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Amnesia: The Dark Descent

  • Jeu vidéo
  • 2010
  • M
NOTE IMDb
8,1/10
2,4 k
MA NOTE
Amnesia: The Dark Descent (2010)
ActionAventureCriminalitéDrameFantaisieHorreurMystèreScience-fictionThrillerHorreur psychologique

Daniel, un jeune homme, se réveille dans un château morne sans souvenir de son passé et découvre qu'il a délibérément effacé sa mémoire et doit voyager à travers les couloirs sombres pour tu... Tout lireDaniel, un jeune homme, se réveille dans un château morne sans souvenir de son passé et découvre qu'il a délibérément effacé sa mémoire et doit voyager à travers les couloirs sombres pour tuer le maléfique baron Alexandre.Daniel, un jeune homme, se réveille dans un château morne sans souvenir de son passé et découvre qu'il a délibérément effacé sa mémoire et doit voyager à travers les couloirs sombres pour tuer le maléfique baron Alexandre.

  • Scénario
    • Mikael Hedberg
    • Thomas Grip
  • Casting principal
    • Richard Topping
    • Sam A. Mowry
    • Bill Corkery
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    8,1/10
    2,4 k
    MA NOTE
    • Scénario
      • Mikael Hedberg
      • Thomas Grip
    • Casting principal
      • Richard Topping
      • Sam A. Mowry
      • Bill Corkery
    • 15avis d'utilisateurs
    • 4avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Vidéos1

    Amnesia: The Dark Descent
    Trailer 2:26
    Amnesia: The Dark Descent

    Photos19

    Voir l'affiche
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    + 15
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    Rôles principaux8

    Modifier
    Richard Topping
    Richard Topping
    • Daniel
    • (voix)
    Sam A. Mowry
    • Alexander
    • (voix)
    • (as Sam Mowry)
    Bill Corkery
    • Agrippa
    • (voix)
    Eric Newsome
    • Herbert
    • (voix)
    Lani Minella
    Lani Minella
    • Girl
    • (voix)
    • …
    Marc Biagi
    • Innocent Man
    • (voix)
    Dave Rivas
    Dave Rivas
    • Man in Morgue
    • (voix)
    Dan Zullo
    • Wilhelm
    • (voix)
    • …
    • Scénario
      • Mikael Hedberg
      • Thomas Grip
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs15

    8,12.4K
    1
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    8
    9
    10

    Avis à la une

    8merem1

    I like this game

    The atmosphere of this game. It is great. The game is really tense and creepy. The game is effective and it is a satisfying experience. The location the game takes place in is awesome. The voice acting is well done. The game is a good looking game.
    10danielfarmer-80144

    The most terrifying experience!

    Amnesia: The Dark Descent is undoubtedly the most terrifying gaming experience i've ever had. This game is a masterpiece.

    In this game you play as Daniel. A man stricken with Amnesia and on a quest for answers. The story in this game isn't the best thing ever but i was intrigued the whole time and it deals with questions of guilt amongst other things. The voice acting is very good and the game has multiple endings so you can conclude the story in the way that fits you.

    In the game, you complete a series of tasks/puzzles to progress the story and you must hide from enemies whilst managing your sanity and light resources. The levels are very well designed hub levels that remove the feeling of linearity because you have to do a lot of exploring if you want to find resources and things to progress. The interaction involved in opening doors and moving objects its great because it adds that physical immersion to the game. The stealth works well and its utterly terrifying when the enemies see you and give chase. The puzzles are solid too.

    The best thing about this game is definitely the atmosphere. There is constantly this crippling sense of dread produced by incredible music, sound design, terrifying environments and enemies and just well paced gameplay. It was so scary that i had to stop every 20 minutes because I honestly thought i might of had a heart attack. It builds up the tension so much that when an enemy does appear and attack you it utterly shocks you to the core. I have never before or since had such an intense fear playing a video game.

