
Game Hub writes: "When it was announced at E3 back in 2005, Alan Wake had Xbox and PC gamers salivating over the promise of a psychological thriller in the style of Twin Peaks or the X Files. Early screenshots of the game boasted impressive visuals and the game seemed to be on track to blow our minds in 2007.But then something happened, Remedy, the studio behind bullet time ballet Max Payne, announced the game "still needed time" and the released date was depressingly pushed back. Gamers didn't really seem to care however, distracting themselves with the big name titles such as Halo 3 that had the good graces to come out on time. By early 2009 when the game was put back again most people had given up on Mr Wake, and waited for the inevitable announcement that the project had been shut down."

VGChartz's Mark Nielsen: "All in all, it’s not hard to see why Alan Wake has received a bit of a cult following (there’s that famous foreshadowing again). It’s a title that blends themes and gameplay, while pushing the limits of storytelling by putting stories within stories and letting you read those stories before you get to that part in… the story. It has flaws, to be sure - the gameplay side can’t quite keep up with the rest of its ambitions - but overall it’s a great game that stands out among its peers and is undeniably… one for the books."

Remedy has announced a new Alan Wake book and more as part of their anniversary celebration.

Alan Wake, from Max Payne and Control creator Remedy, is a horror classic, prompting one player to buy 4,000 copies that don’t even work.
Kind of a goody story...
On a serious note, that is why I try activating gift cards asap. It's happened to me where the store didnt scan it right where the card was unusuable. Happened at Wally World.
Usually most of those redemption card have an expiry date on them. If they expired all buyer did was buy recycled paper. And some of those codes are country locked to certain countries. I buy a card from the States I can't use it in Canada.
Dumb and silly story. She wasted her money for no reason.
Is it really that hard to go to Steam or GOG. She spent $240, when its currently 70% off on GOG, and only costs $4.49.
Gee, I wonder, should I spend $240 on eBay, or $4.49 on GOG? 🙄
So in short she paid $240.00 assuming usd for a bunch on unactivated game codes.
I still don't understand why I guess cause there's not a physical version and she wanted something for a collection or art project.