Perhaps ironically, Axel is killed by said monster, now seen as the alien. Amanda bumps into a survivor named Axel, who informs her of a ‘monster’ is that running loose on the ship, but is willing to help her find her friends in exchange for a place on the Torrens. After making her way around Sevastopol, she notices that something bad has happened – the station is barely functioning, people stranded on the station are trying to kill her and the Working Joe androids are acting on their own accord. As Amanda, Taylor and Samuels spacewalk to the Sevastopol station via a EVA line, however it gets cut down my debris and the trio become seperated.įortunately, Amanda makes it safely onto the station and decides to try and locate the other two. Their ship – the Torrens – manages the locate the Sevastopol space station that took the Nostromo flight recorder from another ship, the Anesidora. After very little persuasion (which is understandable), Amanda joins the crew of Samuels, Nina Taylor and Diane Verlaine. She is approached by Christopher Samuels after the Weyland-Yutani corporation have located the flight recorder of the Nostromo – the ship from the first movie that Ellen Ripley was onboard of. Let’s get to it, shall we?Īs mentioned above, the protagonist is Amanda Ripley – daughter of Ellen Ripley who was the main protagonist for all four of the Alien movies. In this review, I’ll be focusing on the presentation, the gameplay, and the story before giving my final conclusion. But we’ll talk about the story in a minute. It is set 15 years after the first Alien movie and focuses on Ellen Ripley’s daughter Amanda. Well, that was removed because I got the name from the comic, not the game, but both were wrong anyways.Alien: Isolation was released on 7th October 2014 by Creative Assembly and SEGA for the PC, Xbox and PlayStation platforms (along with others that I don’t recognize). I was planning on going through the Isolation pages at some point, but my to-do list is long :)- LEIGH BURNE ( Talk) 12:38, Janu(UTC) Lol. Should I change the page to explain or note this? The Cruentus ( talk) ( Contribs) 12:34, Janu(UTC) After reading the comic, I too got the impression he was the Anesidora crew member. That is of course assuming it is the same person. Also I don't thinks Meeks is a civilian aboard Sevastopol, but the second crew member who investigated the Derelict with Marlow, especially since he hallucinates the words "Anesidora". Henry Marlow addressed his two crew-members by saying "Foster" and then "Meeks" but it was clear to me in both audio and subtitles that he was referring to them as seperate people. I already knew that "Foster" was potentially a mistake, likely caused by dialogue in Alien: Isolation. As we're in agreement, I'll go ahead and rename.- LEIGH BURNE ( Talk) 12:13, Janu(UTC) I noted this before in the trivia section but someone reverted it.yes I am looking at you Mr.Toa lol. I haven't gotten around to changing that.- Toa Quarax ( Talk) 00:43, Janu(UTC) OK. Plus I find it weird they'd give him a first name like Foster when there's already a Foster in his crew.- LEIGH BURNE ( Talk) 16:29, Janu(UTC) I think they're calling out for Catherine Foster (perhaps a reference to how she's the original host in the game, given that the apparitions have distinctly Xenomorph-like mouths). I just read the comic, and when the apparitions in his dream are calling "Fosssterrrr!" they aren't facing him, but rather pounding on a door with their backs to him. I think it's just Meeks from the Anesidora crew encountered in the game. I'm not convinced this guy's first name is Foster.
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