Theresia: Dear Emile review

Not so much spooky as soul-crushingly depressing

12DOVE Verdict

Pros

  • +

    Finally solving some annoying puzzle

  • +

    Competently gloomy inner-monologue

  • +

    Putting DS down

  • +

    staring at clouds

Cons

  • -

    Ponderously walking repetitive halls

  • -

    Moving a chair and being stabbed

  • -

    Wanting to die

Why you can trust 12DOVE Our experts review games, movies and tech over countless hours, so you can choose the best for you. Find out more about our reviews policy.

At this time of year, little can be more entertaining than horror games. It’s fun to be scared, whether the fright is coming from the simple “1, 2, 3…Boo!” approach or a deeper, more atmospheric method. Whilescary gamesmay not always put you in a great state of mind, only Theresia: Dear Emile, a poor excuse for a first-person-adventure-horror game, can fill players with such melancholy and hopelessness.

The game starts with the old chestnut of an amnesiac leading lady lost in a strange place she doesn’t recognize. Her surroundings are dingy, copper colored with old blood, and the stink of death hangs in the air. Behind each door of this hellhole is some disquieting scene. But the setting has no immediate danger to it; it’s just a foul place you want to leave, not explore. No one else is in this maze of horrors she must escape, though she does find all these papers addressed to Emile giving her clues to her situation.

It all plays in the way of adventure games of old: trying to find the one tiny important spot on a single static screen using the confused reasoning of a mad man. Why put out a fire by finding and placing a hose on a faucet when there are pots and pans around perfectly capable of carrying water? That’s just one example of the illogical way to solve several of the games puzzles. And in case you get bored of that, there is abundant backtracking. Yay.

But the main problem with searching for items is that the whole hideous place is covered in little traps to make you to distrust any choice or experimentation. Want to check a table for clues? Uh oh, a needle just stabbed you. Feel like checking the next one? There are ways around the traps for the cautious, but these little ambushes slow everything down and annoy instead of creating the sense of dread or fear as they were probably intended.

Aside from sharp, hidden things, Theresia has no enemies; it’s more like your surroundings are the enemy. But your “enemy” doesn’t look very good; when searching for clues you’re stuck with a grainy picture, meanwhile you walk from room to room in the simplest of 3D hallways. Plus the game’s repetitive and shallow soundtrack only makes it worse.

Theresia’s malaise really sets in when it comes to storytelling. Exploring the hallways, going from room to room looking for clues and keys -it’s all told via first person narration. Not a bad idea, but the view from inside her head is worse than repugnant sights outside. When hurt, she explains thoroughly just how sickening the pain is and how horrible the blood looks. Plus you don’t see what she looks like, so you can only imagine a scared girl in constant pain and confusion. Not our favorite past time.

Horror, like any genre, is full of possibilities; it can just as likely succeed as fail. But the atmosphere of Theresia, as well as its convoluted story, just doesn't scare us, but insteadmakes us want to stop playing, or failing that, kill ourselves. We suppose it successfully creates a truly anxiety-riddled world, but few players will want to spend any real amount of time in it, unless they have a few Xanax handy.

Nov 12, 2008

More info

GenreAdventure
DescriptionA horror game that makes you feel far more sad than scared, Theresia is hardly worth playing through.
Platform"DS"
US censor rating"Mature"
UK censor rating"Rating Pending"
Alternative names"Theresia: Dear Emile"
Release date1 January 1970 (US), 1 January 1970 (UK)
More
CATEGORIES
Henry Gilbert

Henry Gilbert is a former 12DOVE Editor, having spent seven years at the site helping to navigate our readers through the PS3 and Xbox 360 generation. Henry is now following another passion of his besides video games, working as the producer and podcast cohost of the popular Talking Simpsons and What a Cartoon podcasts. 

Latest in Adventure
Screenshot of Herdling, showing the weird yaks heading toward a sunset horizon.
With 18,000 glowing Steam reviews on their lovely debut game, this indie team's game about leading cute fantasy yaks up a mountain is instantly one to watch
The two characters in Split Fiction holding their hands up in surrender in a futuristic city
Split Fiction, the new game from the It Takes Two devs, launches to Overwhelmingly Positive reviews on Steam and is the highest rated game on Metacritic this year
Exploring and fighting in Blades of Fire
Blades of Fire plays like a lost Xbox 360-era mashup between God of War and Soulslikes, and it's coming from the studio behind Metroid Dread
Pokemon Legends: Z-A screenshot
Pokemon Legends: Z-A looks to finally bring my anime-inspired dreams of truly active combat to life
Zoomed in art of the Sudowoodo illustration rare card in Pokemon TCG Pocket.
Pokemon's literal god of the universe is almost unstoppable in TCG Pocket – the only thing that can save us is a smiley tree and a concussed dinosaur
Charizard in the Pokemon anime.
Pokemon fans prove they'll buy anything as a Cheeto shaped like a Charizard sells for almost $90k
Latest in Reviews
The pump header of the NZXT Kraken Elite 360 RGB showing a 35 degree cpu
NZXT Kraken Elite 360 RGB review: "Has some solid design points that make installation a lot easier"
Logitech G Pro X TKL Rapid gaming keyboard on a wooden desk with blue lighting
Logitech G Pro X TKL Rapid review: "one of the best value Hall effect gaming keyboards out there"
Millie Bobby Brown and Chris Pratt in The Electric State
The Electric State review: "Although this may be their most visually stunning movie yet, it looks like the Russos are yet to find their footing outside of the MCU"
Doggerland player board
Doggerland review: "A delicate dance of survival and management that doesn't feel weighted toward a single strategy"
Logitech G Pro X Superlight 2 DEX gaming mouse standing upright on a wooden desk
Logitech G Pro X Superlight 2 DEX review: "a force to be reckoned with"
Daredevil: Born Again
Daredevil: Born Again season 1 review: "There have been far worse Marvel projects, but few as disappointing as this"