82/100[101] and the PC version 82.22%[102] and 81/100.[103]
Episode 4 - Amid the Ruins received mixed to positive reviews. Aggregating review websites GameRankings and Metacritic gave the PlayStation 3 version 79.22%[104] and 78/100,[105] the PC version 78.58%[106] and 78/100[107] and the Xbox 360 version 72.00%[108] and 71/100.[109]
Episode 5 – No Going Back received positive reviews,higher than its predecessor. Aggregating review websites GameRankings and Metacritic gave the PlayStation 3 version 81.67%[110] and 87/100,[111] the PC version 79.19%[112] and 78/100[113] and the Xbox 360 version 77.00%[114] and 84/100.[115] Mitch Dyer of IGN gave the episode a 9.5/10 saying that the finale is 'an impressive and intelligent episode, and among Telltale Games' finest stories.'[116]
Michonne[edit]
The Walking Dead: Michonne received mixed reviews from critics earning praise for its action sequences, atmosphere, and the character development of Michonne, but earned criticism for its story, side characters, short episode lengths, and graphical glitches.
Season 3: A New Frontier[edit]
The Walking Dead: A New Frontier received mixed-to-positive reviews from critics with particular praise directed at the game's updated graphics, new cast of characters, action sequences, and overall new direction. However, the short episode lengths and the treatment of the Season 2 endings were both subjects of criticism. The game's story and Clementine's shift to a supporting character were both met with a mixed response.
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Season 4: The Final Season[edit]
The Walking Dead: The Final Season received generally positive reviews earning praise for its characterization, visuals, and upgraded gameplay mechanics and is considered by both critics and fans to be an improvement over its predessessor and a return to form for the series.
References[edit]
Notes
- ^Skybound Games is developing the final two episodes of The Final Season.
Footnotes
- ^[1] How adventure games came back from the dead
- ^Klepik, Patrick (2012-08-28). 'The Walking Dead's Faces of Death: Part 1'. Giant Bomb. Retrieved 2012-11-28.
- ^Klepek, Patrick (2012-08-29). 'The Walking Dead's Faces of Death: Part 2'. Giant Bomb. Retrieved 2012-11-28.
- ^'Everything Breaks Bad In The Darkest, Strongest Episode Of The Walking Dead Yet'. Kotaku. Retrieved 2012-09-29.
- ^Klepek, Patrick (2012-11-13). 'Faces of Death, Part 4: Around Every Corner'. Giant Bomb. Retrieved 2012-11-28.
- ^'The Walking Dead Episode 5 review: All the time in the world'. Joystiq. 2012-11-26. Archived from the original on 2012-11-29. Retrieved 2012-11-29.
- ^Oliver Snyders (December 17, 2013). 'Telltale confirms The Walking Dead: Season 2 will release on PS3 this week'. El33tononline.com. Retrieved December 17, 2013.
- ^Karmali, Luke (2014-02-27). 'The Walking Dead Season 2 Episode 2 Release Date'. IGN. Retrieved 2014-02-27.
- ^Karmali, Luke (2014-05-09). 'The Walking Dead Season 2 Episode 3 Release Date'. IGN. Retrieved 2014-05-13.
- ^Phillips, Tom (2014-07-14). 'The Walking Dead: Season Two - Episode 4 release date announced'. Eurogamer. Retrieved 2014-07-14.
- ^Hanson, Kyle (2014-08-21). 'The Walking Dead Season 2: Episode 5 Trailer and Release Date Revealed'. Attack of the Fanboy. Retrieved 2014-08-21.
- ^Aiyed, Mona (February 10, 2016). 'The Walking Dead: Michonne Release Date Announced'. IGN. Retrieved February 10, 2016.
- ^Good, Owen (March 14, 2016). 'Second episode of The Walking Dead: Michonne launches March 29'. Polygon. Retrieved March 14, 2016.
- ^Nunneley, Stephany (April 19, 2016). 'Conclusion to The Walking Dead: Michonne arrives next week'. VG247. Retrieved April 19, 2016.
- ^Grunt, Christopher (June 15, 2015). 'The Walking Dead: Michonne coming from Telltale Games'. Polygon. Retrieved June 15, 2015.
- ^'Telltale announces The Walking Dead: Michonne'. pcgamer.com. Retrieved June 15, 2015.
- ^Sarkar, Samit (December 3, 2015). 'The Walking Dead: Michonne's first episode premieres in February 2016'. Polygon. Retrieved December 4, 2015.
- ^ abGoldfarb, Andrew (November 22, 2016). 'Telltale's The Walking Dead: A New Frontier Release Date Announced'. IGN. Retrieved November 22, 2016.
- ^Dornbrush, Jonathan (March 10, 2017). 'Pax East 2017 Telltale Games' The Walking Dead Season 3 Episode 3 Release Date Announced'. IGN. Retrieved March 10, 2017.
- ^Sirani, Jordan (April 19, 2017). 'A New Frontier Episode 4 Drops Next Week'. IGN. Retrieved April 19, 2017.
- ^Dornbrush, Jonathan (May 18, 2017). 'Telltale Games' The Walking Dead Season 3 Finale Episode Release Date Announced'. IGN. Retrieved May 18, 2017.
- ^Goldfarb, Andrew (2016-11-22). 'Telltale's The Walking Dead: A New Frontier Release Date Announced'. IGN. Retrieved 2017-02-19.
- ^Paget, Mat (April 25, 2016). 'The Walking Dead Game's Season 3 Details Teased, Returning Character Confirmed'. GameSpot. Retrieved April 25, 2016.
- ^'Telltale's The Walking Dead - Robert Kirkman Interview'. IGN. April 25, 2016. Retrieved April 25, 2016.
