Those unfamiliar with the Clock Tower series need not feel left out, as its near-thirty-year history journeyed from humble beginnings to today’s long overdue return. Releasing first in 1995 exclusively in Japan, the original title proved you didn’t need blockbuster resources to build an atmosphere of dread.
Led by director Hifumi Kono’s passion, it drew from iconic Italian horror films to craft survival horror decades before the genre title existed. Playing as a girl stalked by an unstoppable killer, Clock Tower pioneered the style later popularized worldwide.
While acclaimed, its influence went underappreciated for years outside its homeland. That is until now, with Clock Tower: Rewind bringing the seminal tale stateside. This remaster resurrects the harrowing halls of 1995, but with upgrades befitting modern consoles.
For the first time, Western fans can experience what forged an enduring legacy, now enriched by enhancements while maintaining the essence of its slow-burn scares. Through WayForward’s loving preservation, a foundational fixture of the genre emerges from obscurity at long last.
The Twisted Tale
Jennifer Simpson finds herself in a strange new home along with other orphan girls, having been adopted by the wealthy Barrows family. But there’s an unsettling atmosphere from the start at the sprawling Gothic mansion, known locally as Clock Tower for its towering namesake.
When handler Mary departs to fetch the elusive Mr. Barrows, leaving the girls alone, a bloodcurdling scream shatters the uneasy quiet. Jennifer rushes to investigate, only to discover her celebrating friends have vanished without a trace.
It seems a shadowy presence stalks these winding halls. A monstrous creature that appears without warning, melting from the masonry itself. The deformed child known only as Scissorman cuts a haunting figure, his oversized shears announcing his gruesome work. As Jennifer explores in a desperate bid to escape and uncover the mansion’s dark secrets, Scissorman’s chilling theme plays on her nerves. His terrifying encounters leave the player fleeing in a panic.
Amid the mounting intrigue, clues hint at sinister pasts buried deep within these walls. Long-forgotten tales of cannibalism, Satanic rites, and engorged embryos and their connection to the estate’s accursed lineage. Piece by piece, Jennifer peers through the miasma to understand her adoptive family’s sordid history and haunting legacy. Her only allies are found in frayed manuscripts detailing prior victims’ final moments. The strain mounts as escape seems less and less plausible.
In this ominous labyrinth born of a madman’s disturbed dreams, Jennifer braces for the nightmare to deepen at every unlit corner. What nightmares still lie in wait-down corridors that seem to twist in on themselves, defying logic and reason? The murky plot thickens while survival proves a fleeting reward in this bleak and brutal game of cat and mouse.
Survival by the Cursor
Clock Tower reveals itself as a point-and-click horror of the old-school variety. Jennifer’s movements rely solely on cursory control, whether gliding the stick to search every corner or directing her escape from afar. This proves both a boon of freedom and a bane of imprecision, where split-second reactions hold dire consequences.
Combat remains thankfully absent, but encounters with the Scissorman bring equal panic. Hearing his tale shears signals a chase is nigh, and where he may materialize adds its own nightmarish surprise. Outmaneuvering his reach calls for strategies like obstacles, delaying devices, and well-timed concealment, provided the cursor aligns nimbly enough.
Progress elsewhere hinges on inventory puzzles. Clues lie tucked within furnishings and crannies, solver only through experimenting each item’s usage at the right moment. Often their purposes elude until stumbling upon inspired application, and roadblocks may bar progress until chance revelation elsewhere.
Aid comes through rewind, yet its scope proves limited against foes. A snap reaction saves from sudden ambush, but stalemates like dead ends require restarting the hunt entire. Salvation also comes by way of saving at any juncture, though reloading retains no unlocked rewards between reruns.
Through it all, multiple conclusions await depending on one’s detective work. Piecing scenarios shift with each fresh start, as do necessary keys and characters’ fates. This rewards revisitation, as small changes unveil new outcomes to uncover Clock Tower’s stalking secrets.
While dated controls frustrate, Clock Tower’s foundations endure through mood alone. Survival stems not from mainstays but clever compensation for limitations of an era past. Therein lies both its retro charm and lasting influence upon those who master its peculiar mechanics.
Return to Form
Despite its retrofitted canvas and 16-bit confines, Clock Tower invokes eerie wonder through visuals alone. Within crude pixels lies attention to detail that makes each foreboding corridor come alive. From dust-laden finery to flickering candles along crumbling walls, one feels history’s weight bearing down.
Sound, too, sinks its hooks with virtuosity. What strings and blips lack in richness, they gain in hints of lurking terrors. That haunting theme knows precisely when to play its panic-inducing song, keeping nerves drawn as tight as bowstrings. Across bare-bones limitations, it breathes verisimilitude into each choking heartbeat.
