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Real Crimes: Unicorn Killer Review

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Help rookie FBI Agent Jennifer Lourdes, and veteran detective Alan Michaels catch the infamous Unicorn Killer! Track down the murderer, Ira Einhorn, as you bring him to justice in this exciting Hidden Object game. Travel all around the globe and explore important crime scenes. Based on a true story, Real Crimes: The Unicorn Killer, takes you on the long-running chase and extradition of this dangerous criminal!

Big Fish Games

What a shock! And just the sort of shock I don’t like! Here I am, thinking that the game is taking a really interesting turn, and suddenly – “The End.”

Real Crimes Unicorn Killer screenshot 1

Story: Ira Einhorn, the peace activist of the 60’s and 70’s, had killed his girlfriend and hidden her in his closet for two years before police finally got onto his scent. But his high profile political connections saved his ass as he flitted out of America around Europe with no one to touch him. Now, years later, the young detective Jennifer Lourdes arrives on the scene, ready to battle it out with Einhorn “the Unicorn” one last time and try to throw him behind the bars!

Gameplay: The story is actually mighty fine. It is matured, and is boldly undelined by the power-politics of the modern world. But the problem is this storyline leaves no scope for you to play, to use your detective powers. Neither is there a plot within the game – not even the semblance of that in the entire game. This is a hidden object game, with you playing as Jennifer on either Detective (without timer or random click penalties) or Rookie (both timer and penalty) modes. For most of the part, you’re following your senior detective Michaels to learn about Ira’s past. It could’ve been the prologue, with further chapters to follow when you do your own detection. No such luck. The game ends with the prologue itself.

Real Crimes Unicorn Killer screenshot 2Puzzles: This is a hidden object game. The hidden objects are remarkably well-hidden in wide angle views of the locations; it gets harder in the night locations. There are 5 or so Chinese Go puzzles hidden at places which, though unorthodox to be included in a hidden object game, are quite easy to solve. The other puzzles involve mini- games in the forensic lab like matching the fingerprints and match-and-pair. The fingerprint business is the only tough puzzle around.  Just like in baseball, each wrong guess causes a “strike”, and three strikes mean you lose.

Ambience: The game, however small in its gameplay, is outstanding in its graphics and animation. Especially the animation. Who would’ve expected FPS level animation in a hidden objects game? Yet it is so, smooth, high-level, believable animation! – a real pleasure when you compare this with the scratchy animations of most puzzle games.

Real Crimes Unicorn Killer is somewhat moody in its music. Each country has its own traditional music to go with it. But, hey developers, please change the error sound next time, it hurts the ears when you click on wrong places!

Real Crimes Unicorn Killer screenshot 3

Bottomline: Again, an unexpectedly short game. The levels are fast-paced and small, action packed with serious lines and proper characterization of the criminal. Hardly 20 such levels on, you find yourself putting handcuffs on Einhorn. It transpires in the end that the heroine of the game is just a brainless amateur who has a tendency to mouth loud words but ultimately dangles around on her superior’s tailcoat. Play this only if you like short political-based hidden object games. Real Crimes does not have much uniqueness of its own.

Rating: 3.5 out of 5

Real Crimes Unicorn Killer Quick Review

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Now this seems a fresh sort of hidden object game. Set in 1979, it has the 70’s periodic feel as you chase across a complex criminal across Europe. The political shades are expertly blended, so the plot looks honestly good.

The rooms are held at long shots, fairly spacy, not cluttered with items. Maybe that is why it is not always easy to find the 10 hidden objects. Short-action packed levels along with unique, peppy score for each setting…. If you like political detective stories with serious characterization, play Real Crimes The Unicorn Killer.

See Big Fish Games for more info.

Written by anti7neutrino

April 30, 2009 at 8:05 am