It’s sad to say, but the Life is Strange series, in its
current iteration, might be about ready to be put to rest. I say this as
someone who, ever since the series debuted in 2015, fell in love with its warm
vibes, likable characters, indie soundtracks, and often compelling stories shaped
by choice that each installment has provided.
Originally created by DontNod Entertainment, who developed Life
is Strange and Life is Strange 2, the series has been in the hands of Deck Nine
Games ever since, who made the perfectly solid prequel Life is Strange: Before
the Storm, and then the truly fantastic Life is Strange: True Colors.
Unfortunately however, Deck Nine has fallen on some pretty
hard times over the years; the rounds of layoffs and turnover was really felt
with 2024’s Life is Strange: Double Exposure, which brought back original main
character Max Caulfield (though not Chloe) but otherwise failed to do anything
particularly exciting with either its gameplay, its new setting, or its
narrative. It wasn’t especially well-received among the fans, and in many ways
Life is Strange: Reunion seems as if Deck Nine’s attempting a do-over,
continuing within Double Exposure’s universe but this time bringing back Chloe
Price.
The results, sadly, are more of the same. The way in which
Chloe returns (a merging of realities that’s too convoluted to get into and never
really fully explains itself) is almost beside the point; her presence proves
to be a welcome addition to Max’s story at Caledon University, which is
otherwise largely populated with the same bland cast from the previous
installment, and many of the same locations.
Long story short; While Max is away for the weekend, a fire
erupts at the university, burning the place down and killing many people.
Horrified, Max realizes that she’s able to reawaken her time travel abilities,
and returns to the start of the weekend, hoping to get to the bottom of the
mystery of the fire and to stop it before it’s too late.
From the beginning, the plot just never manages to take
hold. There aren’t enough characters at the university that Max is close with
for any of this to really matter, with the same obnoxious Abraxas fraternity
from Double Exposure taking up most of your investigative time, along with some
completely forgettable students and unlikable university officials. It’s a far
cry from Life is Strange 1’s Blackwell Academy, a boarding school that felt
truly alive, with real characters you got to know from your interactions with
them, and who you got to care about. It had a ton to explore, from its
expansive grounds and facilities to dorm buildings, classrooms, and even other
locations in town.
Caledon University, by comparison, features a courtyard, a
small hallway with a couple of empty classrooms and offices, and two or three
off campus houses. You barely get to see any of it, and you barely get to know
anyone there. The one location in Life is Strange: Reunion that radiates with
any sort of life is the off-campus bar The Snapping Turtle, which features
great music, vibrant art on its walls, and fun interactions with the other
students, including the bartender Amanda, one of the only likable characters at
Caledon. But even my experiences there were a little less special, because I’d
of course visited The Snapping Turtle already in the last game, and it’s very
much the same here.
In between Life is Strange: Double Exposure and Life is
Strange: Reunion, series creators DontNod released their own narrative-driven
adventure game called Lost Records: Bloom and Rage. It not only felt like a
Life is Strange game in everything but name, but it took the genre forward, had
a real vision, and genuinely felt alive. By comparison, Life is Strange:
Reunion feels like an uninspired effort from a defeated Deck Nine Games, who I
worry just might not have it in them anymore to make something like Life is
Strange: True Colors or even Before the Storm again.
I don’t see much of a way for this series to continue short
of a complete reboot, and I’m worried that this studio doesn’t have the
resources or the inspiration to pull it off. I don’t see much of a way for this
series to continue short of a complete reboot, and I’m worried that this studio
doesn’t have the resources or the inspiration to pull it off. I'd love to be
proven wrong, but for now, I can only recommend Life is Strange: Reunion to the
fans who have stuck around, and only so they can see how things wrap up with
Max and Chloe. Newcomers would be much better off playing the first few
installments or Lost Records instead.
2.5/5
