Alice: Madness Returns: Difference between revisions

From WE Computers Museum
(fix image and tense, add line break)
No edit summary
Line 6: Line 6:
   systems        = [[PlayStation 3]], [[Windows]], [[Xbox 360]]|
   systems        = [[PlayStation 3]], [[Windows]], [[Xbox 360]]|
   release        = '''PlayStation 3, Windows, Xbox 360'''<br />North America: June 14, 2011<br />Europe: June 16, 2011<br />Japan: July 21, 2011|
   release        = '''PlayStation 3, Windows, Xbox 360'''<br />North America: June 14, 2011<br />Europe: June 16, 2011<br />Japan: July 21, 2011|
   added_to_museum = Not yet|
   added_to_museum = Windows (''[[Alice: Madness Returns - The Complete Collection|Complete Collection]]''): July 5, 2024|
}}
}}
'''''Alice: Madness Returns''''' was a [[2011]] [[video game]] by [[Spicy Horse]] loosely based on the [[Lewis Carroll]] novels ''[[Alice's Adventures in Wonderland]]'' from [[1865]] and ''[[Through the Looking-Glass]]'' from [[1871]]. It was the sequel to ''[[American McGee's Alice]]''.
'''''Alice: Madness Returns''''' was a [[2011]] [[video game]] by [[Spicy Horse]] loosely based on the [[Lewis Carroll]] novels ''[[Alice's Adventures in Wonderland]]'' from [[1865]] and ''[[Through the Looking-Glass]]'' from [[1871]]. It was the sequel to ''[[American McGee's Alice]]''.

Revision as of 03:03, 6 October 2024

Alice - Madness Returns cover.jpg
Alice: Madness Returns
Developer Rogue Entertainment
Publisher Electronic Arts
Platforms PlayStation 3, Windows, Xbox 360
Released PlayStation 3, Windows, Xbox 360
North America: June 14, 2011
Europe: June 16, 2011
Japan: July 21, 2011
Added to
Museum
Windows (Complete Collection): July 5, 2024

Alice: Madness Returns was a 2011 video game by Spicy Horse loosely based on the Lewis Carroll novels Alice's Adventures in Wonderland from 1865 and Through the Looking-Glass from 1871. It was the sequel to American McGee's Alice.

American McGee's Alice' was an action-adventure video game. In the previous game, Alice Liddell was traumatized after she survived a fire that killed her family at seven years old. She was left catatonic and was put into Rutledge Asylum. Eleven years later, in 1874, she managed to overcome her trauma and was discharged.

A year later, in 1875, Alice has a room at the orphanage known as the Houndsditch Home for Wayward Youth. She is under the care of a psychiatrist named Dr. Angus Bumby, and Alice works for the orphanage as a maid and errand runner.