![[UNDUB, need fix] Testing Clock Tower II: The Struggle Within / Clock Tower: Ghost Head on Retroarch](/images/yt/t_/undub-need-fix-testing-clock-tower-ii-the-struggle-within-70k5t.jpg)
[UNDUB, need fix] Testing Clock Tower II: The Struggle Within / Clock Tower: Ghost Head on Retroarch
Surprisingly, I found this undub on a Russian website. The author of this mod replaced the English dub with the Japanese one but apparently couldn't edit the text (which westernize the names of the characters even if the setting is OBVIOUSLY JAPANESE), the reactions of the protagonist, the English laugh of the killing doll or the dub in the ENDING A (he tried to hardsub the video but failed). Apart from that, is refreshing seeing this game with an actual professional dub instead of the English voice work of the official release. Also, the author recommend people who wants to play this game on modded PS3 that the emulation on that platform somehow lowers the volume of the voices at the beginning of the game.
In the end, it's a mixed bag but it does work I guess.
Clock Tower II: The Struggle Within, known in Japan as Clock Tower: Ghost Head, is a horror-themed adventure game developed by Human Entertainment and released for the PlayStation in 1998. It is the third game in the Clock Tower series. The story follows 17-year-old Alyssa Hale who suffers from multiple personality disorder with an alter ego named Mr. Bates. The player must guide Alyssa through various environments, altering between her normal and twisted personality, to uncover the secrets of her and her family's past.
Clock Tower II was met with negative reviews. Journalists heavily criticized the gameplay which they found to be poor due to its slow and dated point-and-click interface, as well its reliance on trial-and-error mechanics. The story was criticized by some but found to be mature and creepy by others. Critics ultimately did not recommend the game except to those looking for an experience similar to Clock Tower (1996) and those looking for a game that, like a cult film, is flawed conventionally but redeemed by its willingness to stray from the mainstream.