There’s not much Batman in
Batman: The Enemy Within: Episode 3 – Fractured Mask, save for a few encounters with a few of the most important people in his life. One of these in particular is a bit of a surprise, so I’ll leave that to you to discover. The obvious one is Catwoman. Regardless of whether or not Bruce ever pursued her romantically, their relationship is complicated. They both know each other’s identities, and they both understand each other too well to assume that their coexistence in any capacity can be consistently mutually beneficial. I’m torn on how this dynamic is approached in
Episode 3 – Fractured Mask. While my gut reaction is that it’s classic Batman and Catwoman, it doesn’t seem to settle on the right tone and chooses instead to give the player mood whiplash between playful antagonism, excessive gravitas, and the kind of sexual tension you could cut with a butter knife. I get that Telltale may not have the resources or the runtime to pad this stuff out comfortably, but that's the effect it had on me. Something tells me it’ll resolve itself in the coming episodes, one way or the other.
The horrible Tiffany Fox subplot finally gets where it needs to be in Episode 3 – Fractured Mask. When Lucius was blown to kingdom come in Episode 1 – The Enigma, my gut reaction was to pull his equally-brilliant daughter into the fold as quickly as possible; it was the only logical course of action. And, of course, Telltale’s writers denied me that because they had to incorporate their favorite brand of melodrama: unnecessary, inescapable alienation of the player character’s allies. I don't know anyone who enjoys this particular storytelling trope, and Telltale desperately needs to evict it from its wheelhouse, preferably with a double-barreled shotgun.
So yes, that stuff comes to a blessed end, but it also comes at the cost of… more of it. My choice to work with Amanda Waller and The Agency has, of course, led to the unnaturally rapid deterioration of Batman’s relationship with perhaps his closest ally, Gotham City Police Commissioner James Gordon. And since there are few functioning adult minds in this world who even entertain the notion of compromise and cooperation, Gordon is in full collapse mode at this point. Batman’s sudden and unwarranted unavailability leads the poor man to start pulling at every stray thread he sees, and of course, the biggest one of all of them is Bruce Wayne, who, on top of being the prodigal son of one of Gotham’s biggest crime families, has been caught in a number of incredibly compromising situations over the last couple of episodeS. Save for an early episode encounter with a familiar (not to be confused with friendly) face, I’m obviously not a fan of this subplot.