The 3 Types of Detective Game

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  • čas přidán 23. 05. 2024
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    Back in 2017 I made a video about detective game design. And I had to dig deep to find good crime-solving games to talk about - like old PC games from the 90s and obscure indie titles on Itch. But in the last five years we've seen an explosion of great detective games - so it's time to revisit the topic and ask, again, what makes a good detective game?
    === Chapters ===
    00:00 - Intro
    01:42 - Deduction Style
    05:26 - Contradiction Style
    07:40 - Investigation Style
    12:15 - The Accusation
    14:14 - Tester Design
    19:07 - Assisting the Player
    21:30 - Other Games
    22:27 - Outro
    === Games Shown ===
    L.A. Noire (2011)
    The Wolf Among Us (2013)
    Sherlock Holmes: Crimes & Punishments (2013)
    Sherlock Holmes: Consulting Detective (1991)
    The Blackwell Legacy (2006)
    Return Of The Obra Dinn (Demo) (2016)
    Her Story (2015)
    Return Of The Obra Dinn (2018)
    Shadows of Doubt (In Early Access)
    Lucifer Within Us (2020)
    The Case of the Golden Idol (2022)
    Scene Investigators (2023)
    Detective Grimoire (2014)
    Telling Lies (2019)
    Tangle Tower (2019)
    Disco Elysium (2019)
    Lost Judgment (2021)
    Frog Detective 1: The Haunted Island (2018)
    The Murder of Sonic the Hedgehog (2023)
    Murder by Numbers (2020)
    Murdered: Soul Suspect (2014)
    Strange Horticulture (2022)
    Riley & Rochelle (2022)
    Layton's Mystery Journey: Katrielle and the Millionaire's Conspiracy (2017)
    Contradiction: Spot the Liar! (2015)
    The Great Ace Attorney Chronicles (2021)
    Papers, Please (2013)
    A Hand With Many Fingers (2020)
    Do Not Feed the Monkeys (2018)
    Hypnospace Outlaw (2019)
    Outer Wilds (2019)
    Immortality (2022)
    Danganronpa: Trigger Happy Havoc (2010)
    Paradise Killer (2020)
    Whispers in the West (2023)
    Sherlock Holmes: The Devil's Daughter (2016)
    Detroit: Become Human (2018)
    Gotham Knights (2022)
    Discworld Noir (1999)
    Pentiment (2022)
    Overboard! (2021)
    Silicon Dreams (2021)
    Among Us (2018)
    Mind Diver (Unreleased)
    AI Tech Preview: The Portopia Serial Murder Case (2023)
    === Credits ===
    Music from L.A. Noire, by Andrew and Simon Hale
    Music from Disco Elysium, by Sea Power
    Music from Return of the Obra Dinn , by Lucas Pope
    Music from Layton's Mystery Journey, by Tomohito Nishiura
    Music from Lucifer Within Us, by FX Bilodeau
    Music from Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney - Dual Destinies, by Noriyuki Iwadare
    Music from Shadows of Doubt
    Music from Her Story, by Chris Zabriskie
    Music from Paradise Killer, by Barry Topping
    === Subtitles ===
    Contribute translated subtitles - amara.org/videos/D0k9rtffqBnd/
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Komentáře • 1K

  • @GMTK
    @GMTK  Před 9 měsíci +249

    You can now follow GMTK on Substack! Get an email whenever there's a new video. Read the script as a fancy article. Get recommended articles and videos (paid) - gmtk.substack.com

    • @DOOF1
      @DOOF1 Před 9 měsíci +4

      ace attorney dog

    • @jakub5
      @jakub5 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Have you heard of game A Hand With Many Fingers. Would love to hear your thoughts about it.

    • @TheMaskedDonut
      @TheMaskedDonut Před 9 měsíci +1

      The only downside with the substack is that when I got the e-mail, I didn't realize it was for a new video (I thought it was its own thing) and accidentally read the transcript before seeing the video pop up in my CZcams feed.
      Anyhoo, excellent work! Keep it up!

    • @Jigsawn2
      @Jigsawn2 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@jakub5 it's literally shown in the video, so presumably he has played it! Would you recommend it?

    • @jakub5
      @jakub5 Před 9 měsíci

      @@Jigsawn2 must have missed it, yes i would recomend it , its interesting and really cheap

  • @zzache
    @zzache Před 9 měsíci +3601

    The best part of a GMTK video is seeing a game that you love playing get described by someone who can write way better than you.

    • @woutervanduin7415
      @woutervanduin7415 Před 9 měsíci +39

      Yes. Relatable.

