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Dead Head Fred

Dead Head Fred
DeadHeadFredCover.jpg
Developer(s) Vicious Cycle Software
Publisher(s) Namco Bandai Games
(ported versions)
D3 Publisher
(PlayStation Portable)
Distributor(s) D3 Publisher
Designer(s) Adam Cogan
Composer(s) Jason Graves
Engine Vicious Engine
Platform(s) PlayStation Portable
Release date(s) UMD
  • NA: August 28, 2007
  • EU: October 26, 2007
  • AU: November 2, 2007
  • JP: March 27, 2008
PlayStation Store
  • INT: October 16, 2008
Genre(s) Action-adventure, platformer
Mode(s) Single-player
Aggregate scores
Aggregator Score
GameRankings 76.97%
Metacritic 75/100
Review scores
Publication Score
Eurogamer 5/10
Game Informer 6/10
GameSpot 6.5/10
GameSpy 4/5 stars
GameZone 8.5/10
IGN 8.3/10
VideoGamer.com 8/10
Award
Publication Award
Writers Guild of America Videogame Writing (2007)

Dead Head Fred (Japanese: デッドヘッドフレッド ~首なし探偵の悪夢~ Hepburn: Deddo Heddo Fureddo ~Kubinashi Tantei no Akumu~?) is a horror comedy action-adventure video game for the PlayStation Portable, developed by Vicious Cycle Software and published by D3 Publisher. It was released in North America on August 28, 2007 and is powered by Vicious Cycle's proprietary Vicious Engine. It features a premise that is a combination of 1940s-style noir and contemporary horror, dubbed "twisted noir" by the design team.

The game is a single-player experience whose title character, Fred Neuman, is a private investigator with the ability to switch heads. Fred has recently been murdered and decapitated, and has few memories of the events leading to his death. The plot follows Fred as he pieces together the clues of his murder and tries to get revenge on the man who killed him. Unlike many action game heroes, Fred has no conventional weapons—he relies solely on the powers available to him from the severed heads of fallen enemies.

The game received generally positive reviews, with reviewers mentioning its dark humor and noir-inspired motif as high points. It received criticism for its controls and lack of combat depth. In 2008, it won the Writers Guild of America's first-ever award for video game writing.


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Wikipedia

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