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Review
Black
Circle: A Carol Reed Mystery
Review by Ryan Casey

January 29, 2010 |
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Nancy
Drew has been quite the globetrotter in her years as detective, but
one place she has yet to visit is Norkopping, Sweden – most
likely because the crimes there (the ones that are fun to solve, anyway)
are handled by Carol Reed, a twenty-something English girl with the
same kind of perpetual inquisitiveness and resourcefulness that make
Nancy such a super sleuth. In her latest outing, Carol is approached
by her neighbor, Oscar, a retired doctor, who claims he saw a dead
body while he was out for his morning walk. When he returned with
the police, however, the body was gone – and the police think
he was merely hallucinating. Insistent upon what he saw, he pleads
for Carol to investigate.
There
are numerous locations for Carol to explore on her quest for answers,
all of which have been beautifully photographed and edited by the
MDNA Games team of Mikael and Eleen Nyqvist. This is a great feature
for detective games because it allows for you, the player, to immerse
yourself in the experience by carefully surveying different environments
and hunting for clues. Everything is fair play, with no pixel hunting
necessary. A map feature lets you travel from location to location
with beautiful and haunting interstitial music. The interface makes
navigation in even large environments simple; arrows point you where
you can go, and a magnifying glass indicates when there is something
of interest to look at. At the top of the screen lies your inventory,
which includes a notebook that lists your current objectives and an
optional hint system for reaching those objectives. As you can tell,
this game is straightforward in every possible way. It is easy to
play, easy to navigate, and easy to understand, which makes gameplay
genuinely enjoyable.
There
are plenty of characters to interact with during the investigation.
Conversations are conducted merely by selecting questions on Carol’s
notepad, so you have no control over what to ask. Voice work is generally
solid, but everybody enunciates so carefully that sometimes it is
tedious to get through a few lines of dialogue, especially given that
their facial expression also changes with each line (sometimes to
no effect). Speaking slowly also takes away from the emotion that
some lines could use. I was additionally surprised at how ready and
willing to talk many of the suspects were. Maybe I am just used to
the Nancy Drew games, where everybody is always asking chores of you
before you can even find out their names, but everybody in Norkopping
is very talkative, and when a murder investigation is the subject
of conversation, that’s very rare.
Especially
rare when you see how the plot begins to unravel. This is definitely
one of the series’ darker mysteries, if not its darkest yet,
and therefore elaborately constructed. I had a hard time in the beginning
trying to follow how Carol was connecting the clues from one location
to the next, as my own detective instincts were leading me in a different
direction, but the storyline eventually becomes quite gripping and
doesn’t beat you over the head with some of the back story and
history needed to understand what is happening, unlike with some games.
All of the clues are fairly placed, although you will definitely have
to do some meticulous exploring to find what you need. I found that
I had to search every location very thoroughly to make sure I collected
every possible item that I might need later on, and there is a lot
of backtracking to talk with suspects multiple times. The level of
detail, from the impressive locations to the plot twists to the organic
puzzles – most of which are based on the inventory items you
collect throughout the game – is impressive for an independent
project, and should most certainly be applauded.
If
you have played one of these games before, then “The Black Circle”
is exactly the kind of high quality point-and-click mystery game you
have come to expect from MDNA games. If you are new to the series,
this is as good a place as any to start. The Carol Reed Mysteries
are independent productions that are fun and easy to play, well-crafted,
engaging, and unique in their construction. I would recommend the
series, and especially this latest adventure, to anybody looking for
a good story-based mystery adventure.
Minimum requirements:
- Pentium 1000 or higher
- 128 MB RAM
- 16MB video card
- 800 MB hard drive
space
- Windows 98 (XP, Vista
or Windows 7 is recommended)
- The game runs in 1024x768
resolution.
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