


He manages to make you a part of the story, to draw you in. Writer and Game Director of Heavy Rain, David Cage writes a phenomenal story that you'd expect to see it win Oscars and Golden Globes. That's all I will tell you for now, the rest is up to you to find out. He kills them by letting the rainwater fall on them till they suffocate. The Origami killer takes children between ages 8 and 10 every fall, and puts them under a grated pipe with a lock. The game takes place in the fall season, so it's no wonder why everything is depressing, but according to the investigation, that's when the Origami killer strikes. Each chapter has a very depressing tone to it, it rains nearly every single time, and the skies are cloudy, always. We each get a Point Of View of how the Origami killer has or is affecting their lives. The story shifts around chapters and events with each of the four characters to balance it out.

I won't spoil it for you, because it had me by surprise, BIG TIME. A private detective for hire who's out to get leads on the Origami killer and gets closer to the truth. You have Madison Page, a journalist who disguises herself as a photographer to whomever she meets, all she wants is a little inside story on a victim's father about the Origami killer, and finally you have Scott Shelby, my favourite character. You have Agent Jayden, an FBI investigator sent to investigate the latest killing of the Origami Killer. You have Ethan Cole, father of two, an architect who's living his American dream.
