

#OPEN ROADS FULL#
“It was Noël and another person on the team that came to me and were like, ‘Hey, full transparency, here’s what’s going on: All these changes are happening, and we still want you on the team but now that it’s a little different than what we had talked about before, do you still want to do it?’” Fincher recalls. In fact, she accepted the job as the information was coming to light. But she has a different perspective on those things because she’s trying to do some creative things in her life, and not all of it worked out the way she wanted it to.”Įxecutive producer Amy Fincher was the only one who wasn’t with the team before Gaynor left.

“Tess is into movies and has a lot of personal interests that she pursues independently without anybody driving her to do that,” Fincher says. On the other side, Opal is noticing things about Tess that remind her of herself. They don’t start as enemies.”Ī lot of the journey centers on Tess seeing her mom as a person outside of that caretaker role. “ ending is like, ‘Okay, they’re on their way.’ And I think Open Roads is really interesting because they’ve kind of already had that happen. “One thing that we talked a lot about in the beginning is with a lot of mother/daughter relationship stories that we see, like Lady Bird, for example, the plot is about that first step towards friends,” explains graphic artist Harrison Gerard. There’s a child and parent dynamic, but they’ve built a good relationship. “A pitfall we see sometimes is because there are so few mother/daughter stories, they kind of end up being the same story the same conflicts and the same personality types.”Īt the start of the game, Opal and Tess are in a good place. “There aren’t as many mother/daughter stories out as there are father/daughter and father/son stories,” says executive producer Amy Fincher. This mother/daughter relationship is the most important aspect of Open Roads, and it’s something about which Fullbright thought carefully. The hand-drawn art style popped, but it also turned heads for the top-tier talent cast in the two leading roles: Keri Russell ( The Americans, Star Wars: Episode IX - The Rise of Skywalker) and Kaitlyn Dever ( Booksmart, Dopesick).Īctresses Keri Russell and Kaitlyn Dever have helped bring the characters of Opal and Tess to life, recording at times together and apart. And rightfully so, as it centered on a mother and daughter’s journey to discover more behind their family history – a different set of protagonists than we usually see in our video game adventures. Two years ago, the debut trailer for its third game, Open Roads, was met with excitement. In creating a game about a road trip, you could say Gone Home developer Fullbright experienced these highs and lows at every turn. However, the memories that help us power through the tedium often stick – singing along to a classic, having a heart-to-heart conversation, or observing a surprising sight. Sometimes the open road instills a sense of freedom other times, you feel trapped. There are stretches of nothingness, and your numb mind tries to pass the time until you reach the destination. There were some notable old highways included in the Open Road area.Every road trip has bumps along the way - unexpected potholes, constant traffic, and extra pit stops. The Night City Council considered these areas to have a threat level of "Outskirts", which basically meant it was outside of the city's jurisdiction, therefore the only valid laws out here were the ones you made for yourself, except for those places controlled by the nomad families. All this due to the nomad families taking greater control of the world's commerce and shipping, and thanks to their surplus in military hardware, it was easier for them to drive out the gangs and make the roads safer for travel.

These roads and highways were littered in some areas with dead, burned-out vehicles and dust, but were still open and usable, and little by little they were resembling more Route 66 than the Mad Max highways. OverviewĪfter the Fourth Corporate War, the Open Road was the home of roving gangs on spiky cars and motorcycles, well-defended nomad caravans, and those few who had to transverse them. The Open Road (or the Open Road Zones) was the name designated to refer to the major roads in and around Del Coronado Bay during the Time of the Red.
