Contents RemasterThe 2011 PC, PlayStation 3, and Xbox 360 versions do not allow cheats without modding due to the console being disabled. However, cheats can be modded into the 2011 PC remaster using one of two methods.For the 'ultimate' experience, install Peixoto's Patch first and then do the OmriKoresh mod. This is because Peixoto's Patch also contains some other features, while OmriKoresh mod also has more cheat features.Peixoto's Patch methodCheats binding.Peixoto's Patch can be downloaded via the or a. In the 'Patches' folder in the.zip you just downloaded, in 'Alice', extract the 'base' to your own Alice folder (replace the files if it asks).Cheats in-game.To access the cheats in-game, if you're using a controller, press the 'triangle' on a PlayStation layout. If you're using a keyboard, you must first bind the cheats key in the actual in-game control settings.Options will appear:.
Summon Meta-Essence. Use Rage Box.
Use Grasshopper Tea. Use Looking Glass. Have all toysOmriKoresh mod methodOmriKoresh's mod can be downloaded via, which also includes mirrors in case the download gives an error.Drag ONLY the two files 'pak8mod.pk3' and 'autoexec.cfg' into the game's 'base' folder, and ensure 'autoexec.cfg' only contains a single line:bind o 'pushmenu ali'While in-game, press O to show the console and Escape to hide it. Options include:. Disabling the HUD. Noclip. First person view.
No target (enemies act like Alice isn't there). Infinite and. All. AllGeneral cheats NameCodeEffectGodmodegodToggles godmode.No clippingnoclipToggles no clipping.All weaponswussGives all weapons.Give itemsgive ITEM NAMEGives Alice an item. For the ITEM NAME codes, see.Map selectmap MAP NAMEOpens the selected map.
The creepy old ‘Skool House’.Let’s take a step back. The off-kilter, borderline insane original books – “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland” and “Through the Looking Glass”- are true masterpieces of the surreal, featuring little in the way of plot or straight narrative. While most people consider them works for children, they’re perhaps only fully appreciated by adults, filled as they are with so many obscure references, puns and other oddities. They’re also filled with fairly dark imagery—for example, the Queen of Hearts has this odd desire to behead her enemies. It’s not frightening to most kids because it’s tempered with things that kids really like, such as smiling cats, talking animals and fantastical locations.The books are wonderfully unpredictable and this game shares that one surreal sense of skewed reality. In McGee’s version, our heroine loses her parents in a fire and ends up in an asylum.
American Mcgee's Alice Windows 10
She’s older than she was in the books, and though she’s wearing the familiar frock we’ve all come to associate with Alice, it is now decorated with “dark and twisted” tribal symbols and a skull broach to hold her bow in place. Topping it off with combat boots and dark hair, she ends up looking more like Christina Ricci’s Wednesday Addams.On one particular count, the game is quite faithful to the spirit of Carroll’s book, putting forth a world where the “bad” adults consistently marginalize Alice. She returns to Wonderland to reclaim her sanity and finds that the Red Queen has gone on a rampage and enslaved the denizens of Wonderland. She immediately runs into the white rabbit (who, in his usual fashion, runs off) and the incredibly well voice-acted Cheshire cat, who with his tribal tattoos and earring makes him, in the words of Alice, look “quite mangy” as opposed to “dark and twisted.” He offers up occasional obvious advice and disappears. As you progress through the game, you’ll run across various familiar faces: the Queen of Hearts, the Mock Turtle, Tweedle Dee and Tweedle Dum, the Gryphon, and the Duchess.
Many people will talk about how “dark and edgy” McGee’s vision of wonderland is. The original DOOM (on which American McGee worked on) felt considerably darker because it inspired a sense of dread. The levels and character designs of Alice are infused with a sense of slightly morbid whimsy that owe a larger debt to Tim Burton’s vision of the afterlife in Beetlejuice—it’s all skewed angles and strange doorways. The game can never be truly horrific as it’s just too oddly beautiful.The entire production shows a lot of quality, from the weapon design to card soldiers that can be sliced in half with your knife. Alice looks fantastic and is well animated and voiced in the in-engine cut scenes. The Mad Hatter looks suitably mad, the Queen’s card troops look appropriately two-dimensional and the chess pieces in the spectacular White Queen levels are incredibly cute even when they attack you.
In every other aspect this is a straightforward adventure, with lots of simple combat and sometimes too frequent platforming. The game’s a hefty affair, weighing in at several days’ worth of gaming, and the resulting story in all its nonsensical perplexity is somewhat of a bad acid trip. Play at your own peril.System Requirements: Pentium II 400 Mhz, 64 MB RAM, 16 MB Video, Win 9X/ME/2000.