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Gabriel Knight: 20th Anniversary Edition - GDC 2014 trailer

Added: 21.03.2014 17:15 | 8 views | 0 comments


Phoenix Online Studios has released the GDC 2014 trailer for Gabriel Knight: 20th Anniversary Edition. Gabriel Knight: 20th Anniversary Edition is a remake of the first Gabriel Knight game that packs high res graphics, an all new remastered soundtrack, behind-the-scenes goodies, and the great gameplay and story of the original.

From: n4g.com

City of Titans Powered by Unreal Engine 4

Added: 21.03.2014 7:31 | 2 views | 0 comments


Previously known as The Phoenix Project and the spiritual succesor of City of Heroes

From: www.gamershell.com

Professor Layton Vs. Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney Review | Gamereactor UK

Added: 20.03.2014 17:15 | 7 views | 0 comments


GR-UK writes: "The unusual setting brings in unusual elements for both games, but also as a result makes the experience refreshing from what we've become used to."

From: n4g.com

Professor Layton Vs Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney Review (God is a Geek)

Added: 19.03.2014 16:15 | 6 views | 0 comments


Posted by Dan Naylor Professor Layton Vs. Phoenix Wright is a combination that you would expect to work, and it does. Sort of. But its still a very mixed bag.

From: n4g.com

Professor Layton vs Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney Review | VideoGamer

Added: 19.03.2014 10:15 | 5 views | 0 comments


VideoGamer: "A wonderful crossover."

From: n4g.com

Review: Professor Layton VS Ace Attorney (3DS)

Added: 19.03.2014 8:00 | 6 views | 0 comments


Like Tango and Cash with Top Hats and manga Hair.

It’s an overwhelmingly successful merging of two different narrative-driven puzzle franchises that turn out to be highly compatible with each other.The game largely takes place in the fictional town of Labyrinthia, which exists in a book, and Professor Layton and his urchin dogsbody Luke manage to get trapped there. Phoenix Wright and his assistant Maya get sucked in afterwards, leading to the greatest collaboration since Jagger and Bowie. The forces eventually unite, with Wright and Layton attempting to get to the bottom of things.

It’s a puzzle title at heart, and a...



From: www.videogamer.com

Feature: Professor Layton and Phoenix Wright: The perfect match

Added: 19.03.2014 8:00 | 4 views | 0 comments


Why the collaboration works, and what it could lead to.

They’re from two completely different worlds, of course. Professor Layton is a casually dressed Victorian gent in a top hat, and his sidekick Luke dresses like some Charles Dickens urchin, and even has the mockney accent to go with it. Phoenix Wright and Maya? One’s an endearingly insecure hot shot lawyer in a sharp blue suit, and the other’s a boisterous, frivolous sidekick in traditional Japanese garb. Combining these two worlds is like getting an anime company to make a Werthers Originals advert; an old english gent slowly rocking back and forth in a rocking chair next to a roaring...



From: www.videogamer.com

Professor Layton vs. Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney Review

Added: 18.03.2014 23:01 | 0 views | 0 comments


Why would the amiable Professor Layton be interested in squaring off against the uncomfortably awkward Phoenix Wright? Answer: He's not. The first thing to understand about the awkwardly named Professor Layton vs. Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney is that the two title characters are allies, not adversaries. Pure and simple, what you've got here is a bromance between two of the DS and 3DS's most captivating stars.

And it works. The problem of how to combine two franchises that operate in fundamentally different ways has been deftly overcome by transplanting this entire 30-hour-plus (yes, 30 hours...plus!) adventure to a new time and place. Proceedings begin in London but quickly move to Labyrinthia, a medieval town of a fantastical disposition featuring witches, knights, magic, and a storyteller capable of changing the future by rewriting it.

The fully animated cutscenes are stunning in quality

On the flip side, Layton's puzzles, while generally well crafted and boasting diversity, come off as a little underdeveloped in comparison to the trials. The new setting and the multiple witness angle means playing as Phoenix feels fresh and exciting, while puzzle solving is the same as it ever was.

