HomeNews
Alan Wake Remastered is real and arriving later this yearHe has A. Wakened
He has A. Wakened

The leaks were true: Remedy Entertainment have announced that theAlan Wakeremaster is real, and it’s coming out this autumn. The spooky shooter originally came out in 2010, though it didn’t hit PC until 2012.Alan Wake Remasteredis bringing the mysterious fella back in shiny 4K, along with commentary from creative director Sam Lake.Remedy say the remaster’s cutscenes, characters and “majestic Pacific Northwest vistas” have been visually enhanced, and it’ll come with both its expansions, The Signal and The Writer.Alan Wake - Official Launch Trailer | HDWatch on YouTubeMost people I know who played the game tend to rave about it, though Alec Meer found it “tedious” and “uninspiring” in his oldAlan Wake review: “It has a setting and a tone that I really do thrill to, which makes me all the more downcast that its memorable shell doesn’t house a more satisfying game.“While Remedy don’t give an exact release date,a recent leaksuggested the remaster would come out on October 5th. That would fall in line with the autumn release window the devs have announced, but we’ll have to wait until a little closer to the time to find out for sure.Sam Lake has written an open letter about Alan Wake and the remaster, talking about his experience working on the game, and what it means to him to bring it back. It’s a nice read, and you can take a look yourself on the community websiteA Sudden Stop.Alan hasn’t been out much since the old game, but after Remedy bought the Alan Wake publishing rightsfrom Microsoft back in 2019, they put him in their supernatural shooter Control, as well asControl’s AWE expansion.They could have even more Alan Wake for us down the line too. Last year, they revealed they were working on a new gameset in the Control and Alan Wake universe. Prior to that, we found out they were working on a number of unnamed projects, includingone live-service multiplayer game.
The leaks were true: Remedy Entertainment have announced that theAlan Wakeremaster is real, and it’s coming out this autumn. The spooky shooter originally came out in 2010, though it didn’t hit PC until 2012.Alan Wake Remasteredis bringing the mysterious fella back in shiny 4K, along with commentary from creative director Sam Lake.Remedy say the remaster’s cutscenes, characters and “majestic Pacific Northwest vistas” have been visually enhanced, and it’ll come with both its expansions, The Signal and The Writer.Alan Wake - Official Launch Trailer | HDWatch on YouTubeMost people I know who played the game tend to rave about it, though Alec Meer found it “tedious” and “uninspiring” in his oldAlan Wake review: “It has a setting and a tone that I really do thrill to, which makes me all the more downcast that its memorable shell doesn’t house a more satisfying game.“While Remedy don’t give an exact release date,a recent leaksuggested the remaster would come out on October 5th. That would fall in line with the autumn release window the devs have announced, but we’ll have to wait until a little closer to the time to find out for sure.Sam Lake has written an open letter about Alan Wake and the remaster, talking about his experience working on the game, and what it means to him to bring it back. It’s a nice read, and you can take a look yourself on the community websiteA Sudden Stop.Alan hasn’t been out much since the old game, but after Remedy bought the Alan Wake publishing rightsfrom Microsoft back in 2019, they put him in their supernatural shooter Control, as well asControl’s AWE expansion.They could have even more Alan Wake for us down the line too. Last year, they revealed they were working on a new gameset in the Control and Alan Wake universe. Prior to that, we found out they were working on a number of unnamed projects, includingone live-service multiplayer game.
The leaks were true: Remedy Entertainment have announced that theAlan Wakeremaster is real, and it’s coming out this autumn. The spooky shooter originally came out in 2010, though it didn’t hit PC until 2012.Alan Wake Remasteredis bringing the mysterious fella back in shiny 4K, along with commentary from creative director Sam Lake.
Remedy say the remaster’s cutscenes, characters and “majestic Pacific Northwest vistas” have been visually enhanced, and it’ll come with both its expansions, The Signal and The Writer.
Alan Wake - Official Launch Trailer | HDWatch on YouTube
Alan Wake - Official Launch Trailer | HD

Most people I know who played the game tend to rave about it, though Alec Meer found it “tedious” and “uninspiring” in his oldAlan Wake review: “It has a setting and a tone that I really do thrill to, which makes me all the more downcast that its memorable shell doesn’t house a more satisfying game.”
While Remedy don’t give an exact release date,a recent leaksuggested the remaster would come out on October 5th. That would fall in line with the autumn release window the devs have announced, but we’ll have to wait until a little closer to the time to find out for sure.
Sam Lake has written an open letter about Alan Wake and the remaster, talking about his experience working on the game, and what it means to him to bring it back. It’s a nice read, and you can take a look yourself on the community websiteA Sudden Stop.
Alan hasn’t been out much since the old game, but after Remedy bought the Alan Wake publishing rightsfrom Microsoft back in 2019, they put him in their supernatural shooter Control, as well asControl’s AWE expansion.
They could have even more Alan Wake for us down the line too. Last year, they revealed they were working on a new gameset in the Control and Alan Wake universe. Prior to that, we found out they were working on a number of unnamed projects, includingone live-service multiplayer game.