New content like expressive opening animations works wonders, immersing viewers in the gothic world awaiting within. Expertly marrying sight and sound, they set a chilling tone for the isolation to come. Options to tailor onscreen presentation only enhance engagement, whether nostalgic CRT filters or fitting aspect ratios.
For all technological marches, simple virtues like atmosphere endure. Clock Tower proves less is often more when vision and audio come together as kindred spirits. Through them the macabre depths of the human imagination emerge clear, darkness held at bay by a single flickering candle. In such ways does this pioneer still startle and delight in equal measure, its core spirit shining through unchanged.
Room for Improvement
Clock Tower pushes the player into nerve-shredding terrain with its unflinching approach. One slip or wrong instinct bringing unforgiving demise, restarting the long hunt entire. Jennifer’s restrictive control adds to the tension but loses out in accessibility. With no options for tuning sensitivity, fraught moments rely too heavily on flickering precision.
Unpalatable though some tactics feel, this style reflected its era. But modernizing holds merit, and opportunities were missed. The rewind serves as a mere bandage where surgery was needed. Its bounds remain too narrow to undo catastrophic errors in a game punishing them severely. A true checkpoint or tweaked autosave could have lessened frustrating replays, honing terror without dulling it through repetition.
Resourcefulness and puzzle-solving prove this survival’s true tests. Yet clunky controls and interfaces pose needless obstacles, demanding adaptation rather than immersed commitment. Dated mechanics undermine the compelling core, aging poorly where foundations could have weathered better with refinement.
Clock Tower established terrifying motifs deserving preservation and praise. But for newcomers, unlearning steep learning curves distracts more than enhances fragile frights. Its loyal cult following stems as much from triumph over shortcomings as fright itself. With sharper quality of life focus, this pioneering terror might have endured even firmer in popular favor, modernization strengthening rather than weakening stalking chills long disturbing the genre it helped birth.
Behind the Scenes Terror
Beyond its ghoulish gameplay lurks greater horrors yet in Clock Tower’s bonus treats. A wealth of making-of material surfaces from the shadows, summoning fans into the development hell that birthed this beast.
First appears director Hifumi Kono for a spellbinding forty-minute interrogation. His recollections peel back the curtain on conceptualizing terror in a pre-survival era, budgetary demons conquered through nothing but nightmarish vision.
Artworks then materialize, preserving pixel portfolios that birthed Clock Tower’s crumbling manse. From concept to character, each sketch seeds the source of screeching sounds stalking corridors long after leaving them.
Comics in turn spring to disturbing life. Wordless tales adapt cinematic sequences freeze-framed between scrolling dialogue, while newly summoned voices resound as choruses from silent era serials of yore.
Soundtrack samplings and strategy sleuthing scan further depths. Mapping unseen avenues and avenging unsolved enigmas to satisfy any fan’s fiendish curiosity. Under moonlit menus, one rediscovers a nightmare that never loosened its macabre grip, ensuring its timeless horrors haunt forevermore.
A Legacy Worth Rediscovering
While years leave their mark, Clock Tower’s place in shaping genres withstands the test of time. Its foundations endure where flesh may falter, pioneering spirits that stir fresh terrors in new generations. True, antiquated designs impose frustrations modern gamers little wish to endure.
Yet for those seeking gaming’s past or curious of influences now commonplace, this remaster delivers a special glimpse behind curtains long closed. Fans beholding origins freshly imagined find lasting magic lies not in technical wizardry alone. Here a visionary’s unbound imagination proves far harder to date than any code.
For all its imperfections, Clock Tower: Rewind resurrects nightmares of yesteryear through care and passion alone. Accessible as never before, its hallowed halls ring with echoes of what seeded survival horrors throughout.
As preservation, this release triumphs through faithfulness to frights that refuse relinquishing their grip, even decades on. For historians or terror-seekers alike, its unreasonable demands matter less than respawning reveries long dormant. Sometimes the old ways show best the new, what fears yet lie in wait-down darkened corridors where legacies linger longest in living.
The Review
Clock Tower: Rewind
While Clock Tower: Rewind preserves an important piece of gaming history, its unmodernized mechanics undermine the experience for all but the most devoted of fans. This long overdue localization accomplishes its most basic aim, but opportunities were missed to elevate the terror to match its legacy through sorely needed quality of life adjustments. As a remnant of horror's pioneering days, its influence remains profound, yet as a standalone experience, its shortcomings overshadow far more than its strengths.
PROS
- Preserves an important piece of gaming history
- Offers new accessibility for the classic horror experience
- Provides interesting behind the scenes extrasGameplay is hampered by outdated and clumsy mechanics.
CONS
- Gameplay is hampered by outdated and clumsy mechanics.
- Controls remain unintuitive and unconfigurable.
- Rewind feature and saving are underwhelming remedies.