#61: American McGee’s Alice

“A dark interpretation of Alice In Wonderland” is not a phrase anyone wants to hear, but this game’s alright regardless

Initial release: 2000
Platform: PC
Developer: Rogue Entertainment

Late 90s pop culture is perhaps best defined as “for people who took Johnny the Homicidal Maniac seriously.” There’s an aesthetic to stuff marketed to edgy kids in their teens and early twenties at the time that’s instantly recognizable, and American McGee’s Alice is no different. While I don’t think it’s accurate to call American McGee the Tim Burton of video games, there’s no denying a direct stylistic influence from the likes of Nightmare Before Christmas to American McGee’s Alice, and the success of Alice meant that McGee has tried to replicate the style occasionally. American McGee’s Alice (yes, that’s the whole title) is a monument to the millennial mallgoth zeitgeist: themes of mental illness, violence and despair in a twisted, sinister take on the classic Alice in Wonderland stories. It’s honestly a surprise that Tim Burton didn’t just rip this game off for his own Alice film.

-june❤

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Media critic, retired streamer, furry. I love you. [she/they]

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june gloom

Media critic, retired streamer, furry. I love you. [she/they]