

You play as Alex Chen, a child of the foster care system who was separated from her big brother Gabe when she was 10. That ability lets the game traverse some new, fascinating territory for this series, but it’s still a bit too bashful about staying there for too long. It features a new hero who can delve into peoples' lives on a level beyond the capabilities of the series' other protagonists. The strength of Life Is Strange as a series is how it always seeks to answers the deeper questions about why people are the way they are, but even compared to the original Life is Strange protagonist Max Caulfield seeking to untangle her best friend's life, or Sean and Daniel Diaz of Life is Strange 2 being at the mercy of an increasingly merciless America, True Colors drills deeper. The latest entry, True Colors, represents the first time subtext becomes not just text, but the game's core mechanic. For six years, the Life Is Strange series has consistently told stories about the ties that bind us, between friends, families, and communities.
