The ending for Alan Wake 2 is pretty confusing though The Final Draft’s extended ending makes things a little clearer
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
What happens in the Alan Wake 2 ending can be quite confusing, due to Saga and Alan’s separated, dimension-hopping stories. While they finally begin to converge, things quickly go awry, leading to same late-game dimension-hopping and a conclusion that makes you wonder what exactly happened to Saga, Alan Wake, Casey, Alice Wake, the Clicker, Scratch, and the Dark Place inAlan Wake 2. With the extended The Final Draft ending, an extra layer is added to all that too making it a lot to take in. Below, I’ve tried to shed some light on the Alan Wake 2 ending, including the new Final Draft ending.
Obviously massive spoilers if you’ve not seen the ending yourself. You have been warned.
How does Alan Wake 2 end?
Aftercoming up with a new plan in Alan Wake 2and realizing that the Alan Wake in the real world is actually Scratch/the Dark Presence, Saga sets out to fix reality and rescue Alan Wake from the Dark Place. She performs a ritual using the Clicker, with the help of Tor, Odin, Casey, and Estevez, though it all fails and apparently nothing happens.
Meanwhile, Alan, still trapped in the Dark Place, discovers that Alice committed suicide after being repeatedly haunted by Scratch. Assuming he remains trapped in the Dark Place due to Scratch rewriting his drafts, Alan shoots a different Alan in his Writer’s Room, only to realise that this is all part of a loop – Alan writes a draft to escape, a different Alan rewrites it only to be killed by the first Alan, who then gets possessed by the Dark Presence to become Scratch. This reveals that Alan and Scratch are actually the same person and that he was the one haunting Alice and not an evil doppelganger.
Should you play Alan Wake before Alan Wake 2?Alan Wake 2 manual saveAlan Wake 2 difficulty settingsAlan Wake 2 deer headsAlan Wake 2 maps
In a mid-credit scene, another video from Alice Wake plays, in which she reveals that she did not kill herself and instead jumped into Cauldron Lake to re-enter the Dark Place. Misleading Alan was crucial to helping him see the spiral and not the loop. However, the spiral keeps going unless you complete the Final Draft ending.
The “true” ending for Alan Wake 2 comes at the end of anAlan Wake 2 new game plusrun, known as The Final Draft. Everything is the same as above until Saga calls Logan on her phone:
In the Final Draft, Logan answers the phone, seemingly completely normal. Despite having been shot in the head by Saga, Alan Wakewakesup with the bullet now glowing in his head again. “The ending worked. Scratch is gone”, he says. Alice Wake then appears only to Alan, and says, “at last”, to which he replies, “thank you, my love”. Alan then delivers one final monologue and closes out the game calling himself “the master of many worlds”.
So, what does all that mean? Firstly, Logan answering the phone proves that Alan’s rewritten Return ending worked, fixing reality. Return’s original plot, which involved Saga and Logan moving to Watery and Logan drowning, was prevented from becoming real – all seems well for Saga.
As for Alan Wake, thanks to Saga’s Bullet of Light and their plan, he is back in the real world and free of the Dark Presence’s possession and the Dark Place itself. He also seems pretty confident that he’s some inter-dimensional master by the sounds of things, which will no doubt be come up in a future game. However, it’s not clear what’s going on with Alice Wake. Alan now knows she did not in fact commit suicide and is still in the Dark Place, so perhaps her fate is something that’ll be explored in DLC.
The phrase “it’s a spiral, not a loop” and lots of spiral symbolism pop up a lot in Alan Wake 2 (and even in other Remedy games as seen in theseAlan Wake 2 easter eggs) and it’s meant to encapsulate Alan’s attempts to escape the Dark Place through writing and rewriting new ways out. His repeated failures make him feel like he’s stuck in a loop, but he was just working his way down a spiral and, thanks to Saga’s help, this Final Draft ending is the end of that spiral.
The Final Draft ending wraps up Alan Wake 2 surprisingly nicely, which means you have to wonder where the story goes from here. One thing that will no doubt come up again is this idea that the rewritten Return ending had to stick to the conventions of the horror genre – if there are heroes, they must suffer greatly to ensure balance. Things seem on the up for both Alan and Saga, so it seems that this cost is yet to become clear.
© GamesRadar+. Not to be reproduced without permission.
Weekly digests, tales from the communities you love, and more
Baldur’s Gate 3 dev says Stalker 2’s commercial success is proof of a “seismic shift behind so much” and players are “hungry for hyper-engaging, focused experiences”
Modders are already making Stalker 2 run better and have removed the most annoying mechanic in the game