2018âs A Quiet Place film kicked off the ongoing horror franchise that is all about deadly alien monsters invading Earth and hunting down anything that makes too much noise, forcing humanity to be very quiet at all times or die. Iâve never seen the movies, so I wasnât sure if Iâd enjoy the new video game, The Road Ahead, set in the same horrific universe. Luckily, The Road Ahead is a standalone story and a solidly creepy, tense, but not too overwhelmingly scary horror game worth playing this Halloween season.
The Road Ahead features characters and events not seen in the films, so for fans of the franchise you get an entirely new take on the Quiet Placeâs post-invasion Earth. For folks like me who havenât seen the movies, the game doesnât expect you to have seen past films or fully understand whatâs going on in this world. The game explains just enough about whatâs happening and provides enough context that I never felt lost.
In The Road Ahead you star as Alex, a young woman with asthma who, in the opening moments, loses her boyfriend to one of the alien monsters after discovering sheâs pregnant with his child. This doesnât help her relationship with her BFâs mom, who already blames her for the death of her husband and becomes disturbingly aggressive when she learns that Alex is carrying the last member of her family. So Alex and her older father escape their clutches, but in doing so get separatedâthat means an asthmatic, pregnant, and mourning Alex must make her way alone through the alien-infested world to reach some semblance of safety.
I really appreciate that The Road Ahead doesnât rely solely on the alien monsters to add tension and intrigue to the game. Instead, they act more as an ever-present background threatâsimilar to how George A. Romero used zombies in his moviesâas a small group of people fight for survival while trying to deal with a lot of trauma. But donât be mistaken, the blind and nearly indestructible aliens are always around and ready to pounce on you if you get too loud or careless.
A Quiet Place: The Road Ahead
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BACK OF THE BOX QUOTE
âFinally a game for quiet librarians who love to shush people.â
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TYPE OF GAME
First-person survival horror
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LIKED
Everything feels tense, the main story, using asthma as a health meter, and sound design
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DISLIKED
Intro is a bit slow, animations can look wonky, and some minor bugs
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DEVELOPER
Stormind Games
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PLATFORMS
PS5, Xbox Series X/S, PC
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RELEASE DATE
Oct. 17, 2024
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PLAYED
About five hours and completed the main story on normal difficulty
Similar to Alien Isolation, you arenât really fighting the monsters in Road Ahead. Instead, 90% of the game is focused on avoiding them by being very quiet and careful. This is done by moving slowly, avoiding surfaces that make a lot of noiseâlike broken glass or waterâusing items as distractions and even pouring out sand to create safe paths to walk on, like in the movies. (Iâve seen the trailers!)
Most of my time was spent carefully tiptoeing around metal cans and piles of leaves. Even opening a door or turning a valve to solve a simple puzzle is nerve-wracking in a universe where one loud squeak or bang can get you killed. The game makes you slowly pull, push, and turn doors, vent openings, valves, dresser drawers, and more using your controllerâs analog stick. Make a single mistake, like carelessly trying to run out of a warehouse or fling open a door to safety, and youâll be attacked and killed in one hit.
Thankfully, when this happened to me, the gameâs checkpoints were frequent enough that I never lost too much progress. Still, whenever I accidentally kicked a can, I froze in real life and hoped the creatures wouldnât get me.
Alexâs asthma plays a big part in the game and takes the place of a traditional health bar. Because the monsters in A Quiet Place are incredibly lethal and kill you instantly for being too loud, the devs couldnât use a traditional health meter like in Resident Evil or Silent Hill. Instead, you have to manage your stress and asthma. Running too much or carrying heavy objects for too long will start to strain your lungs, as will getting too close to the monsters, which causes Alex to stress out.

If Alex pushes herself too far, she can suffer an asthmatic attack, which could get you killed depending on where you are and when it happens. So you need to manage your asthma with inhalers and pills found around the world. I donât suffer from asthma, so Iâm not sure how accurate Road Aheadâs depiction is, but it adds an interesting and tense wrinkle to the gameâs most harrowing moments.
The Road Ahead isnât a very long gameâmost players will be able to finish it in about five to six hours, but thatâs perfect. It tells a compelling story that keeps you moving forward and knows when to call it and not stick around too long and run the concept into the ground. Good scary games tend to work better as shorter experiences and the devs behind Road Ahead seem to get this.
While this new Quiet Place game isnât the most innovative or scariest game Iâve played, itâs a very well-made and tense adventure that had me more terrified of metal cans and broken glass than any random zombie Iâve encountered in Resident Evil. Who knew trash could be so scary?
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