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Windows Windows. Most Popular. New Releases. Desktop Enhancements. Networking Software. Meitantei Conan is a Playstation game released in based on the popular anime of the same name, translated to Detective Conan.
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This is another entry that isn't strictly a detective game, but has the feel of one. This unique freeform structure, combined with understated and believable police interview clips, makes it a bold narrative experiment.
And piecing together the story really makes you feel like a detective. This is the devilish premise of Overboard, a superb interactive fiction game from Inkle, the studio behind 80 Days. Cleverly, it's a detective game in reverse. Rather than solving a murder, you're covering one up, and helping Veronica get away with the crime is incredibly satisfying. It's a spiralling conspiratorial thriller, and throws in enough twists and surprises to keep things interesting. Set in an abandoned American town in the s, you play as a journalist investigating a series of murders, and you really have to use your mind, intuitively piecing clues together, to get any kind of resolution out of it.
These troubled souls are complete strangers to you, their lives a total mystery. But by the end of the game you'll know them intimately, and will have uncovered a series of shocking truths about their lives. It's a series of short first-person vignettes, stitched together with snappy TV-style editing. The game is completely linear, often to a fault, but the compelling way the mystery unravels and the strength of the characters makes up for it—and all without a single line of dialogue.
This garish and hilarious simulated internet, inspired by the golden age of the web, is hiding all kinds of illegal content, and you really have to work to find the offending material, infiltrating hacker collectives, locating hidden pages, and cracking passwords.
You play as Francis McQueen, and along with sidekick and foil Dooley, you solve cases with a hidden supernatural element, like a goofier X-Files. FTL composer Ben Prunty also provides an excellent, atmospheric soundtrack. You have limited time to solve a variety of mysteries on the train, including the brutal death of a passenger—who also happens to be your friend. The time element can be stressful at first, but it's worth persevering with.
A very different take on the detective genre, and brutally, punishingly difficult thanks to its real-time structure. You play as an ex-cop in a wheelchair who witnesses a murder and takes it upon himself to crack the case.
It's a compelling mystery, and teaches you a little something about the history and politics of post-Franco Spain in the process. You can revisit the exact moment of a person's death, and through these vignettes you piece together their name, how they died, and who or what was responsible.
This is an immensely satisfying detective game because it trusts you to solve each mystery yourself with no hand-holding. You explore a vivid and deeply strange tropical island at your own pace, pick up clues in any order, and create links to solve a brutal mass murder. This makes exploring extremely rewarding, and a single piece of evidence can completely change your perception of the case.
It's a classic point-and-click game, but with some light RPG elements, such as choosing from one of three backgrounds for your character. The shadowy streets of New York make for an evocative setting, and the game mixes the magical and the mundane brilliantly. It's incredibly janky, but depending on who you ask, that's all part of its charm.
The severed head of a girl on the doorstep of Bigby Wolf triggers its mystery. But like any good noir story, The Wolf Among Us can't be solved.
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