playcevrimicicasino

playcevrimicicasino

If you've ever wished Phoenix Wright was a witcher then do I have the game for you

By Dr. Eleanor Vance | Published on January 01, 0001

The problem with our modern, humdrum, urban existences is that there's just no magic. Back in the day, when the world was young and the woods were thick, the world abounded in witchcraft and devilry. Now if I accuse an old woman of curdling my milk, suddenly I'm the bad guy.

Not so in , a puzzle-y, point-and-clicky thing from developer Hakababunko, which puts you in the shoes of university student Azami Fukurai as she investigates spooky goings-on in and about her city.

Azami equips her magical glasses with a grin.

(Image credit: Shueisha Games)

Azami's got the sight, you see. She sees dead people. Or not dead people, but actually the psychometric echoes of living people who have been in a location before. Maybe? I haven't quite put that one together yet, but the point is she's pretty much tailor-made to be a psychic detective, which is why the titular Urban Myth Dissolution Center has hired her.

Job offer you can't refuse

Or, more accurately, the Center has extorted her. Azami's naive and a klutz, and when she visits the center for help with her visions and accidentally breaks the their prize murder chair (a chair that kills you, QED), she's easily bamboozled into taking on a job to pay off her debt.

Which should indicate that, despite the spooky premise, the game is actually quite daft. Think the humour of the kind of anime you might catch on a Saturday morning and you're not far off. Honestly? It's not what I was expecting going in: I was anticipating something much more straightforwardly horror-themed, but I quite like it anyhow. Azami's a bit of a trope and her boss, Ayumu Meguriya, is only ever inches away from going full , but they come across as likeable and familiar rather than tired and played out.

A woman huddles on a bed while a creepy man with an axe crawls out from under it. Japanese text on the screen is translated into English subtitles reading "The Man Under the Bed".

(Image credit: Shueisha Games)

The meat of the game is in the investigation. Urban myths are slippery things, prone to spreading like wildfire and mutating in the telling, and Azami's job is pinning them down. That means figuring out their origins, the tell-tale signifiers that identify which particular myth she's dealing with, and then, well, leaving. Because actually solving the problem isn't the gig, we're just here to investigate. Tough luck yono all app for the guy who hired you.

Investigation manages to keep feeling pretty varied, not trapping you in a single gameplay loop for too long at any one time, at least in the couple of hours I've spent with the game so far. A process of "social media investigation," which means scrolling fake-Twitter clicking on comments that look evidence-y and assembling combinations of search terms, feeds into the process of searching the actual scene of the crime. You click evidence, talk about the evidence with victims and witnesses, that unlocks more yono apk evidence to find, and so on. At times you retreat to your mind palace to piece together the circumstances of events by assembling fragments of phrases, like you're writing a message in Dark Souls.

Mio clutches her face and screams "No!" while approched by a red figure carrying an axe.

(Image credit: Shueisha Games)

All of which works quite well. Like I say, I've never felt like any of these gameplay sections have dragged on too long in my time with the game, and even when I've gotten a little stuck, the strength of the writing has kept me propelled forward. Azami's an affable chucklehead, and watching her attempt detective work is good fun.

Also you get to do witcher stuff, so that's good. A case concludes with your boss getting very theatrical as you assemble your evidence yono arcade and pin down just which urban myth it is you're dealing with. It's like Geralt figuring out he's dealing with a werewolf from a tuft of hair and the shape of a wound, except it's a young woman figuring out that, obviously, this is the famous urban myth 'guy with an axe what lives under your bed'.

It's part Phoenix Wright, part Witcher, and I'm enjoying it a lot. If you want to check it out yourself, Urban Myth Dissolution Center has a demo on .

: When's the next event?
: What's free right now?
: The best freebies you can grab
: This year's upcoming releases
: No purchase necessary

Reader Comments

ReelFanatic7687

The promotions and bonuses offered are very generous. I especially love the daily free spins and deposit bonuses. They make playing even more enjoyable and increase my chances of winning big. The platform keeps me engaged for hours every day. Sometimes I wish there were more ways to earn rewards through loyalty programs or frequent player bonuses. Adding seasonal events or special challenges could enhance the excitement even further.

GameAddict5584

The variety of games is excellent, including table games like blackjack, roulette, and baccarat, in addition to slots. This keeps the platform interesting and allows me to switch games depending on my mood. The promotions and bonuses offered are very generous. I especially love the daily free spins and deposit bonuses. They make playing even more enjoyable and increase my chances of winning big. The platform keeps me engaged for hours every day.

SpinQueen4728

Sometimes I wish there were more ways to earn rewards through loyalty programs or frequent player bonuses. Adding seasonal events or special challenges could enhance the excitement even further. The progressive jackpots are thrilling, and it's exciting to watch the jackpot amounts grow as more players spin the reels. I hope they add even more jackpot slots because it adds a lot of excitement to the gameplay.

Recommended Reading

A group of Elden Ring's most devoted players have slain the same Souls bosses nearly 800 times while

Abstract: Dark Souls 3's hardest bosses are routinely getting punished by Elden Ring's most devoted players as they wait for the Shadow of the Erdtree DLC to finally [[link]] release.Three YouTubers, Lellollo, Kyoufo, a...

Starfield player spawns thousands of milk cartons in space and smashes into them, resulting in one o

Abstract: I don't think I'll ever get tired of [[link]] Starfield players gathering or spawning vast numbers of mundane objects and dumping them all in one place, but for now I think I've found my favourite. It involves...

WoW's telegraphs are so cluttered that even the best guild in the world is using darkening potions d

Abstract: World of Warcraft: Dragonflight has its fans and detractors, but on one point a huge number of players [[link]] agree: the game's telegraphs, the visual and audio cues that show what a given character is about...