The Alters, developed by This War of Mine and Frostpunk's 11 bit studios, has launched to strong reviews. It currently sits, as of this writing, with an 84 Metascore on Metacritic and an 86 Top Critic Average on OpenCritic. Still, several reviews of The Alters skip over an important make-or-break detail.

In The Alters, players take on the role of Jan Dolski. Jan, trapped on a deadly planet, must make pseudo-clones of himself with a physically constructed body made of Rapidium and memories, skill sets, and life experiences created by a Quantum Computer. At the heart of it is ultimately a question of regret: "What if you made a different choice at important junctures in your life?" Players utilize common survival and resource management mechanics, as well as social simulation mechanics, to see an engaging story unfold before their eyes. According to critics, most of these all-important features are very good. Very few, however, mention Alex Jordan's name.

Date Everything review
Date Everything Review: I Kissed a Towel and I Liked It

While it may look goofy at first glance, Date Everything is a lengthy feel-good dating sim with plenty of heart, soul, and furniture puns.

3

Every Alter is the Result of One Actor

The Alters has earned rave reviews across the board, but the vast majority have overlooked one of its most impressive elements—the fact that actor Alex Jordan is not only playing the prime Jan Dolski, but also all of his clones, each with their own unique personality traits, characteristics, mannerisms, voices, and life experiences. Alex Jordan is perhaps best known for his video game roles as Rook in Dragon Age: The Veilguard, Mr. Hands in Cyberpunk 2077: Phantom Liberty, and as sex noises in Baldur's Gate 3, but he's also appeared in movies and TV such as Paddington 2, The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim, and The Amazing World of Gumball.

Complete Alex Jordan Gameography

  • Asher Forrester in Game of Thrones: A Telltale Games Series
  • Skrand Sharpbreak in Stellaris
  • Sherlock Holmes in Sherlock Holmes: The Devil's Daughter
  • Sherlock Holmes in Sherlock Homes Chapter One
  • The Professional, Traitor Captain in Warhammer 40K: Darktide
  • Mr. Hands in Cyberpunk 2077
  • Sex Noises in Baldur's Gate 3
  • Jiyan in Wuthering Waves
  • Rook in Dragon Age: The Veilguard
  • Dahm in Eternal Strands
  • Ice King in Split Fiction
  • Jan Dolski (and Jan and Jan and Jan and Jan...) In The Alters

As of this writing, there are 63 reviews of The Alters on aggregate site Metacritic (45 PC reviews, 2 Xbox reviews, and 16 PS5 reviews). Jordan is only mentioned in 11 of the PC reviews, neither of the Xbox reviews, and only 3 of the PS5 reviews. In other words, roughly 78% of reviews do not mention his name whatsoever. For Alters reviews that do mention Jordan, it's mostly an acknowledgment or footnote and not a critical analysis or evaluation of his performance.

On the contrary, pretty much all reviews acknowledge their likes and dislikes of the Jan Dolskis, the storytelling, the emotional impact, the "what if" experiences, and the direction of the narrative, in all of which Jordan's performance is vital. Not only does he play nearly a dozen different characters in this video game, but he has to make sure that the delivery makes them each stand out—but not too much. There have to be differences in their mannerisms and their voice, but they have to come from a realistic place based on how similar or different their path is from the main Jan. The level of nuance is incredible, and Jordan's performance nails this at every turn.

Many reviews, put simply, fail to give flowers to the one man who made this possible across every version of Jan Dolski in The Alters, and the reviews that do so are still brief and quick to the point with their evaluations.

Why This is Important

It's worth mentioning that this is not uncommon in the industry, as many reviews will be sharp-witted when actor performances bring down a game, but there will be crickets if performances are anywhere from good to great to game-defining. There are exceptions, of course, but these are exceptions that prove the rule. Baldur's Gate 3 is easily one of the biggest hits in the game industry in recent years, and the various companions and the actors behind them are huge factors. Something tells me if I check BG3 reviews like I did the Alters reviews, my findings would be similar. A review of art not discussing the quality of performance suggests that performance is not important, and that treatment is a reality actors have to live with every single day.

It's also worth mentioning that actors have to fight to exist within this industry. AI performances are becoming more commonplace, with SAG-AFTRA striking a tentative deal with game publishers just recently following a 10-month strike to acquire some degree of protection against AI. A 10-month strike, I will add, that has impacted game development across the industry. Meanwhile, modern and evolving technologies mean they are as exposed to the public as any other actor. Actor Debra Wilson, for example, has been criticized (all in bad faith) for facial capture technology that has ensured she is FULLY characters like Cere Junda in the Star Wars Jedi series. And these are just two examples of hardships plaguing a passion for people who love this industry and sacrifice for it.

Video game development is a collaborative process, one that often fails even those directly involved. There have been many scandals of developers going uncredited in video games; that should change. There is a serious, dehumanizing, and sometimes seemingly intentional reduction of people, literally and figuratively, in this industry; that should change. And these are the people who we treat like pixels and not like people; that should change. If this industry doesn't treat its people like the stars they are, how can we expect anyone else to ever watch them shine?

Rating block community and brand ratings Image
The Alters Tag Page Cover Art
Display card tags widget
Survival
Strategy
Management
Display card system widget
Systems
Display card community and brand rating widget Display card open critics widget
Top Critic Avg: 86 /100 Critics Rec: 94%
Display card main info widget
Released
June 13, 2025
ESRB
Mature 17+ / Blood and Gore, Strong Language, Use of Drugs and Alcohol, Violence
Developer(s)
11 Bit Studios
Publisher(s)
11 Bit Studios
Display card main info widget end Display card media widget start
The Alters screenshot
Display card media widget end

WHERE TO PLAY

SUBSCRIPTION
DIGITAL
Checkbox: control the expandable behavior of the extra info

Engine
Unreal Engine 5
Genre(s)
Survival, Strategy, Management