Identifying the odd one out, navigating a maze, solving faux-mathematical number puzzles and besting diluted variations of popular games (chess, for instance) feel very much like brain teasers that we've seen and done before in more than one other Layton game. Those included do a good job of mimicking the magical tone of Labyrinthia, but at their core the format is familiar enough to trigger déjà vu and for you to wonder if you've solved this same puzzle somewhere else previously. This is going to be a greater or lesser problem depending on how many Professor Layton games you've already played--if you've played them all, then fatigue is going to set in before the finale.

That said, both sides of the game are undoubtedly of high quality; it's just a shame that one side feels fresh and new while the other remains exactly as we've always known it. If you've never played a Layton game, however, or haven't played one in recent history, you'll find nothing to complain about.

Phoenix's courtroom cases are grandiose, exaggerated, and some of the most charming and wacky he has ever been involved with.

There can certainly be no complaints, however, regarding the quality of the production values. Fully animated video cutscenes and voiced dialogue appear often, while the design and implementation of the touch-screen controls and in-game menus exude the kind of quality you'd expect from two franchises that have been doing the rounds for so long.

Layton vs. Phoenix Wright is a long game--at least as long as a Professor Layton game and a Phoenix Wright game combined--and relatively little of it is genuine crossover. But that doesn't make it any less enjoyable. What is here is big, it's often silly, and it's sometimes unwieldy, but it's rarely anything less than engaging thanks to some great execution on tried-and-tested ideas. It's Phoenix, however, in his element in this magical world, that well and truly steals the show.

From: www.gamespot.com

Professor Layton vs. Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney Review

Added: 18.03.2014 23:01 | 0 views | 0 comments


Why would the amiable Professor Layton be interested in squaring off against the uncomfortably awkward Phoenix Wright? Answer: He's not. The first thing to understand about the awkwardly named Professor Layton vs. Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney is that the two title characters are allies, not adversaries. Pure and simple, what you've got here is a bromance between two of the DS and 3DS's most captivating stars.

And it works. The problem of how to combine two franchises that operate in fundamentally different ways has been deftly overcome by transplanting this entire 30-hour-plus (yes, 30 hours...plus!) adventure to a new time and place. Proceedings begin in London but quickly move to Labyrinthia, a medieval town of a fantastical disposition featuring witches, knights, magic, and a storyteller capable of changing the future by rewriting it.

The fully animated cutscenes are stunning in quality

On the flip side, Layton's puzzles, while generally well crafted and boasting diversity, come off as a little underdeveloped in comparison to the trials. The new setting and the multiple witness angle means playing as Phoenix feels fresh and exciting, while puzzle solving is the same as it ever was.

Identifying the odd one out, navigating a maze, solving faux-mathematical number puzzles and besting diluted variations of popular games (chess, for instance) feel very much like brain teasers that we've seen and done before in more than one other Layton game. Those included do a good job of mimicking the magical tone of Labyrinthia, but at their core the format is familiar enough to trigger déjà vu and for you to wonder if you've solved this same puzzle somewhere else previously. This is going to be a greater or lesser problem depending on how many Professor Layton games you've already played--if you've played them all, then fatigue is going to set in before the finale.

That said, both sides of the game are undoubtedly of high quality; it's just a shame that one side feels fresh and new while the other remains exactly as we've always known it. If you've never played a Layton game, however, or haven't played one in recent history, you'll find nothing to complain about.

Phoenix's courtroom cases are grandiose, exaggerated, and some of the most charming and wacky he has ever been involved with.

There can certainly be no complaints, however, regarding the quality of the production values. Fully animated video cutscenes and voiced dialogue appear often, while the design and implementation of the touch-screen controls and in-game menus exude the kind of quality you'd expect from two franchises that have been doing the rounds for so long.

Layton vs. Phoenix Wright is a long game--at least as long as a Professor Layton game and a Phoenix Wright game combined--and relatively little of it is genuine crossover. But that doesn't make it any less enjoyable. What is here is big, it's often silly, and it's sometimes unwieldy, but it's rarely anything less than engaging thanks to some great execution on tried-and-tested ideas. It's Phoenix, however, in his element in this magical world, that well and truly steals the show.

From: www.gamespot.com


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