    • @dcta51
      @dcta51 Před 9 měsíci +25

      All these CZcams video game channels write better than us 😭

    • @andrewdennehy8170
      @andrewdennehy8170 Před 9 měsíci +120

      The best part of reading the comments section is seeing what you’re thinking described by someone who can write better than you

    • @jacktheripper4731
      @jacktheripper4731 Před 9 měsíci +3

      I mean he didn't really say anything special, he played a bunch of investigation type games and then described the most basic aspects of them. let's if a developer was watching this, what could they actually learn?

    • @jp9707
      @jp9707 Před 9 měsíci +27

      ​​@@jacktheripper4731 at the beginning of the video he describes how in 2017 he made a video lamenting the lack of actual, organic investigation in detective games, and then said that at least one of the games featured in this new video was made as a response to that first video. So his videos do inspire developers in how to make their games.
      GMT doesn't describe the literal coding or software needed to make games. Instead he talks about game mechanics, and how to make them interesting and fun. It's a well-known fact that many, many professional game developers are subscribed to his channel and use his videos as inspiration for their games. Heck, many successful games have even started out as submissions for his annual game jam, in which people who watch his videos put the techniques they have learned from him to the test.
      Making a game is more than about writing code, it's about having a fun central game mechanic. GMK videos explore how these mechanics work, and explore the overriding themes that connect these mechanics, enabling people to work out ways of designing a new mechanic for their own game.

  • @hassanshaikh3451
    @hassanshaikh3451 Před 9 měsíci +1269

    I really like Ace Attorney as it stands out for one thing: You're not the only one pointing out contradictions. In other detective games the primary antagonist is probably the perpetrator, but for Ace Attorney the primary antagonist is the prosecution, and in them pointing out the flaw in the players logic it can completely flip the case on its head.

    • @Jigsawn2
      @Jigsawn2 Před 9 měsíci +306

      Yeah there are some great moments in Ace Attourney where you think a case is in the bag, but then the prosecutor points out some flaw you probably overlooked. Unfortunately this can also mean that if you did notice the flaw in advance, it's forcing you into being 'stupid' for the sake of the plot. Danganronpa is also really bad for this, where you can be forced to submit 'facts' you know are wrong if you have cracked the case already.

    • @rogerlegrow-cormier7197
      @rogerlegrow-cormier7197 Před 9 měsíci +159

      @@Jigsawn2 yeah that is one of the other major issue with contradiction style games. They tend to be super 'tunneling' in your thought progress via the questions they ask, but can also sometimes be infuriating if you know the answer and are just trying to guess what it wants you to use it on

    • @nyarlathoteppol2177
      @nyarlathoteppol2177 Před 9 měsíci +200

      ​@@Jigsawn2 It's true, but I think that this problem is alleviated by the fact that the player character is much more of a "character" in those game than it is in games like Obra dinn for exemple. You may spot that Phoenix's logic is flawed before the game reveal it, but it doesn't feel that bad because phoenix isn't just an avatar to project yourself onto, he hae a personality and a role in the story. It's like reading a detective novel and understanding that the detective is following a red herring before him, in a way it feel pretty good, because it feel like you have outsmarted the plot itself.
      The real problem of these kind of game IMO is when you know of a contradiction, you know you have what you need to point it out, but you can't because the game want you to point something else first. Having your character make wrong assumption in the story is more than fine, being forced to make one yourself throught gameplay feel pretty bad.

    • @sid98geek
      @sid98geek Před 9 měsíci +39

      Yeah, that is a good point. You have one more person pointing out contradictions, i.e. the prosecutor, and all of the supporting cast, including the judge, voices their opinions. This can be interesting in cases where the prosecutors themselves are the perpetrators.

    • @Archipelagoes
      @Archipelagoes Před 8 měsíci +15

      Ace attorney and Danganronpa are kinda basic with the detective thingy.. We play them for their cool and fun story/characters.. It's pretty linear also..

  • @TheBirdSolution
    @TheBirdSolution Před 9 měsíci +1645

    First time seeing a game I've worked on in a GMTK video - so cool to see Shadows of Doubt on your radar Mark!

    • @DjokovicIsOurLordAndSaviour
      @DjokovicIsOurLordAndSaviour Před 9 měsíci +78

      It looks incredible, congrats!

    • @SL4PSH0CK
      @SL4PSH0CK Před 9 měsíci +44

      True Shadow of doubt and Battlebit were the indie games I recommend my friends during the month of release

    • @ranchonbread4905
      @ranchonbread4905 Před 9 měsíci +22

      I had the game on my wishlist, but seeing it in action has already made me put it in my cart. (Also mark streamed it not too long ago, so shoutout to that!)

    • @danielgrezda3339
      @danielgrezda3339 Před 9 měsíci +30

      As an aspiring game developer, the first time I heard about shadows of doubt I thought the person was joking. How you guys built an interesting and massive generated detective game that can run on when most developers can't get basic works generation right boggles my mind. I hope more games are made with this good procedural generation!

