Skip to main content

American Arcadia review: ingenious spy thriller is a can’t-miss November game

Trevor and Angela stand tall in American Arcadia.
Out of the Blue
American Arcadia
“American Arcadia turns The Truman Show into an interactive indie thriller you don't want to miss.”
Pros
  • Great retro future art style
  • Gripping story
  • Strong lead performance
  • Clever puzzle platforming
Cons
  • Satire loses its focus at times
  • Chase scenes get repetitive

Trevor Hills is a perfectly average guy. He wakes up every morning, follows the same routine, works at his boring desk job, and heads home without making a fuss. He’s an ideal all-American good boy — and it’s about to get him killed.

Recommended Videos

That’s the juicy premise that fuels American Arcadia, the latest project from Call of the Sea developer Out of the Blue. The standout puzzle-platformer takes the gameplay ideas of moody genre classics like Limbo and works them into a small-scale Hollywood spy thriller about the world’s dullest action hero. He’s not running and jumping from a serial killer or giant monster, but something far more threatening: a media mega-power that’s decided his boring life simply isn’t profitable enough anymore.

American Arcadia is a sharp dystopian satire that takes jabs at capitalism, Disney, and reality TV. Imagine a playable cross between The Truman Show and The Fugitive, all dressed up in 1970s retro-future style. Out of the Blue delivers on that premise with clever gameplay that replicates the thrills of cinematic chase scenes and hacker flicks alike in colorful 2.5D. It’s a small rallying cry for ordinary people who just wish they could break free from the dehumanizing corporate world.

Under the dome

When I’m first introduced to the world of American Arcadia, everything seems hunky-dory. The opening moments introduce me to Trevor as he goes about his day to day in the titular Arcadia. I get some calm moments to soak in the intricately designed “city of the future,” a 2.5D metropolis that takes colorful inspiration from 1970s retro future design, before I find out everything around me is a lie. It turns out Trevor is unwittingly the star of an enormous reality TV show set in a city trapped inside a dome.

It plays like an interactive combination of The Truman Show, The Fugitive, and Free Guy

That’s where American Arcadia gets into some juicy satire. A mysterious hacker named Angela informs Trevor that he’s one of the show’s least popular cast members, because he’s just too boring for viewers. Since keeping a cast member alive isn’t cheap, the megacompany that runs the program plans to cut him … permanently. It’s a sharp-witted premise that takes aim at the way capitalism reduces people and workers to dollars and cents. That’s especially resonant right now, as the video game industry is in the midst of mass layoffs that have carelessly thrown thousands of developers out to sea. The modern workforce is starting to feel as cutthroat as a TV show competition.

Some of those satirical wires do get a bit crossed during the surprisingly long adventure. Commentary on reality TV culture gets mixed up with jabs at Disney, a company that the game’s nefarious media corporation seems clearly modeled after. Those two pieces don’t always fit together cleanly, but it does let American Arcadia paint a broad picture of our country’s obsession with money, power, and consumption.

Trevor walks into INAC headquarters in American Arcadia.
Out of the Blue

Even if it’s thematically imperfect, the story is a compelling setup for a good old Hollywood thriller. It plays like an interactive combination of The Truman Show, The Fugitive, and Free Guy, with the average Trevor becoming an unwitting action hero as he tries to escape the dome. Credit goes to Spider-Man voice actor Yuri Lowenthal here, who turns Trevor into a lovable loser that I can’t help but root for. Lowenthal nails Trevor’s slow-building frustration, as each new twist he learns about Arcadia shows just how little control he has over his own life. By the end, he completes his transformation into a true everyman: a guy who just wishes everyone would leave him alone.

Run and hack

To deliver its Hollywood premise, American Arcadia adopts an action-adventure setup that’s most similar to games like Limbo. Trevor’s escape has him sneaking past guards with a bit of puzzling and doing some fast-paced urban platforming during chase sequences. The added twist, though, is that players also control Angela, who can remotely hack Trevor’s surroundings to help him escape. It’s a one-player co-op premise that works surprisingly well and paves the way for some ingenious moments.

… a smart spy thriller with varied set pieces.

During one early chase scene, I see a guard coming down an elevator. He has a view of Trevor’s escape route through clear glass, but there’s a quick junction where the glass is covered. I get Trevor into cover and take over a security camera as Angela, who hacks the elevator just at the right moment so that the guard’s vantage point is blocked. A later stealth segment has Angela hopping between drones patrolling a room, using them to stun wandering guards and clear the way for Trevor. Inventive moments like that bridge the gap between action and puzzle to create a smart spy thriller with varied set pieces.