    Amnesia: The Dark Descent is a special game that most other horror games have tried (and failed in my opinion) to encapsulate. What an amazing experience that i will never forget.

    10/10.
    8gamesorgtfo

    Very Satisfying Survival Horror

    Don't be thrown off by the fact this game plays about 10 years older than its release date. It does have some clunk to it, but for the most part, it is dated in a positive way taking the aspects from older generations of horror games that fans of the genre appreciate.

    It pretty much ticks all the boxes a survival horror fan might look for with the exception of combat. It has a deeply immersive atmosphere powered by a darkly captivating world, an eternal darkness-like sanity system that warps POV, and a fantastic soundtrack. The puzzles are creative and challenging without being frustrating for the most part. I also appreciate that some of them have multiple solutions including working the game's physics system into the puzzles. The level design is solid with a nice combination of linearity and non-linearity despite the confined spaces.

    However, I do believe it is held back slightly on a few fronts. While, I am fine with minimal combat, they should have been more creative with the "action" around that idea. More sequences like the aquatic (leaving this intentionally vague to avoid spoilers) one early in the game could have elevated my rating. The variety is left lacking due to the designers not being imaginative enough with these interactions. Additionally, the ending, while satisfying for my playthrough on a narrative level, was anti-climactic in my opinion.

    Overall, it's a damn good game that deserves the cult-classic label it has. While it is not near the top of the genre for me (LOU, Evil Within, Multiple REs, etc. Are better), it will most likely enter into the back end of my top 100 games after I've thought it over.
    8TBJCSKCNRRQTreviews

    Unforgettable, elevated to radiance

    You wake up in a medieval castle. Shambling around, trying to shake the confusion(seen through gradually switching Dutch angles and filters), you can say with certainty only two facts - your name is Daniel, and you live in Mayfair, London. Finding the first of many notes(that, along with the flashbacks which are done via red tint, voice-over, without taking away control, evoking the feeling of recalling a memory, make up the storytelling - you are not hand-holded through, you get hints, and piece the whole together, yourself), you find your former self imploring you to do one thing... kill Alexander, the politically powerful Baron of the vast Castle Brennenburg in Prussia, which you currently find yourself in.

    Immediately, we have questions. Why? For both the murder(which you get to make up your own mind on - is it deserved or not?) and the distance between what you call home and where you are now. What's happening? Clearly, something supernatural is going on(a gust of wind will blow open a door, for example... inside!), is spreading through the creaky, near-abandoned(sections in disrepair, cobwebs, maggots...) fortress, the foundation of which will shake, threatening to bury you in the rubble of this centuries-old building. These will be answered, by you paying attention and applying yourself, without culminating in any easy conclusion or removing all mystery. This uses your own imagination.

    The elements that are not of this world are made all the more terrifying by the contrast(something uses well, in general - open/closed areas, shadow/brightness, etc.) between them and the clearly natural world around you. Eerie and murky though your surroundings may be, they behave as you'd expect. This is similar to the Penumbra series, also by Frictional Games, and is in many ways an upgrade. The physics engine makes a triumphant return - nearly everything is interactive. Pick up, rotate on both Z and X axes(by pressing R - I wish it would allow locking one of the two, and using the keyboard is slightly awkward, as is the "sometimes yet not always working" quality of using Right Mouse not only to push/throw/slam, that goes fine, no, when you attempt to use it for the opposite direction... if they just decided that it could only go "away" from you, that would be fine), move, pull open every door and drawer, etc. Everything has weight, glass can break, and so on. Need to mess around with all these objects? No. You can, and sometimes it'll help, not always(it might hurt! Fire=ow, as you might imagine).

