The Walking Dead Episode 5: No Time Left – Review

A fitting finale of a series committed to the emotional experience.

As the festive periods looms like an iceberg in dark waters, and the thought of buying presents weighs heavy on everyone’s mind, many will turn to glossy gift guides for inspiration. Often supplied by retailers or newspapers, these guides are packed full of ideas, from embroidered aprons to novelty slippers.

This year I noticed a ‘zombie survival experience for 2′ as one of the suggested endowments, offering a day out in Kidderminster braving the zombie apocalypse. The hosts simulating all the attendant discomforts and horrors of the worst kind of end of days.

Somebody obviously still hasn’t discovered Telltale Games’ The Walking Dead, which fulfils a similar function but, crucially, allows you to sit comfortably in the warmth of your own home this Winter – with a hot mug of tea to balance the chill in your spine.

To summarise the story so far, our hero Lee has so far managed to keep himself alive through four episodes, braving hordes of walkers, bandits, cannibals and other crazy leftovers of humanity while journeying through farms, motels, mansions and waterfronts. This final one sees him and his fellow survivors (the party composition depending on decisions you made earlier in the series) desperate to rescue Clementine, their youngest member.

Abducted in the previous instalment, Clementine represents the promise of hope for the group – she is both the moral compass and the possibility of a prospective future for humanity. Adults don’t want to disappoint her, checking their more savage impulses in her presence, and more importantly, refusing to give in to the gnawing worry that there will be no adult society for her to grow up in.

This is why a group of strangers will risk life (and possibly limbs) for someone they barely know. It’s a noble cause, and there’s no doubt that the game keeps the player completely onside by facilitating the choices in conversation and action.

You as the player invest in the events, coveting a safe journey for Lee and crew. Even if upon replaying the game you realise your choices perhaps don’t influence the overall narrative as greatly as Telltale might have us believe.

Like a drunkenly played accordion, the pace swells and contracts in a queasy manner, ratcheting up the tension and pulling no punches as the rescue attempt leads to some horrible realisations. In easily the most harrowing of the series to date, Lee and the survivors find themselves holed up at the mansion once more.

The buoyant promise of escape sliding away in place of a burgeoning sense of dread – knowing the worst is going to happen, but choosing to live through it anyway . Needless to say, there are tough choices to be made at every turn as the series sluices to its end point.

Mechanically, the game remains indebted to point-and-click adventures, spliced with some of the original Resident Evil’s DNA. There’s a simplicity about the control that keeps the story as the main focus, although this means it’s less of a playing game, more of a watching game with occasional interruptions for control.

Having survived through this first season it’s now perhaps possible to critique the series as a whole. While a stand-out piece of storytelling it’s this lack of ultimate control which is perhaps now holding the series back. Hopefully for the next series Telltale will be a bit braver, handing the player more freedom of movement in terms of where they go as well as within the narrative structure.

However, that’s a minor quibble of what is an intense and enjoyable ride, providing excellent value for money. The Walking Dead is a rarity in this gaming climate, and the series as a whole should be cherished both for a refusal to give in to temptation of tooling players up and for its commitment to the emotional experience rather than shock tactics.

That’s not to say there aren’t any surprises, or jump-out-of-seat moments, but they’re enriched by the way they’re embedded in a solid storyline and happen to characters you can actually care about.

So, if you really care about your loved ones, perhaps you could spare them the day freezing to death in Kidderminster and instead of plump for this instead. At least they’ll be warm, even if their spine is chilled…

By Sam Gill

Score: 4/5

Format: PS3, Xbox 360, PC
Price: £20.99 (for 5 episode series)
Developer: Telltale Games
Publisher: Telltale Games

Independent Comment
blog comments powered by Disqus
News in pictures
World news in pictures
Life & Style blogs

Where do most millionaires live in the UK?

Plus lateral thinking and living on London's waterways

Wandsworth tops aspiring young professionals hotspot list

Other popular areas include Didsbury, Clifton in Bristol, central Cambridge and West Bridgford

Christian GPs and the morning after pill: Much needed clarification

Doctors are allowed to have personal beliefs, just as long as these beliefs do not interfere with th...

       
Independent
Travel Shop
India and Shimla
14 nights from only £1899pp Find out more
Prague city break
Three nights from £199pp Find out more
4* Soreda hotel break, Malta
Seven nights all-inclusive from £399pp Find out more

ES Rentals

    Day In a Page

    National archives: Edward VIII’s phone calls - and how MI5 bugged them

    Edward VIII’s phone calls - and how MI5 bugged them

    Newly unearthed papers reveal a shocking extra dimension to the constitutional crisis over monarch’s abdication
    Sent down at the Old Bailey: A tour of the world's most famous court

    Sent down at the Old Bailey

    A tour of the world's most famous court
    Hollywood's random acts of red-carpet kindness

    Hollywood's random acts of red-carpet kindness

    The Hangover actor Zach Galifianakis’s date for his movie premieres isn’t arm candy  – it’s his 87-year-old friend who he saved from homelessness
    British football scores an own goal

    British football scores an own goal

    Many managers barely survive a year in post. Martin Baker talks to experts who make a case for clubs using forensic business skills to find the best staff
    James Lawton: Sergio Garcia cracks as major fault line opens up again

    James Lawton

    Sergio Garcia cracks as major fault line opens up again
    Dylan Hartley: Northampton have spent the season proving all our critics wrong

    Dylan Hartley talks tough

    Northampton have spent the season proving all our critics wrong
    Watch out Watford: Here comes the secretive Bilderberg Group

    Watch out Watford: Here comes the secretive Bilderberg Group

    A meeting of global power brokers in a Hertfordshire hotel is exciting conspiracy theorists, but what are they really about?
    'The ultimate all-in-one home entertainment system': Microsoft finally unveils its Xbox ONE console

    'The ultimate all-in-one home entertainment system'

    Microsoft finally unveils its Xbox ONE console
    Plenty of Fish dating site founder pulls 'Intimate Encounters' option to ward off sleazy men

    Plenty of sleaze

    Dating website pulls intimate 'hook-up' section to curb harassment
    Inferno author Dan Brown 'honoured' to be invited to join the Freemasons

    The Freemasons’ Code

    Dan Brown reveals the message that told him door to the lodge is open
    Not secure any more: G4S boss heads for exit at last

    Not secure any more: G4S boss heads for exit at last

    Nick Buckles survived the Olympics débâcle and a £5bn bid fiasco but a profit warning finally triggered his downfall
    How to say ‘I’m a sellout’: Tumblr’s David Karp’s message of reassurance to his staff sounded very familiar

    How to say ‘I’m a sellout’

    Tumblr’s David Karp’s message of reassurance to his staff sounded very familiar
    Why clubs are keen to take a stand

    Why clubs are keen to take a stand

    There's a real desire around the grounds for safe standing. But will the authorities listen?
    In the end the fans decided Tony Pulis had made a pig's ear of the job at Stoke City

    In the end the fans decided Tony Pulis had made a pig's ear of the job at Stoke City

    Disillusion with a siege mentality and negative playing style made change inevitable
    James Lawton: The James Hunt I knew is the subject of a new F1 movie

    James Lawton: The James Hunt I knew is the subject of a new F1 movie

    British driver was fascinating man whose epic duel with Niki Lauda in 1976 was typical of an era of glamour and glory – but also the ever-present threat of death