    • @westofley
      @westofley Před 9 měsíci +1

      i wonder how you felt about the ZP about it

  • @smactork
    @smactork Před 9 měsíci +1001

    Shadows of Doubt, for what it is, is SO fun and gives you so much freedom. I am extremely excited to see where it goes

    • @SL4PSH0CK
      @SL4PSH0CK Před 9 měsíci +26

      Agree, I'm seeing AI as a convenient way of putting dynamic writing

    • @HonoraryAperture
      @HonoraryAperture Před 9 měsíci +69

      I love that dang game but it's so buggy, and development seems kind of slow, I'm assuming because of small dev team, if it is even a team. I'm here for it, though, as long as it takes. The atmosphere and lingering air of "No one knows there's a killer afoot but me, and I'm the only one who can solve it" because they're all mindless AI is extremely good.

    • @smactork
      @smactork Před 9 měsíci +25

      @@HonoraryAperture It is incredibly buggy, and there is a lot that can be changed and added, hopefully some day. But I think it's a great baseline for gameplay structure and atmosphere

    • @targard.quantumfrack6854
      @targard.quantumfrack6854 Před 9 měsíci +6

      Tried 1h, fell in love and bought it ASAP, great base of a fantastic game

    • @bubblemage
      @bubblemage Před 9 měsíci +9

      @@HonoraryAperture but at least it's getting worked on and updated! so we can only wait until the full game releases with all of that fixed, they recently fixed a massive and annoying memory leak that caused the game to become laggy after X minutes of playing, there's that.

  • @haniyasu8236
    @haniyasu8236 Před 9 měsíci +501

    I feel like Outer Wilds was a little undersung here. I know it's not really a "detective game", but it is one of the few games I've found that have truly made me feel like I was in a mystery and made me feel clever by figuring something out. The way it used travel to locations and knowledge based puzzles to solve the "how do we ask the player the answer to the mystery" felt incredibly clever and novel.

    • @DrEcho
      @DrEcho Před 9 měsíci +14

      This is a wild take that I 100% agree with.

    • @TheWarperbros
      @TheWarperbros Před 9 měsíci +16

      Agreed. There’s something so gratifying about the way you feel when you are able to reach a new corner of the world using the knowledge you gain. So many moments in that game left me awestruck.

    • @gnanay8555
      @gnanay8555 Před 9 měsíci +5

      Yep, it's the king of detective games for me too. Outer wilds is a lot of things though

    • @GeneralBolas
      @GeneralBolas Před 9 měsíci +32

      I think games like The Outer Wilds, while being similar to detective games, would be better considered to just be exploration or adventure games. The core difference is intentionality.
      In a detective game, you're told very clearly and directly what you are looking for. Someone's dead and you need to find out who. Or whatever. They can be non-linear from that point forward, but they are looking for a specific answer to a question that's asked very early on.
      Outer Wilds just... throws you into exploration. You must not only uncover the answers, but also the *questions themselves.* And that gives them a different, more "aimless" (for want of a better term) feel to them.

    • @sirprintalot
      @sirprintalot Před 9 měsíci +6

      one of the few games where I felt like I was on an adventure. Truly felt like a Doctor Who type story where I picked up all the leads, made mistakes, got myself out of trouble. Incredible experience I will never forget.

  • @Mwrp86
    @Mwrp86 Před 9 měsíci +364

    Here is a list of the games mentioned in the video:
    1. L.A. Noire (2011)
    2. The Wolf Among Us (2013)
    3. Sherlock Holmes: Crimes & Punishments (2013)
    4. Sherlock Holmes: Consulting Detective (1991)
    5. The Blackwell Legacy (200)
    6. Return Of The Obra Dinn (Demo) (2016)
    7. Her Story (2015)
    8. Return Of The Obra Dinn (2018)
    9. Shadows of Doubt (In Early Access)
    10. Lucifer Within Us (2020)
    11. The Case of the Golden Idol (2022)
    12. Scene Investigators (Unreleased)
    13. Detective Grimoire (2014)
    14. Telling Lies (2019)
    15. Tangle Tower (2019)
    16. Disco Elysium (2019)
    17. Lost Judgment (2021)
    18. Frog Detective 1: The Haunted Island (2018)
    19. The Murder of Sonic the Hedgehog (2023)
    20. Murder by Numbers (2020)
    21. Murdered: Soul Suspect (2014)
    22. Strange Horticulture (2022)
    23. Riley & Rochelle (2022)
    24. Layton's Mystery Journey: Katrielle and the Millionaire's Conspiracy (2017)
    25. Contradiction: Spot the Liar! (2015)
    26. The Great Ace Attorney Chronicles (2021)
    27. Papers, Please (2013)
    28. A Hand With Many Fingers (2020)
    29. Do Not Feed the Monkeys (2018)
    30. Hypnospace Outlaw (2019)
    31. Outer Wilds (2019)
    32. Immortality (2022)
    33. Danganronpa: Trigger Happy Havoc (2010)
    34. Paradise Killer (2020)
    35. Whispers in the West (2023)
    36. Sherlock Holmes: The Devil's Daughter (2016)
    37. Detroit: Become Human (2018)
    38. Gotham Knights (2022)
    39. Discworld Noir (1999)
    40. Pentiment (2022)
    41. Overboard! (2021)
    42. Silicon Dreams (2021)
    43. Among Us (2018)
    44. Mind Diver (Unreleased)
    45. AI Tech Preview: The Portopia Serial Murder Case (2023)

