![]() ![]() This may seem like a nit-picky, largely irrelevant complaint, but it actually affected my immersion. ![]() For starters, it struck me as unrealistic that almost everyone talked to themselves. Let’s get into the little irksome details throughout that I just couldn’t ignore. This served as brief entertainment, but as I said, I’d would’ve preferred more time with the main protagonists. Most of the other characters introduced had only one sole purpose, and that was to die in the most horrific ways possible, each instance trying to outdo the last. Whilst Everson did a good job in capturing the nastiness of their sudden invasion, I found myself wishing the focus back upon Rachel and Eric, as I felt more committed to them in the long run. The greatest and worst biological weapon, their only instinct to wipe out life. ![]() The very life cycle of these unnatural creatures made my skin crawl a bizarre rotation of fly and spider, with bites that could implant eggs, as well as paralysing venom. And flesh they got, copious amounts of it, from animals to humans of all ages everything that breathed appeared to be fair game. Instead of the eight-legged critters that want nothing more than to live human-free lives, were abominations hungry for the warmth of living (and dead) flesh. Who isn’t afraid of spiders? Well, me actually, but the way in which arachnids were presented here was no doubt alarming. ![]()
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