By: Robert Murphy
It feels rather fitting that a company would come along
after thirty years to the decaying ruins of Freddy Fazbear’s Pizzeria and try
to earn a quick dollar by marketing off of the mysterious deaths that took
place there so many years ago. Yes, we head into the future for the third
installment of Five Nights at Freddy’s
but not a lot has changed considering you’re still a lowly security guard
working the night shift in this new establishment. Your work conditions haven’t
gotten a heck of a lot better either, dingy work environment, small little
office space and the added treat of some of your electrical system
malfunctioning and causing you to slowly lose oxygen and hallucinate. And the
getting murdered thing too, I don’t know how that slipped my mind. This quickly
brought together facility doesn’t feel like the greatest environments but that
certainly added to its horrifying charm as all the haphazardly put together
pieces created a psychological terror.
As I said, bits and pieces from the seemingly long forgotten
Fazbear’s Pizzeria have slowly come together by the unknown owner of your new
place of work, Fazbear’s Fright. The owner knows the legend and the hauntings
all those years ago are sure to earn him a pretty penny on opening day, if it
ever gets that far. As you look around the ten different rooms on your first
night you will see old arcade style video games, tattered posters and the
various disembodied pieces of the former Fazbear gang. Freddy, Bonnie, Chica
and Foxy now decorate certain parts of the establishment in the hopes to scare
kids and teens as they travel from start to exit. But, if they’re on the walls
and decorating the place, you might be wondering what there is to worry you and
this was also my big question my first night as well. Scouring the place
looking for something to scare me I found nothing but then night 2 came.
Your new enemy has apparently just been found by the owners,
a faulty and decaying machine that looks like Bonnie but has simply been named Springtrap
due to a faulty mechanism in the suit. How the owner didn’t see the rotted
corpse inside, I will never know. This horrifying Frankenstein monster is now
roaming the halls and trying to get inside your cramped little office space to
say “hello” and you have to stop it. The new security system appears much like
the old one you had but now you also have an audio, camera and ventilation
screen so you can reboot faulty systems when they inevitably break down. Your
audio system is your line of defense, activating the eerie voice of Five Nights 2 character Balloon Boy in
various rooms will lead Springtrap towards them and far away from you. But, as
I said, the systems are faulty and will break down so you must use them wisely.
Camera systems being down lets Springtrap run amuck and get close to you, audio
being down leads to not being able to distract your new foe and don’t get me
started on ventilation.
The terrifying factor often comes from this system going
down, sometimes there is an alert to let you know to reset it and sometimes
there isn’t, but you will know whether or not it breaks down when the
hallucinations start. Springtrap may be your main enemy and the only one who
can kill you but the hallucinations help him out greatly. Freddy, Chica, Ballon
Boy, Puppet Master and Foxy all return in “shadow” versions of themselves and
each have their own ways of messing with you or scaring the crap out of you.
Personally, Chica was a favorite of mine, when you start to go loopy, you would
see a terrifying vision of her in an arcade game and then you would exit the
security monitor to find her in the room, jumping out at you. This causes your
character to panic and it will deeply mess with your head, the others are just
as terrifying. This new mind game aspect was quite interesting to me and felt
like a great way to shack up the dynamic to the Five Nights players have come to know.
This also brings up the new aspect that you really never
tried before in one of these games and that is looking around the facility. In Five Nights at Freddy’s 1 + 2, you
probably spent most of your time focused on what’s in front of you or one or
two rooms, not doing too much exploring do to fear and wanting not to lose
focus and die. With Five Nights 3 players
are more inclined to keep their eyes on the screen so they know where
Springtrap is and move he/she/whatever the hell it is to where you need it to
be. This helps the hallucinations grab you as you’re forced to look in the
various rooms and then have the gaze of any one of your foes be upon you.
Puppet Master could appear in front of you and block your access to the
monitors or Foxy could shriek in your ears, messing up your audio and not
allowing you to hear Springtrap get up in your face. It’s a balanced system of
fear and enjoyment that I loved.
While it is enjoyable though, it does lose its appeal as you
progress to later nights in the game. The problem with having a single enemy
that can harm you is that things can get a little tedious once you’re use to
the events each night can hold. Yes, the scares are terrifying when Chica or
any of the shadow cast comes to greet you but they can’t harm you so really you
just have to calm yourself and keep an eye out for good ole Springy. This also
makes the harder nights appear to drag on for a bit and fear more luck based,
before with the other Five Nights games
you could learn to stop your foes but now the hallucinations are inevitable and
you can’t prevent them so it becomes trial and error till you win. This mainly
happened for me on Nightmare mode which is the 6th Night so I was
glad the tedium didn’t come any sooner than that.
In conclusion, I’m a little sad to know that Five Nights at Freddy’s 3 will most
likely be the final game for the series as the ending for the game seems final
and getting all the secrets throughout, ties the game up in a nice little bow.
Secrets have always been hidden in these games but now their importance is much
higher so keep your eyes peeled. I loved the game though for it’s new mind game
angle and the genuine fear that comes across for your character now. Springtrap
is also a terrifying new enemy, keeping him busy and avoiding systems errors
makes the games all the more engaging and difficult. I only wish the content
lasted much longer than it did, fighting off only one “real” enemy doesn’t work
forever and will wear down the fun after awhile but still I’ve had a blast with
this trilogy regardless.
Good:
- The new shadow
enemies add a new level of terror
- Springtrap is
gruesome and a fantastic enemy to face off against
- Your new environment
is gritty, fun and filled with little secrets
- A few questions
remain but if you reach the “true” end I believe many of the fans will be
satisfied
Bad:
- The singular enemy
aspect is good but in later levels it will start to drag
- You will undoubtedly
build up a tolerance to the jump scares and they won’t effect you as much as
you try to complete the game
Scully Rating: 8.0 out of 10
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