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The Hardy Boys: The Perfect Crime Review

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Developed by Trine Games, produced by Jowood Productions and published by BigFish Games

A crime wave has gripped the Hardy Boys` hometown of Bayport! Help the Hardys solve this rash of crimes and unravel the Perfect Crime! It’s up to the Boys and their detective skills to follow the clues and discover an incredibly deep plot in this Hidden Object game. Hardy Boys – The Perfect Crime will challenge you with tough minigames and detailed scenes. Can you find the mastermind behind it all and crack the case?

Bigfish Games

Story: The Hardy Boys are renowned in their home town of Bayport for their exceptional sleuthing skills. Now a case of unconventional theft falls right into their lap. The threads, when followed back, lead to a hugely complicated and ominous conspiracy of fraud and smuggling. Are the Hardy Brothers up to putting the criminals behind bars?

The game is typically hardyish, centering around  the (sometimes annoyingly) precocious highschoolers Joe and Frank Hardy, a little around their parents, and a host of personality-less characters in Bayport, including police officers who are always ready to let the boys play the detective. As you play through the game, you’ll find that The Perfect Crime is a misnomer for this game. The plot simply doesn’t have the finesse to match up to the elegant name, and all the underlying swiftness and cruelty it implies. The lack of interesting material in the plot is tried to be covered by some unnecessary complexity that doesn’t work. Still it comes fairly close, and qualifies as an average Hardyish story. Despite the tidy narration, not as awe-inspiring as a point-and-click crime story could’ve been.

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Gameplay: However flimsy the plot might be, playing the game isn’t bad (provided you’ve turned off the music). You start off with great expectations from the starting page – designed like a detective’s scrapbook. For the first few minutes, your interest will be well rewarded, for it starts with one of the best aspects of the game – the witty banter between the Hardy Brothers, Joe and Frank!

Then we move on to the Hidden Object part. This part is easy enough, but that’s the start of all the troubles. Instead of “hiding” objects, they’re reduced to tiny faraway objects that would require you to resort to pixel hunting to pick them up at all.

Hints are provided, probably 3 at each level. I cannot be sure, because the number was never mentioned in the entire game.

And yes, some minigames are provided, but it seems the developers were pretty reluctant to put much effort to it. Three or four separate puzzles of nursery stage are replayed again and again, each more brain sapping than the previous in terms of simplicity.

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Graphics and Music: The Hardy Boys: The Perfect Crime scores poorly in this department too. The graphics going with the HOG are incredibly mediocre, with a narrow angle, unimaginative decoration, and low lighting.

And the music? It is totally unworthy. I turned it off after the first few minutes of the game. Trust me, no detective could work properly with those tracks blaring in the background.

Bottomline: The sole point I loved about the game was the dialogues between the Hardy brothers. Their repartee and sarcasm are outstanding and refreshing after each level of tiring gameplay. If you’re a Hardy fan, this game could qualify on your list of Must Play Games. For others, you might want to try it out for the constant leg-pulling and the well-recited plot.

Rating

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