![]() The best part of the episode for me was spending some time in Arkham. Things are rough right off the bat, but he finds an unlikely ally in a white faced, green haired, grinning madman named, “John Doe.” He might seem like a joker, but he’s no laughing matter. Blamed for the sins of his family and forced into an assault on his rival Cobblepot, he wakes to find himself in the infamous Arkham Asylum. If you’ve been following my coverage so far like a good little boy/girl, you’ll remember that Episode 3 had left Bruce at an all-time low. It’s fitting, since the two episodes are so closely connected that they basically feel like one anyway. So now I’m just going to review it all as one final package, lumping Episodes 4 & 5 (“City of Light”) into a single section. I missed reviewing Episode 4: “Guardian of Gotham” due to it coming out around my birthday and me being too drunk to care, but it’s fine since the final episode came out like two weeks later. ![]() No, you hooked me from the get go and didn’t let go. Even my favorite shows like The Flash and Supernatural (yeah, I know, deal with it) I tend to let pile up until I can spend at least 10 hours in a sweaty haze powering through. As a modern binge watching millennial, I often forget about the emotional maelstrom that comes with getting locked into a season from the start. ![]() ![]() Telltale Games have come a long way from taking seven months to round out a season, but I’ve still been with Batman: The Telltale Series since it premiered in August. At the end of another episodic series, ready to decide if it was all worth it. ![]()
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