American McGee's Alice/Heartwarming: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
m (clean up, removed: Category:Video Games/Heartwarming)
No edit summary
 
Line 3: Line 3:
* The Journal Manual from the first game is both heartwarming and creepy, since as you read it you see the Doctor becoming more and more attached to Alice, and you remember that he's been treating her for ten years. He's most definitely on her side for her to recover - but he does seem to like the idea of her remaining in the asylum all her life. It's effectively Florence Nightingale Syndrome.
* The Journal Manual from the first game is both heartwarming and creepy, since as you read it you see the Doctor becoming more and more attached to Alice, and you remember that he's been treating her for ten years. He's most definitely on her side for her to recover - but he does seem to like the idea of her remaining in the asylum all her life. It's effectively Florence Nightingale Syndrome.


----
{{reflist}}
:<small>Back to ''[[{{ROOTPAGENAME}}]]''</small>


{{reflist}}
[[Category:American McGee's Alice]]
[[Category:Heartwarming]]
[[Category:{{ROOTPAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:{{SUBPAGENAME}}]]
{{Heartwarming}}

Latest revision as of 16:51, 11 October 2018


  • The ending of the game, after you've blown the Queen up, is very heartwarming, Especially for the fact that Alice smiles properly for the first time in game. Sadly, it's also Harsher in Hindsight if you know what happens next...
  • The Journal Manual from the first game is both heartwarming and creepy, since as you read it you see the Doctor becoming more and more attached to Alice, and you remember that he's been treating her for ten years. He's most definitely on her side for her to recover - but he does seem to like the idea of her remaining in the asylum all her life. It's effectively Florence Nightingale Syndrome.

Back to American McGee's Alice