In June, the P.T.-inspired psychological horror game Allison Road met the same fate as the demo that inspired it. The game’s publisher, Team17, quietly confirmed its cancellation and promised to issue a statement within the “next few days.” Fast forward nearly two weeks later and we got our statement, but still no explanation. There wasn’t much to glean from it, unless you weren’t aware of the “many layers of complexity” involved in modern games development.
It seemed as if there was no way this could end well, and that made the news of its revival all the more surprising. Allison Road creator Christian Kesler has resumed development of the title, albeit with a slightly refocused direction, as Kesler recently explained in an interview with IGN.
“After the set back, I took a bit of a break from working on it and re-evaluated all the work...
It seemed as if there was no way this could end well, and that made the news of its revival all the more surprising. Allison Road creator Christian Kesler has resumed development of the title, albeit with a slightly refocused direction, as Kesler recently explained in an interview with IGN.
“After the set back, I took a bit of a break from working on it and re-evaluated all the work...
- 8/23/2016
- by Dominie Lee
- FamousMonsters of Filmland
Matthew Byrd Aug 23, 2016
The spiritual successor to cancelled survival horror game P.T. is back in development. Allison Road still lives, its creator confirms...
Allison Road, the fan-made spiritual successor to the cancelled Silent Hills demo P.T., was believed to be dead in the water after developer Far From Home and publisher Team 17 failed to reach an agreement regarding the game's continued production earlier this year. But now, it appears that the title will continue to be developed after all.
Far From Home co-founder and Allison Road's creator Christian Kesler released a statement to IGN in which he confirms that he will continue to develop Allison Road without the support of Team 17 or, at present, any other publisher.
"After the setback, I took a bit of a break from working on it and re-evaluated all the work that had been done so far," said Kesler. "I started making a...
The spiritual successor to cancelled survival horror game P.T. is back in development. Allison Road still lives, its creator confirms...
Allison Road, the fan-made spiritual successor to the cancelled Silent Hills demo P.T., was believed to be dead in the water after developer Far From Home and publisher Team 17 failed to reach an agreement regarding the game's continued production earlier this year. But now, it appears that the title will continue to be developed after all.
Far From Home co-founder and Allison Road's creator Christian Kesler released a statement to IGN in which he confirms that he will continue to develop Allison Road without the support of Team 17 or, at present, any other publisher.
"After the setback, I took a bit of a break from working on it and re-evaluated all the work that had been done so far," said Kesler. "I started making a...
- 8/22/2016
- Den of Geek
Cancelled indie horror game Allison Road has been revived and re-entered development, creator Christian Kesler has confirmed. Kesler confirmed the news to IGN in a recent interview, telling the site that he’s “actually really happy to be able to announce that [Allison Road] will continue,” adding that he remains as devoted to the project as he was when the P.T.-inspired title was first announced two years ago.
Having received a positive reaction for Allison Road‘s original gameplay trailer and having secured half of the funding it needed as part of a Kickstarter drive, developer Lilith Ltd pulled their product midway through the crowdfunding campaign, announcing that Worms creator Team17 had made them an offer they couldn’t refuse, and would be publishing the game when it was ready to release.
However, none of that ever came to pass, and just a few months ago both parties confirmed that...
Having received a positive reaction for Allison Road‘s original gameplay trailer and having secured half of the funding it needed as part of a Kickstarter drive, developer Lilith Ltd pulled their product midway through the crowdfunding campaign, announcing that Worms creator Team17 had made them an offer they couldn’t refuse, and would be publishing the game when it was ready to release.
However, none of that ever came to pass, and just a few months ago both parties confirmed that...
- 8/22/2016
- by Joe Pring
- We Got This Covered
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