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 FeedFind us on Facebook!

Buy PC Games at JA+

Review

Mystery Case Files: MillionHeir
Developer: Big Fish Games
Publisher: Big Fish Games (online)
Touch Generations (packaged)
Genre: Casual
Release Date: September 2008
Platform:

Nintendo DS



Review by Ray Ivey

April 23, 2009

 

 

Buy this game at
Buy games at the Just Adventure+ store!

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


Mystery Case Files: MillionHeir screenshot - click to enlarge I’ve become a big fan of the “Hidden Object Games.” Lately my game pal Laurie and I have been working our way through the Mystery Case Files series. These games are mostly for the PC, but there have been two titles released for mobile devices.

Mystery Case Files: MillionHeir is for the Nintendo DS, and it generally succeeds in bringing the popular HOG to the GameBoy.

The thin plot of the game involves the player searching for the heir to a recently-vanished mogul. Gameplay consists of meeting a parade of typically colorful characters and engaging in a series of hidden object puzzles to move the story forward.

Mystery Case Files: MillionHeir screenshot - click to enlarge You might think that a HOG wouldn’t work well on the small screens of the Nintendo DS, but the designers make it work pretty well. The searching all takes place on the lower screen using the stylus. Since you don’t have the benefit of a large PC screen to see the entire area, you use the movable “camera” to scan the image.

In addition to simply moving around the screen and hunting for objects with the naked eye, as the game progresses you acquire extra tools to help you in your search. There’s an infrared scanner, a flashlight and even a pair of special goggles that help you spy objects that are in liquid.

There are bonus puzzles at the end of each level, and these are generally of the jigsaw or slider variety.

The graphics are fine, but nothing to write home about.

Mystery Case Files: MillionHeir screenshot - click to enlarge In fact, I’d rank the entire enterprise this way: It gets the job done. It provides your HOG fix on a hand-held system. And while I commend Big Fish for designing a puzzle adventure directly for the DS (as opposed to simply porting a PC game to the smaller platform), I have to say that the Mystery Case Files experience is somehow . . . reduced on the small screens. Compared to the lush screens, smooth animations and high-quality musical scores of the PC versions, MillionHeir feels more repetitive, and the gameplay simply wears out its welcome more quickly. While I did enjoy the experience, it wasn’t the breezy fun of playing a MCF game on the PC.

I do hope Big Fish tries again. As their popularity proves, the HOG is a solid formula. It deserves a second try on the DS.


Final Grade: C+
(find out more about our grading system)

If you liked this game, then
Play: Pandora's Box (PC)
Watch: Clue
Read: The Body in the Library by Agatha Christie

System Requirements:

Nintendo DS

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.