![]() ![]() ![]() Wandering through these memories is not a nice nostalgia trip, instead letting you relive someone else’s horrifying moments and twisted abstract concepts. While exploring and using the Dream Eater to jack into people’s neural connections, things start to enter the state of psychological horror and thriller. Observer System Redux has three new side cases, so even those who played the original will find a reason to come back. Some of the apartments are open though, filled with clues for either the main case or a number of side cases. By talking to these people, you learns things about the building and the desperate situation of the residents, giving clues as to how this dystopian future of 2084 functions. Instead, the way you interacts with the majority of the building’s inhabitants are through their intercoms. So you gets to work searching for Daniel’s son, but never really see anyone else aside from Janus the caretaker. ![]() You gets stuck in the apartment building soon after entering with a lockdown occurring, which happens in this world if there is a threat of the nanophage virus – how topical. Observer: System Redux is part exploration title and part detective story. These augmentations also don’t always work smoothly requiring you to take pills to reduce strain on them and Daniel’s mental faculties. Unfortunately, these apartments hold more than their fair share of disturbing and horrifying situations. This last piece of equipment allows you to hook up to the neural networks of other people and experience their memories, and it comes in particularly useful while scouring an apartment block for clues about Daniel’s missing son. Daniel is kitted out with augmentations such as a bio scanner, tech scanner, night vision, and what is called the Dream Eater. You are Daniel Lazarski, played by the late Rutger Hauer, an Observer for the KPD. ![]()
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