NPR

'Dead Space' Review: A new voice for a recurring nightmare

This year's tastefully refurbished Dead Space provides plenty of reasons to revisit the sci-fi horror classic.
Grim systems engineer, Isaac Clarke, in the ruins of the USG Ishimura.

Imagine a haunted house attraction you first visited fifteen years ago. The wallpaper is peeling, the paint cracking, the animatronic ghosts jerky and faded.

Then imagine someone knocks it down and rebuilds it brick-by-brick. They plaster the walls, haul in spookier ghouls, add frightening new pictures to the frames.

You approach the house with trepidation — how could it possibly replicate the scares and thrills you so fondly remember? But by the time you leave, you can't stop smiling.

That's exactly what makes this year's remake so exciting. It proves that a timeless game built on a solid foundation can feel as fresh in 2023 as it felt in 2008 — for newcomers and aficionados alike.

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