Beyond Two Souls on Playstation 3 – The DVDfever Review & Full Video Walkthrough

Beyond Two Souls

Beyond Two Souls is the first video game to feature Hollywood actress Ellen Page, although many have assumed she was also in Sony’s recent summer smash hit, The Last Of Us.

Yes, the lead character was called Ellie and she looked like a younger version of Ellen Page, but she was actually portrayed by Ashley Johnson

About Beyond Two Souls and this centres around a young woman, Jodie Holmes (Page), who has supernatural powers and a link to an entity named Aiden. This is something she was born with, but from a young age she ends up in the hands of the government so they can perform tests on her. Clearly no life for a child, let alone a young adult, but when you’re special it seems you’ve got no choice.

Tasked with testing her is Dr Nathan Dawkins, portrayed by Willem Dafoe – one of the best actors around, and who commented in his Metro 60-second interview that working on this game was a great new experience for him, partly because the format meant they could get through recording far more pages of scripts in a day than the average Hollywood movie because no-one had to physically get a set built right or lit right, or for them to be standing in the right place.


Beyond Two Souls – Complete Walkthrough (720p HD)


Beyond Two Souls gives you options along the way about how a conversation can go, but in the grand scheme of things, for the most part, it doesn’t affect anything important. Later on, different scenes will play depending on your selections giving it some replay value, but one thing that is very annoying about the game, is that some levels, such as Homeless (No.9) and Navajo (No.13) go on for anywhere between just under an hour, and a good 75 minutes. Yet, you can’t break off mid-level and come back to it. Surely, these should’ve been chaptered in some way so you could come back to it at a later point? I remember Assassin’s Creed: Revelations had something like this which allowed it. Given that some of these levels in BTS come straight after levels which have lasted just a few minutes, it makes it feel very uneven.

While it’s worth trying something different once in a while, if I wasn’t playing with Ellen Page, it might not be as interesting. It does seem to have a certain charm, though, as it plays out like a cross between an interactive movie experience and a bit like a modern-day Dragon’s Lair, putting the joypad in certain directions or pressing buttons to get somewhere.

Overall, though, it’s not a gameplay style I’d like to see encouraged because gameplay styles are quickly copied – how many games were based on the original Tomb Raider engine, for example – and not all of them are going to have the backing of an interesting storyline and great actors in the lead roles. So, a lot of them will end up feeling like one big training level – like the early parts of this game – when I’d much rather just get stuck into the game proper. In fact, a good example of this sort of game which can NOT be recommended is last year’s Resident Evil 6.

Go to page 2 for the next part of my review.


Beyond Two Souls Walkthrough: Part 01 – The Experiment (720p HD)



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