Some segments play with the format even more. Occasionally, I take direct control of Angela as she infiltrates the enemy headquarters in full 3D, first-person perspective. An early situation has me hacking security cameras by placing dummy video feeds in front of the right camera and sleuthing out a door code for a locked server room. At its best, American Arcadia lets me live out all my hacker movie dreams.

Angela holds her phone as she tries to help Trevor in American Arcadia.
Out of the Blue

There are enough creative gameplay ideas here that American Arcadia never fully runs out of steam, though it is stretched thin across its seven chapters. Chase sequences can get repetitive after a while, especially due to some inconsistent checkpointing that often kicks me back a bit farther than I’d like during tricky sequences that require a little experimentation. My attention never wanders for long, though; there’s always another crowd-pleasing moment ready to crank the approval rating back up.

And audience approval is everything in American Arcadia. It’s the metric by which a billion-dollar entertainment enterprise gets to decide who is profitable enough to live and die. That heightened premise is terrifyingly not far off from our own reality, where hundreds of lives can be upended with the snap of one rich executive’s fingers. The city of Arcadia may seem like a distant dystopia, but the sobering finale reminds us that the world outside of its domed walls isn’t always much better. All we can do is keep running and hope we find our way out eventually.

American Arcadia was tested on PC and Legion Go.

Giovanni Colantonio
As Digital Trends' Senior Gaming Editor, Giovanni Colantonio oversees all things video games at Digital Trends. As a veteran…
Dell slashed the price of the Alienware m18 R2 gaming laptop with RTX 4080 by $420
The Alienware m18 R2 gaming laptop with Baldur's Gate 3 on the screen.

You should be on the lookout for gaming laptop deals if you're thinking about making an upgrade -- these devices are pretty expensive, so any discount will help cushion the blow on your wallet. Here's an offer from Dell to consider: a $420 discount for the powerful Alienware m18 R2 with the Nvidia GeForce RTX 4080 graphics card, which reduces its price to $2,380 from $2,800. You can either pocket the savings or use them to buy more video games and accessories, but you need to act fast because there's a chance that the gaming laptop's price will be back to normal as soon as tomorrow.

Why you should buy the Alienware m18 R2 gaming laptop
The Alienware m18 R2 makes a run at the best gaming laptops with top-of-the-line specifications and a striking design. In addition to the Nvidia GeForce RTX 4080 graphics card, which our gaming laptop buying guide says is among the top-tier GPUs, the machine is equipped with the 14th-generation Intel Core i9 processor and 32GB of RAM that's the sweet spot for high-end gamers, according to our guide on how much RAM do you need. You'll be able to play the best PC games at their most demanding settings on the Alienware m18 R2, and you'll even be prepared for the upcoming PC games of the next few years.

Read more
3 PlayStation Plus games to play this weekend (February 14-16)
Players charge at each other in Chivalry 2's Arena mode.

PlayStation surprised us earlier this week and a new State of Play showcase that highlighted a ton of upcoming PS5 games to look forward to, such as Metal Gear Solid: Delta and Onimusha: Way of the Sword. However, we have a long time to wait for most of those games, and even longer if you want to snag them on PlayStation Plus. This month has no shortage of new games coming out to play, but if you don't have the time or money to get them all, PlayStation Plus has you covered. We picked out some gems from the catalog that might have gone under your radar at the time. Whether you want a deep RPG, fantastic party game, or hardcore multiplayer title, these are the games you should play this weekend.
The Outer Worlds
The Outer Worlds - Come to Halcyon Trailer | PS4

There's a good chance that Avowed will eventually make its way to PS5, but right now, there's no official word on that. What has been on PlayStation Plus for a while is the last major RPG from Obsidian, The Outer Worlds. Often compared to a Fallout in space, this is a more contained RPG experience where you explore several hub locations rather than a single open world. The entire game is a parody on corporations, capitalism, and class that hits way more than it misses. You are given a ton of different build options, and the companions are some of the best we've had the pleasure to meet. This isn't a huge game, but we do need to give you fair warning that it is leaving the service this month so you will need to commit to it if you want to finish it all. Even if you don't, it is worth a purchase to be ready for The Outer Worlds 2.

Read more
How to rebind skills in Avowed
A spellcaster holds a book in Avowed.

Making proper use of all your best abilities in Avowed is the easiest of the tips and tricks you can take into the game. When you begin, you will have your healing and mana potions set on your quick select bar, followed by the first skill you unlock and first companion ability. That's great in the early game, but it isn't long before you unlock new skills that you want on that slot more than what is put there for you. You can always access all your abilities through the tactical menu, but that is a bit cumbersome. Instead, here's how you can remap your quick skills to whatever you want.

Read more