Batman: Arkham Asylum is awesome, and there's a sequel
Last month at the Spike VGAs, one of the trailers premiered was for a sequel to the critically acclaimed Batman: Arkham Asylum. The trailer is more of a teaser, actually, and shows off chaos on the streets of Gotham, ending on an beaten Joker, laughing of course. The tag shown as the scene fades is “Arkham has moved.”
In a recent interview with Paul Denning, senior gameplay programmer for the game, he made it clear that the Arkham setting had “run its course.” This is true, considering you explore the entire Arkham island through the course of the first game. He also describes Gotham as a “fantastically realized fictional city” with many places ideal for gameplay and exploration, but says not to expect a Gotham sandbox. Apparently, they don’t believe the game will lend itself easily to an open-world, so they’re avoiding the concept altogether. Without that, however, incorporating the kind of explorative nature that made the first game so immersive will be challenging. Islands lend themselves well to isolation, after all, and you never question the fact that you can’t leave this area.
Back when this site was run in Wordpress, I posted about the Arkham Asylum demo, stating how it had essentially convinced me to buy the game. I didn’t actually manage to get it until Christmas, and have only had the opportunity to play it just these past few days. I completed everything within the game except challenge maps (they’re hard!), in what feels like 20-25 hours. A lot of the time I was laughing maniacally at what I could do in the game. The game is possibly the first stealth-action game to get the genre completely right. MGS is great and all, but stealth is often a chore that can be unforgiving at times. Arkham Asylum takes the concept and introduces this badass combination of Bat-skills and a reasonable safety net that allows you to essentially try anything within the stealth sections of the game. This, plus an extremely satisfying and well-realized combat system makes you feel as badass as you look, taking on groups of 10 men.
In short, the game is badass, and basically everyone should play it. When I think of games of a similar caliber, Half-Life 2 and Metal Gear Solid come to mind. While neither game is much like Arkham Asylum, they each define their own brand of storytelling that complements the gameplay, keeping you wanting more. Any sequel that can achieve a similar compulsion will undoubtedly be a great game. And, given a developer who realizes their own limitations with the content of their game, there’s a lot to hope for.

Beat AA a day or two ago and I must say I was very satisfied. The only things that bugged me were how if you're not going after medals the riddler challenges are a HUGE waste of time. And harley quinn's voice just sounded sooooo flat. I think she was really the only part of the game I didnt like,her voice just bugged the hell out of me.
Did you ever watch the original animated series? Harley is a character that was so successful in the cartoon that she was introduced into the comic canon. That voice just happens to remain for the fact its the one that initially defined the character. I guess I'm just used to it for that reason... I kinda wish she used a slightly different voice for the patient interview tapes, though.
I get the accent but the VA from the animated sereis seemed alot more....spirited. The one in arkham was kind of monotone throughout the game.
same VA in both, brutha.
Maybe she had a stroke.
Whoa that's the same VA? I could honestly not tell.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qrx6x7lpdSY&feature=related
I think this is my least favorite cutscene in the whole game:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jz1RxbBhjEs
Everything she says after she pushes the warden on screen I couldn't stand.
THAT,is a pretty good game. I got to the second scarecrow encounter however far in that is. Mark hamill will always be the one true joker to me <3. Killer croc looks awesome considering the last time I saw him in any media was the animated series.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SB_yoDX0MUY
hah well funny story...
I was so excited about the demo I kept talking about how awesome it is to everyone i knew, how the game had exactly what you mentioned, unique/forgiving stealth-combat. I got a brand new ps3 version and opened it during christmas, later my uncle got me the 360 version. I am not ungrateful but now I can't exchange one for assassins creed 2 :(
The PS3 version is superior for the fact you can play as Joker.
You know, Amazon does a trade-in thing now, where games will often yield higher returns than Gamestop.