Forgot password
Enter the email address you used when you joined and we'll send you instructions to reset your password.
If you used Apple or Google to create your account, this process will create a password for your existing account.
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Reset password instructions sent. If you have an account with us, you will receive an email within a few minutes.
Something went wrong. Try again or contact support if the problem persists.
Should You Select Old School Or Modern Guidance In Alone In The Dark
Screenshot: PC Invasion

Should you select Old School or Modern Guidance in Alone in the Dark?

Know which settings to keep enabled, and which ones are better left off

There’s a lot that can be said regarding the new remake of Alone in the Dark. However, it does offer you a decent amount of accessibility options for your time in Derceto Manor. We’re going to answer the question: should you select Old School or Modern Guidance in Alone in the Dark?

Recommended Videos

Alone in the Dark — Old School vs. Modern Guidance

Should You Select Old School Or Modern Guidance In Alone In The Dark Fog
Screenshot: PC Invasion

Whenever you start a new game in Alone in the Dark, you’ll have more than difficult options to choose from. Along with difficulty, players have a choice of two preset Guidance options: Old School or Modern.

Modern Guidance gives you all the quality-of-life upgrades expected from a modern game and more. Conversely, Old School Guidance says it gives you no help, forcing you to figure out the game for yourself with no help.

This can make puzzles like finding the broken plates harder or easier depending on your settings selection. That being said, another option exists for players who want to customize their experience a bit more.

Best Guidance settings in Alone in the Dark

Should You Select Old School Or Modern Guidance In Alone In The Dark Settings
Screenshot: PC Invasion

You can customize your Guidance preferences in the pause menu once you start a playthrough. Why select between Modern and Old School Guidance in Alone in the Dark, when you can manually turn on/off every Guidance setting in the game? Through my multiple playthroughs, I’ve found the best settings to keep on, and which ones are better left off.

Here are the best Guidance settings in Alone in the Dark:

  • Text Highlighting: Off
  • Map Highlighting: On
  • Dynamic Objectives: Off
  • Reveal Interaction Points: On

All Guidance settings in Alone in the Dark

  • To go into detail, Text Highlighting does as it says, highlighting key text for clues you find throughout the game. Turning it on for a moment can be helpful if you’re having difficulty with a particular puzzle. But keeping it on all the time removes some of the fun of figuring out the solutions.
  • Map Highlighting, which shows puzzles and doors that are unlockable/solvable, is one of two settings I recommend keeping on. Of course, you can go through clues to figure out where key items and keys go, but for the sake of not wasting time I’ve elected to keep this on. It’s one of those QoL updates you see in most survival horror games nowadays, like Resident Evil. So keeping Map Highlighting on makes the game less tedious and decreases the amount of backtracking you’ll have to do.
  • Dynamic Objectives is a fancy way of saying you receive hints in your journal about how to progress. This would be all right if the hints weren’t the entire solution to that particular part of a puzzle. A little nudge in the right direction would have been nice but fully explaining the solution was a bit much. Because of this, I’ve elected to turn it off about halfway through my first playthrough. And while the puzzles don’t hit as hard as they do on the first go around, turning it off in subsequent playthroughs helps get rid of clutter in the journal, should you be attempting to get an alternate ending.
  • Finally, Reval Interaction Points is probably the most useful Guidance setting in the entire game. It’s just a shame they don’t give you any info on how to use it. Before I called it after beating the game over five times, I pressed LB on my Xbox controller, zooming in close behind the shoulder of your character. I then came to find out that when you use this button around interactables, they’ll be highlighted as long as they are in your line of sight. This is extremely helpful when you’re missing that one Lagniappe and need to scan the entire environment.

PC Invasion is supported by our audience. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn a small affiliate commission. Learn more about our Affiliate Policy
Author
Image of Alex Garcia
Alex Garcia
Alex Garcia is a freelance gaming journalist with over 20 years of gaming experience, and 3 years of professional writing. I stay up to date on the latest and greatest games out there, be they large AAA releases or a diamond in the rough indie game. I like to write about everything Vampire Survivors, and am an avid RPG fan, from Yakuza/LAD, Persona, Final Fantasy, and more. In my downtime you'll find me talking about the greatest invention known to man: cheese.