Jun 05, 2015 American Mcgee's Alice is the cult classic from 2000 that eventually spawned the much more known, 'Alice Madness Returns.' The resolution is off because this was the best resolution we could get.
American McGee has, clearly, had enough of all the Alice questions.
Alice Liddell is the main character of American McGee's Alice. As a child, Alice's house was burnt down and her parents were killed. After a failed suicide attempt, Alice goes into an Angst Coma and winds up in Rutledge Asylum for ten years without any sign of recovery. After a nurse reunites her with her beloved toy rabbit, Alice was dragged down the rabbit hole into Wonderland and discovers. Alice: Madness Returns is a psychological horror hack and slash action-adventure platform video game developed by Independent studio Spicy Horse and released by Electronic Arts for Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360. It is the sequel to American McGee's Alice (2000).
He wants people to stop asking him about Alice 3. In a new blog post, McGee said he gets asked about it a lot.
'I get this question constantly,' he said. 'Several times per day. Across YouTube, Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, Instagram, and via my InReach satellite messenger. My dog has even learned how to ask this question via Morse code farts.'
McGee was the creative director of the EA-published 2000 title American McGee's Alice. It gained a cult status, and was followed up by Alice: Madness Returns in 2011. Fans have wondered about a third Alice game ever since, but it has yet to happen.
It sounds unlikely a new Alice game will happen any time soon, but whatever EA is plotting, McGee has no control - or influence - over it.
'EA own, control, and decide the fate of the game rights to Alice,' McGee continued in his blog post.
'That means any new game must be green-lit, funded, produced, published, and distributed by them.
'No, EA will NOT allow me (or anyone else) to crowd fund, raise investment for, or otherwise self-develop, self-fund, or self-publish any interactive version of Alice.'
McGee suggested fans tweet EA, rather than badger him about it.
There appears to be a degree of confusion caused by Alice: Otherlands, a successful Kickstarter McGee ran back in 2013 for a series of short films that would lead to a theatrical film. That project used the Alice film rights, McGee clarified, which are not controlled by EA.
And it seems McGee is upset over questions revolving around a demo of Madness Returns and supposed removed content. McGee does not own this demo, he said.
'And I am VERY frustrated with the small group of fanatic trolls who continue to bring up this topic and pester me with questions about it,' he said.
'Please, stop. At this point, I've begun blocking any person who persists in questioning me on this topic, so you've been warned.'
McGee ends his post by stressing he appreciates the passion from fans of the Alice series, and says he would love to see and work on a new game in the franchise, but the sheer volume of questions he gets on the subject is overwhelming him.
'Apologies if this message comes out sounding frustrated or angry, but the amount of traffic I get on these questions literally impedes my ability to put effort towards new ideas and new projects,' he said.
'I don't want to ignore the questions, but I do wish the volume would lessen. I appreciate your understanding.'
So, what's McGee up to now? Well, he's working on a tabletop card game inspired by fairy tales called Out of the Woods. It launches on Kickstarter today.