The Path – A Game Unlike Most

I first heard about this game on NPR. Rose_well This  game, The Path is dark horror game.  It is the tale of 6 girls on their way to grandma’s house.  It should sound familiar as the game is based on the tale of little red riding hood.  But this isn’t a game for little girls.

This is a game for women.

There is only one rule in the game.  Stay on the path.  But rules are made to be broken.  As you walk each character down the path, it’s easy to find distractions, birds, sounds, a mysterious girl in white, and various artifacts shadowed in the distance.  The moment you step off the path, color leaves your world, and you are inundated with sounds.  The path disappears as you go deeper and grandma’s house disappears from your thoughts as survival becomes paramount yet a red herring.

For the goal, you see,  is to find your wolf.

The wolf is different for each girl and depends on the desires the girls talk about as they wander.  The wolf is rebellion and consequence.  It’s the choice in life that’s not always pretty but also something you want.  When you encounter the wolf, the imagery of what comes after is more than disturbing.  It alludes to rape and murder.  This isn’t a game where you come out alive.

In a sense it’s a game of innocence lost.  The themes of growth, life and adolescence prevail here, with a moral imperative of reminding you where bad choices leave.  To be good you must stay on the path but if you do, you won’t grow or learn.

Life’s lessons are hard.

If you like horror games you might like this one.  The Path is slow and deliberate.  The game is covered in a Gaussian blur and cracked reality.  It’s disturbing and enlightening.  There is no direct violence but it defiantly alludes to it.  More than once my phone would go off and I would jump.  Letting out a small scream.  And all I was doing?  I walked alone in the woods.

The Thief of Always by Clive Barker

The Thief of Always by Clive Barker is an imaginative children’s horror story in which 10 year-old Harvey is whisked away from his boring life by Rictus, the smiling demon. Rictus takes Harvey to the Holiday House, a place were a year equals a day and no one ever ages, really.

Frightening and fun this spooky bedtime story was fun to read both for myself and by daughter. Fully imagined, the world of Holiday House has its delights and it’s nightmares. I love exploring it.

Anno Dracula by Kim Newman

Kim Newman decided to rewrite the end of Dracula…I’m really not sure who we should blame1.

The book isn’t bad. It’s just too much of a montage. Every pulp/vampire/horror/gothic figure is there…except maybe Blacula. Dracula is now Prince Regent to Queen Victoria. Vampires & Humans live in an X-Men universe kind of peace. The heroes of Dracula are either dead or undead, with the notable exception of Dr. Seaward…who has become Jack the Ripper. This time, however, he’s killing vampire whores.

But the fun doesn’t stop there.

We’ve got Sherlock Homes, the Stokers, Genevieve, Moreau, Dr. Jekyll, and any one else that appeared in 19th century literature, history or otherwise. Some only make cameos, some are main characters, some are only mentioned, but all are there.

The amount of characters in this book was truly phenomenal. Newman only concentrated on fleshing out the main ones as most of the characters had already been fleshed out by their creators (or were real people themselves).

And plot? Find Jack the Ripper, and a little subplot of depose Dracula. Not much to go on as really the author only seems to want you to care about her spotlight montage.

It is a fun read if a little depressing. For the entire monstrosity, Newman gives the monsters as much humanity as any live man…more so in some ways. I liked Genevieve and I mourned for her immortality. I think that was want the author was truly commenting on. Immortality is truly a bitch.

The Vampire Encyclopedia by Matthew Bunson

This is an older copy of the Vampire Encyclopedia. New editions have been updated with the latest additions to Vampire fiction. This book came out shortly after the movie, Bram Stoker’s Dracula in the early 90’s. It is a listing of vampire myth, literature, fiction, TV shows, and movies from around the world. Not only is it extremely interesting for any one interested in Vampires it is essential for reading pastiche books without having read all the background info for those books. I read it just before reading Anno Dracula, by mistake not by design, but it made reading that book more enjoyable.

If you are interested in Vampire lore, this is a must have book.