Batman The Telltale Series review: interactive DC story flips the script

By Tim Biggs
Updated January 17 2017 - 10:13am, first published January 11 2017 - 2:24pm
Bruce Wayne and his struggles with morality are a bigger part of the series than his alter-ego Batman. Photo: Supplied
Bruce Wayne and his struggles with morality are a bigger part of the series than his alter-ego Batman. Photo: Supplied
Familiar allies and villains make appearances in the game, but they aren't all as you may remember them.
Familiar allies and villains make appearances in the game, but they aren't all as you may remember them.
The leader of the mysterious Children of Arkham syndicate is one of the few original characters, and one of the most interesting in the game.
The leader of the mysterious Children of Arkham syndicate is one of the few original characters, and one of the most interesting in the game.

Mixing the graphic storytelling style of a comic book with the engagement of an adventure game — and adding a healthy dose of branching-path interaction via morality-testing choices — Telltale Games has developed award-winning adaptations of The Walking Dead, Game of Thrones and more. Now, it's the Dark Knight's turn.

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