The lighting engine, still impressive today in its stylistic brutality, casts shadows that move when you aren't looking. You will shoot at a flickering light at least three times. You will be right to do so. You can’t have a F.E.A.R. game without new toys and new monsters. On the toy side, the Minigun and Laser Carbine are added to the arsenal. The Minigun turns the slow-motion mechanic into a symphony of brass and gore, while the Laser Carbine is a surgical scalpel for popping Replica soldier helmets.
There are video game expansions, and then there are gauntlets. F.E.A.R. Extraction Point is the latter.
Of course, Alma Wade—the psychic, ghostly child-woman who hates you—has other plans. What separates Extraction Point from its predecessor is its sheer, unrelenting nihilism. The original F.E.A.R. had moments of light; office buildings with fluorescent bulbs, industrial zones with safety signs. Extraction Point has none of that.