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F.e.a.r Extraction Point Access

Of course, Alma Wade—the psychic, ghostly child-woman who hates you—has other plans. What separates Extraction Point from its predecessor is its sheer, unrelenting nihilism. The original F.E.A.R. had moments of light; office buildings with fluorescent bulbs, industrial zones with safety signs. Extraction Point has none of that.

The lighting engine, still impressive today in its stylistic brutality, casts shadows that move when you aren't looking. You will shoot at a flickering light at least three times. You will be right to do so. You can’t have a F.E.A.R. game without new toys and new monsters. On the toy side, the Minigun and Laser Carbine are added to the arsenal. The Minigun turns the slow-motion mechanic into a symphony of brass and gore, while the Laser Carbine is a surgical scalpel for popping Replica soldier helmets. f.e.a.r extraction point

Released in late 2006, just a year after Monolith Productions’ genre-defining first-person shooter, Extraction Point wasn’t developed by the original team. Instead, it was handed off to TimeGate Studios. For most franchises, a "B-team" expansion is a death knell—a quick cash grab of recycled assets and lazy level design. But in a twist of fate, Extraction Point did something remarkable: It understood F.E.A.R. better than its creators did. Of course, Alma Wade—the psychic, ghostly child-woman who