    This won't remind you that it's fiction, or what medium it belongs to. When you take a break, it's as if coming to from a nightmare - you spend a little time reassuring yourself that no, that wasn't reality. The closest this comes to a HUD is brief bloodied wounds when hurt, and the centered cursor, which changes to let you know when and how you can use something you're pointing to. Auto-saving whenever you cross between loading areas(always accompanied by two context-free lines, that you have to place, deduce the meaning of) means you don't think about that aspect; and whenever you stop playing, you can store progress, as well. Sadly, their efforts towards such does lead to some loss of consequence; I won't detail it, I mention it merely as one of the only criticisms of this as a whole. The opening asks you to lose yourself to this, and I concur. Let go. Play alone. In a pitch black room. With headphones. You can thank me later.

    Having already explained how this, like its spiritual predecessor, breathes life into point and click adventure(in addition to puzzles that require you to break/lift etc. objects around you, there are the traditional, inventory-based combine/get key/bring to other place and use ones), a genre dead since 3D became prevalent, let me tell you why this stands out as survival horror. There are no weapons, and the well-designed, monstrous enemies are few in number as well as variety. Conflicts are rare enough that you never get used to them or feel safe(yet without leading to frustration), and are driven by the prevalent disempowerment of the player. You can't fight back, and have to hide, and failing that, run. As fast as you can. You can be obscured by the dark, and crouch around a corner and/or behind something. They will "patrol"/search if they don't know where you are, and if they spot you, they will chase you down - at same or greater speed as you can muster, killing you with two blows. Buy yourself seconds with debris and putting a door between them and you... get your bearings while they tear through it to get at you.

    The thunderous score makes you incapable of "missing" that one is near, and they always feel like they could come by, in spite of the scripted spawns(not outcomes, those are up to you!). Ah, so, avoid the light, I hear you say? No, you will have to balance it - static sources that can't be turned off(!) such as candelabra and torches with the plentiful Tinderboxes(matches) or the carried rare-oil-consuming lantern that you find early. Why? Because that's how you manage Sanity. And if not, you will start hallucinating(blurring, seeing dead bodies, hearing a consistent, sharp note etc.), and you will be of no use. Acting is average. Writing, story and multiple endings(conclusive, yet leaving room for interpretation) are satisfying, based on setup and pay-off.

    The 9 and a half hour length and lack of replayability is helped by being mod-friendly, and the free(at least on Steam) DLC of "Remember"(five short stories by Mikael Hedberg, the writer of this) and "Justine"(a 1-2 hour independent level, with a Portal-esque approach, testing your strength of character). There is a lot of disturbing content and some brutal, bloody gore in this. I warmly recommend this to any fan of Edgar Allan Poe, Clive Barker and The Haunting of 1963. 8/10
    10minihalkoja

    Best horror game so far

    What else can I say? This game has it all. Atmosphere, music, gameplay and a legacy. The story is just amazing and has it's twists and moral questions. The gameplay is also amazing, using physics and freedom of grabbing objects. The game is already getting quite old, but the graphics have aged well and the game's custom story system still gets new creations every year from fans of the game. The devs haven't forgotten the game either and added new content in 2018. And the soundtrack, it's beautifully done. A work of art. I give a 10/10 and a great applause to every writer, composer and programmer of this game. Good job.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      The game takes place on the 19th of August, which is also the birthday of Richard Topping, Daniel's voice actor.
    • Gaffes
      In one of Alexander's notes a dog is referred to as Canis lupus familiaris. This is the modern taxonomic classification, in 1839 the correct term would be Canis domesticus/familiaris.
    • Citations

      Daniel: [Opening scene] Don't forget... some things mustn't be forgotten. The shadow hunting me... I must hurry. My name is Daniel, I live in London... at... at Mayfair. What have I done? This is crazy. Don't forget, don't forget, I must stop him, focus! My name is... is... I am... Daniel.

    • Connexions
      Featured in Zero Punctuation: Amnesia: The Dark Descent (2010)

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    Détails

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    • Date de sortie
      • 8 septembre 2010 (Royaume-Uni)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Suède
    • Site officiel
      • Official site
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Horror Cabinet
    • Société de production
      • Frictional Games
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

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