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Review
Unsolved
Crimes
| Developer: |
Now
Production |
| Publisher: |
Atari |
| Genre: |
Adventure |
| Release
Date: |
September 30,
2008 |
| Platform: |

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Review by Ray Ivey
December 23, 2008 |
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Detective
games have long been a staple of the graphic adventure genre, from
Black
Dahlia and Ripper
to Gabriel
Knight and Sherlock Holmes. Most of those games
tend to focus on a broad storyline and lots of character interaction.
Unsolved Crimes is a little different. It
consists of a series of very specific crimes with very tight crime
scenes. Your job as a rookie detective is to root out evidence and
use logic to solve the crimes.
The flow of the game is
as follows: You see a murky cut scene involving a new murder. Then
you are given the case, presented with the bare facts and a few suspects.
You then scour the crime scene looking for evidence, study the files
on the suspects and begin cracking the case. Progress on each case
is done in the form of a series of “queries” that require
you to analyze the information you have gathered.
Those
who like their games to be very challenging may be disappointed with
Unsolved Crimes as the cases are pretty
simple to solve. However, the difficulty level does ramp up gently
as you progress through the game. Some of the challenges, like working
out sightlines in a city park to corroborate or discredit witness
testimony, are satisfying and fun.
To mix things up, there’s
a sort of meta-case that kicks in about a third of the way through
the game. It involves a kidnapping and successfully serves to add
some variety to the game play.
The
graphics are very basic at best. Movement through the 3D environments
is a bit awkward, but at least gives you the flexibility to be able
to examine the murder scenes with the thoroughness necessary for success.
The game suffers just a
bit from a questionable localization: Though the game is clearly set
in the US, the translation is clearly by someone who’s familiarity
with English is British, rather than American.
All in all, I was surprised
by how enjoyable Unsolved Crimes was to
play. While I want to be careful not to oversell this modest game,
the fact is that it can be a fun little package of murder to carry
around with you.
Final
Grade: B
(find
out more about our grading system)
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If you
liked this game, then
Play: any Law & Order or CSI game
Watch: any old episode of “Columbo”
Read: any 87th Precinct novel by Ed McBain |
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.
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