|
|
| Over 1 Million Visitors a Month! |
|
The #1 show in America is also the #1 interactive crime-solving series, and the latest entry shows us why. No introduction should be necessary for this skilled bunch of Las Vegas crime scene investigators, whose two previous adventures have left some things to be desired. But Telltale Games, new to the franchise, is good at listening to their audience; criticism from previous installments (including last year's CSI: Miami) was taken into serious account for this new game.
All the voices are done beautifully. Particularly, in case four, the actress who plays the victim's wife is unbelievably convincing. The only complaint I have is the voicework for Sara Sidle. Jorja Fox, who plays the CSI on television, did not do the voicework for the game, and neither did Marg Helgenberger for Catherine Willows. Both were voiced by sound-alikes. Catherine's sound-alike fooled me. Sara's was emotionless and sounded rather bored. Hopefully they can get both TV actresses to reprise their roles in future installments. Players of the previous CSI mysteries will be no stranger to the interface. It consists of four main tabs: collected evidence (subdivided into trace, documents/photos, and items), available locations (including the lab, morgue, and Capt. Brass' office), case file (subdivided into victims/hints, suspects, and video recreations), and the options menu. This time around, whenever you receive a new piece of evidence you are given a close-up view. You are then able to look at it from all angles and thus analyze it further. The game has an option called "tool assist," which, when you highlight a suspicious area, brings up the correct set of tools you need (detection or collection - yep, all the usual suspects) and highlights 1-3 possible tools you may need to get the job done. This can be turned on/off with the options menu, but is turned off to begin with for the Advanced and Master levels. I played Normal, but found the tool assist to be too easy. Following that line of thought, you will do a lot of back and forth in this game. Your lab findings will trigger a new question at X, which will lead you to a new question at Y, which will lead you back to X, which will send you to Z, etc. Let's not forget that in between your short visits is the loading screen, with whom you will become good friends by the end of the game. Transitioning from location to location requires that you stare at a glorified CSI logo for at least twenty seconds. I can't argue that the wait wasn't always worth it, but I could have done without. Most of the puzzling you do in this game, other than finding clues (in some cases pixel hunting), is done in the laboratory. You are on your own this time; Greg Sanders is no longer there to do the lab analysis for you (instead, he is your partner on the fourth case in place of Catherine, who drops by occasionally to offer her advice). You have five tools at your fingertips: trace analysis computer (fingerprints, footprints, tire treads, documents, etc.), DNA computer database, chemical analysis machine (for powders, suspicious substances, etc.), comparison microscope (mostly for hairs), and an assembly table (used to rearrange torn letters). When you're in the field and need evidence processed immediately, all of these machines go into your GMC Yukon Mobile Analysis Unit. It's pretty cool! The big technical problem with this game, other than the occasional dialogue skip, was that the game had a tendency to shut down my computer at random stages in the game. If my laptop wasn't able to start up quickly, and if the game didn't include handy automatic saves, I would have pulled my hair out. It's a real shame, because this game is otherwise very impressive, despite a few small errors in the subtitling. All I can say is, every time I see a stain on my clothes or a mysterious splotch of paint on the wall, I have a strong urge to swab it. This game deserves a solid B (worthy of a + if UbiSoft releases a patch), and one can hope there will be more of these games to come. If you haven't gotten your hands on one yet, or if you weren't impressed with the others, I can highly recommend this game. Final Grade: B System Requirements:
|
|
|