Zork White House

Just Adventure +


||  Adventure Links   ||  Archives  ||  Articles   ||  Independent Developers   ||  Interviews   ||   JA Forum   ||
|| 
JA Staff/Contacts   ||  The JAVE   ||  Letters   ||  Reviews   ||  Search   ||   Upcoming Releases   ||  Walkthroughs   ||
|| 
What's New / Home
  || Play Games!
  ||
Over 1 Million Visitors a Month! RSS Feed

Buy Games at Just Adventure+!

Review

In Memoriam
Developer: lexisnumerique
Publisher: UbiSoft
Genre: Adventure
Release Date: TBD - already released in parts of Europe
Platform: PC Mac


Review by Ray Ivey
March 9, 2004

 

 

 

In Memoriam box front In Memoriam box back

Trade for this game at:
Search Game Trading Zone for this game

Buy this game here:
Buy this game at CD Access!


In Memoriam screenshot - click to enlargeInnovation in adventure games is not easy to come by these days. Too many games I play are stuck in a rut, flogging formulas that have been stale for some time.

I get all perky and excited when I find a game that actually tries to do and be something new and different. A few months ago Broken Sword: The Sleeping Dragon got my attention by its beautiful success at creating a pure adventure in a dynamic 3D setting.

And now I’m delighted to tell you about a wildly innovative new adventure called In Memoriam.

In Memoriam screenshot - click to enlargeI love hybrid games. Frequently when I discuss hybrids I’m talking about games that through together different game genres. That’s not what I’m referring to in the case of In Memoriam. It’s a true-blue pure adventure game. But the best way I can describe this game is to ask you to imagine a happy collision between Jewels of the Oracle, the Griffin & Sabine books, Electronic Arts ambitious but failed online adventure game Majestic, and The Blair Witch Project.

No, I’m not kidding. Let me explain.

The premise of In Memoriam is that the game CD was smuggled to you by a network of concerned individuals who are trying to discover the whereabouts of two missing investigators. This CD was somehow procured from the bad guy and needs to be “decoded” by you, the player.

In Memoriam screenshot - click to enlargeAs in Majestic, the entertaining premise of the game is that everything related to the game is actually real. You have to set up a login ID and password to get into the investigating “network,” and, again like Majestic, you get actual emails from players in the game. These emails are from various characters (including, every now and then, the bad guy!) and usually contains hints on how to proceed.

The CD contains a video transfer of an old Super 8 home movie taken by a Greek family thirty years ago. In the movie you see an attractive couple and their young daughter on a holiday. Starting off as a family romp on an island, it eventually reveals a shocking execution-style murder. You later learn that the father, who was shooting the film, was killed by the same men committing the crime he witnessed.

In Memoriam screenshot - click to enlargeAs soon as the game begins, the anonymous evil culprit initiates a cat-and-mouse game with you. This game consists of a series of puzzles that look reminiscent of the Griffin & Sabine books and play a lot like Jewels of the Oracle. There’s almost every kind of abstract puzzle imaginable, and there’s a whole lot of them. Everything from cryptography to miniature golf. These little puzzles and games are fun and visually imaginative.

In addition, a certain amount of internet research is necessary to find passwords and other clues. This is very interesting because the subjects of these scavenger hunt puzzles delve in to very exotic areas of mystical esoterica. Arcane names for the planets and evidence of ancient cult rituals begin surfacing as you investigate.

In Memoriam screenshot - click to enlargeAs you complete each set of puzzles, the bad guy rewards you with an additional video clip. The clips follow the investigation of two researchers, Jack Lorski and Karen Gijman, into the mystery. One of them is a woman, who it turns out is the little girl in the 30 year old home movie.

As you get more and more puzzles solved, the researchers feel they are getting closer and closer to the killer. Eventually the two find a very creepy house into which they disappear a la Blair Witch. Will you be in time to save them?

In Memoriam screenshot - click to enlargeTo be fair, I have to say that, like the last game I reviewed, Jack the Ripper, the denoument in In Memoriam is pretty disappointing. Not because there IS no ending, like in Jack, but because the player is pretty much taken out of it. But it still doesn’t ruin the entertaining journey getting to the conclusion.

As you work on solving the game’s mysteries, you get a series of emails from various characters in the game. These emails flesh out the story a bit and give you important hints and information regarding the game’s various puzzles. A few of the emails come from the killer himself!

This is a very curious, intelligent and ambitious game. In these chilly latter days of adventure games, it’s a very encouraging game to come across. I think its format should be used as the basis for a series of adventures. Go buy the game, and together maybe we can make that happen!


Final Grade: A

System Requirements:

Hey, dig those retro requirements, huh?

PC

  • Operating System 95-98-2000-ME-XP
  • Processor 333 Mhz
  • Memory 64 Mb RAM
  • Graphics Card 32-bit
  • DVD-CD Rom Drive 8x
  • Sound Card 16-bit (SoundBlaster™ compatible)
  • Hard Disk 700 Mb
  • Internet connection 56.6 Kb modem

MAC

  • Operating System OS/8.6 (OS X, Classic Mode only)
  • Hard Disk 700Mb
  • Memory 64 Mb RAM
  • Minimum display resolution 800*600
  • DVD-CD Rom Drive 8x
  • Internet connection 56.6 Kb modem

This review is copyright Ray Ivey and Just Adventure and may not be republished elsewhere without the express written consent of the author. Republication of said review must also contain a link back to Just Adventure.