- ^Phillips, Tom (July 22, 2016). 'The Walking Dead's third season screens shows off Telltale's improved engine'. Eurogamer. Retrieved July 22, 2016.
- ^Matulef, Jeffrey (June 12, 2016). 'The Walking Dead Season 3 revealed'. Eurogamer. Retrieved June 12, 2016.
- ^Statt, Nick (September 2, 2016). 'Telltale's The Walking Dead returns in November for season three'. The Verge. Retrieved September 2, 2016.
- ^Dayus, Oscar (November 22, 2016). 'Telltale's The Walking Dead: Season Three Delayed, New Release Date Revealed'. GameSpot. Retrieved November 22, 2016.
- ^Phillips, Tom (July 15, 2016). 'Telltale's Batman launches August for download, September on disc'. Eurogamer. Retrieved July 15, 2016.
- ^Phillips, Tom (November 2, 2017). 'Telltale's The Walking Dead Collection adds visual enhancements'. Eurogamer. Retrieved December 1, 2017.
- ^Summers, Nick (December 1, 2017). 'How 'The Walking Dead Collection' enhances the original season'. Engadget. Retrieved December 1, 2017.
- ^Whitney, Kayla (January 25, 2018). 'Complete list of winners of the New York Game Awards 2018'. AXS. Retrieved January 28, 2018.
- ^Telltale Games [@telltalegames] (15 August 2018). ''Done Running' - August 14...' (Tweet) – via Twitter.
- ^Schreier, Jason (December 8, 2018). 'The Walking Dead's final season'. Kotaku. Retrieved December 8, 2018.
- ^Brown, Fraser (January 15, 2019). 'The Walking Dead: The Final Season Episode 3 is out now'. PC Gamer. Retrieved January 15, 2019.
- ^Singletary, Charles (June 6, 2018). 'Telltale's The Walking Dead Final Season Release Date Revealed, Pre-orders Live This Week'. Shacknews. Retrieved June 6, 2018.
- ^Bankhurst, Adam (August 15, 2018). 'Telltale's The Walking Dead: The Final Season Full Release Schedule Revealed'. IGN. Retrieved August 15, 2018.
- ^ abcdSummer, Nick (June 15, 2018). 'Telltale's quest to end 'The Walking Dead' on a high'. Engadget. Retrieved June 15, 2018.
- ^Taylor, Haydn (November 30, 2017). 'Original co-writer returns for final season of Telltale's The Walking Dead'. GamesIndustry.biz. Retrieved November 30, 2017.
- ^ abKim, Matt (April 6, 2018). 'The Walking Dead Final Season's First Details Include Unscripted Zombie Fights'. USGamer. Retrieved April 6, 2018.
- ^ abNunneley, Stephanny (July 19, 2017). 'The Wolf Among Us 2, The Walking Dead: The Final Season coming in 2018, Batman: The Enemy Within out in August'. VG247. Retrieved July 19, 2017.
- ^Marks, Tom (July 19, 2018). 'Telltale Doesn't Rule Out More The Walking Dead Games After Season 4 - Comic-con 2018'. IGN. Retrieved July 19, 2018.
- ^'Skybound annouces The Walking Dead: The Telltale Definitive Series'. Skybound Games. Retrieved April 29, 2019.
- ^'The Walking Dead Episode 1 - A New Day (PS3)'. gamerankings.com. Retrieved January 21, 2015.
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- ^'The Walking Dead Episode 2 - Starved for Help (PC)'. gamerankings.com. Retrieved January 21, 2015.
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- ^'The Walking Dead Episode 2 - Starved for Help (Xbox 360)'. gamerankings.com. Retrieved January 21, 2015.
- ^'The Walking Dead Episode 2 - Starved for Help (Xbox 360)'. metacritic.com. Retrieved January 21, 2015.
- ^'The Walking Dead Episode 2 - Starved for Help (PS3)'. gamerankings.com. Retrieved January 21, 2015.
- ^'The Walking Dead Episode 2 - Starved for Help (PS3)'. metacritic.com. Retrieved January 21, 2015.
- ^'GameSpy's Best of E3 2012 Awards'. GameSpy. Retrieved 2011-07-14.
- ^'The Walking Dead Episode 3 - Long Road Ahead (Xbox 360)'. gamerankings.com. Retrieved January 21, 2015.
- ^'The Walking Dead Episode 3 - Long Road Ahead (Xbox 360)'. metacritic.com. Retrieved January 21, 2015.
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- ^'The Walking Dead: The Game – Episode 3: Long Road Ahead Review'. IGN. Retrieved 2012-11-07.
- ^Todd, Brett (August 30, 2012). 'The Walking Dead: Episode 3 – Long Road Ahead Review'. GameSpot. Archived from the original on February 28, 2014. Retrieved November 7, 2012.
- ^'Review: Telltale Breaks Your Heart With 'The Walking Dead: Ep. 3 – Long Road Ahead''. Multiplayerblog.mtv.com. 2012-08-30. Archived from the original on 2012-09-11. Retrieved 2012-11-07.
- ^'The Walking Dead Episode 4 - Around Every Corner (PC)'. gamerankings.com. Retrieved January 21, 2015.
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- ^'The Walking Dead Episode 5 - No Time Left (PC)'. gamerankings.com. Retrieved January 21, 2015.
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- ^'The Walking Dead 400 Days DLC (PS3)'. gamerankings.com. Retrieved January 21, 2015.
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- ^Dyer, Mitch (March 4, 2014). 'The Walking Dead: Season 2, Episode 2 Review'. IGN. Retrieved March 4, 2014.
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- ^Dyer, Mitch (August 26, 2014). 'The Walking Dead: Season 2, Episode 5 Review'. IGN. Retrieved August 26, 2014.