
In some cases, it’s easier said than done – with them being so heavily involved in licensed properties, many of their games have now been removed from digital storefronts. Yet I recently played the Telltale Batman games for the first time and enjoyed them so much that it made me want to explore more of the defunct company’s games. Weary of the impact being dulled, I didn’t play any more of the games in the series, wanting to be left with a perfect – if incomplete – story. Then there was that ending, which I’m not ashamed to admit made me cry it had a huge impact on me – to this day, I can remember almost every moment.

It was maddening to wait for the next episode when one finished, given the cliffhangers each part ended on – but that only added to the anticipation and excitement when new episodes were released.

At the time, I’d just secured myself a shiny new iPad 3 and it was the perfect game to play on it, the touchscreen controls fitting the game’s dialogue heavy, quick-time-event style brilliantly.
#The walking dead season two box art series#
As a fan of Robert Kirkman, Tony Moore and Charlie Adlard’s The Walking Dead comic series – which I read from the very first issue on the day it was released, way back in 2003 – I was very keen to try out Telltale’s episodic, narrative-based adventure game when it first released in 2012.
