East Vs West Spy Drama
Towards the end of the second world war, Russian operative Alekhine is ordered to travel to Bergen, Norway, and infiltrate Bergenhus Festning. Once he has made his way into the castle, his first objective is to locate Martin Fichtner, the Gestapo liaison for the Kd-22 project currently under way at Bergenhus Festning. When Alekhine has confirmed the identity of his target, he should wait for an opportune time and eliminate him, preferably quietly and efficiently. Alekhine's orders also entail tracking down a certain Dr. Hans Heindrich, the Nazi doctor spearheading the development of a mysterious serum. After dispatching the good doctor, Alekhine needs to locate and destroy a magnetic tape containing compromising intelligence. After Alekhine has …show more content…
Although there certainly is an overarching narrative connecting the levels together, Alekhine's Gun's missions feel more like disparate, self-contained operations than a cohesively sequential story. This is mainly due to Maximum Games, for the most part, relying on exposition to detail events via the pre-mission briefings, rendering the actual operations an almost exclusively mechanical fare. Although the story inevitably suffers due to this, I do feel it is thematically appropriate: assuming the role of a hardened assassin willing to do whatever it takes to maintain the balance of power between east and west. Thus, the overarching narrative isn't Maximum Games' focus in Alekhine's Gun; rather, they seem more intent on structuring the narrative as to facilitate various missions in different