Hmmm... sorry, may contain some spoilers below...
Text messages are so impersonal, but the game is very personal. And the author does a good job of getting you up close and personal by allowing you into the mind of Mr. Campbell, Mallory, and Dan – so that you can see through their eyes as the game unfolds.
Mr. Campbell (the victim turned hunter). While he’s not likeable, you do have moments of horror/pity as you learn what made him the man (and I use that word carefully) he is today. Dan (the unappreciated hero, protector, and another victim). Like Mr. Campbell a “victim” of his own willingness to help and sacrifice. Mallory. What can I say about Mallory – you’ll want to call her a victim too, but is she? I mean, she definitely is a pawn, player, prey in the game Mr. Campbell is playing. And she definitely views herself as the victim here, but as the story unfolds you realize very quickly that the real victim is Jenna. We never get to see inside Jenna’s head. We only get snippets (or rather brief texts and video’s) to see into Jenna horror situation through the eyes of Mr. Campbell. One text, two text, three text, one finger, two fingers, three fingers…
Once again, I’m impressed with the ending. The spiraling out of control; the mistakes; the mess and that final moment Mallory is finally able to see what I can only call Jenna’s revenge and realizes who the real victim is. How appropriate that Mr. Campbell – a victim turned hunter - would finally fall at the hands of Jenna who he has now made into the “victim turned hunter”. Her actions a mirror to the madness he created. I would have loved to get a peek back into Mr. Campbell’s head at that moment when he realized his downfall was coming. I would have loved to get peek into Jenna’s mind as she had her revenge. Although perhaps she would have had little to share – brief text messages of thoughts – kill, kill, die.