    • @emmamiller8351
      @emmamiller8351 Před 9 měsíci +4

      Lifesaver

    • @HerMi.T
      @HerMi.T Před 9 měsíci +39

      ​@@emmamiller8351it is already present in the video's description.

    • @garfreeek
      @garfreeek Před 7 měsíci +1

      As a great detective game I'd add the AI: in somnia games. Visual novels with a lot of interrogation, choices and escape room like deductieve scenes.

    • @jishan6992
      @jishan6992 Před 7 měsíci

      Forgot to mention judgment

    • @jtbebop497
      @jtbebop497 Před 6 měsíci +3

      Now there's no doubt in my mind that commentors with terminator pfps are just super helpful bots

  • @ForgeofAule
    @ForgeofAule Před 9 měsíci +331

    I love that Outer Wilds has sort of become an icon in the video game essay community to the point where it is mentioned in almost every video. I can't wait to see what Mobius makes next.

    • @cachotognax3600
      @cachotognax3600 Před 9 měsíci +48

      I also love how, due to the nature of the game, it's impossible to do anything more than mention it, or risk spoiling part of the fun.

    • @markai2002
      @markai2002 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Morbius

  • @MadSwedishGamer
    @MadSwedishGamer Před 9 měsíci +497

    I know you're not technically a detective in Ace Attorney, but it's still my favourite game series in this kind of genre.

    • @noirscape_
      @noirscape_ Před 9 měsíci +52

      Ace Attorney definitely counts as one. IIRC the biggest inspiration for Ace Attorney is Columbo (it's why the series has a long-standing tradition of revealing the first two murders - it's so the first two cases follow the Columbo "whydunnit" format rather than the "whodunnit" format of the typical detective).

    • @bobbitibob197
      @bobbitibob197 Před 9 měsíci +14

      I think most detective games can be summed up by "Create the plot twist" - games that feel like you worked hard to figure out whodunnit and it paid off. I'll argue that AA games due to being graphic novel is more of a "predict the plot twist", but due to how well-made the games are it still feels amazing and better than most "create the plot twist" games.
      To clarify the difference, in "create the plot twist", the questions would usually be more of a long-term thing. Like it could take you possibly hours to answer the leading questions. Whist in Ace Attorney, the questions more guided, short term things (but still often difficult).

    • @Terranigma23
      @Terranigma23 Před 9 měsíci +11

      Same. I also really liked Danganronpa, AI: The Somnium Files, and the recent RainCode. In the indie game style, I really liked Paradise Killer and Tangle Tower. 😁

    • @ihaveagoddamnplanarthur
      @ihaveagoddamnplanarthur Před 9 měsíci +5

      i have played nearly every game on the game except for the great ace attorney and spirit of justice. I'd say that it contains both investigation and contradiction. I prefer the investigations spinoff since you have more freedom and aren't necessarily on court.

    • @Terranigma23
      @Terranigma23 Před 9 měsíci +5

      @@ihaveagoddamnplanarthur The Great Ace Attorney is so good!

  • @jalapenoofjustice4682
    @jalapenoofjustice4682 Před 9 měsíci +194

    A Normal Lost Phone and its sequel are good examples of detective games that don't revolve around an actual crime. The premise of these games is that you have found a phone lying around and by looking through old chatlogs & the like you gradually unravel the story of the person the phone belonged to and why you found it lying around somewhere.

    • @Dashmaster305
      @Dashmaster305 Před 9 měsíci +8

      Sounds like a fun premise!

    • @DrEcho
      @DrEcho Před 9 měsíci

      I just named that among my favorites among the dozens of detective games I've played in my novel of a comment! I have Greyhat in particular to thank for my deep dive into that subgenre. It still remains the one to beat for me.

    • @petrakat
      @petrakat Před 9 měsíci +11

      There's another game like that called "The USB Stick Found in the Grass," which I found pretty frustrating (I didn't get past the first lock) but is really cool. It spoofs an actual extra drive to your computer, so there's no game-y interface; you have to use your computer's file explorer and stuff.

    • @SAmaryllis
      @SAmaryllis Před 9 měsíci +3

      Oh hey! I was just thinking of this game, as you slowly scroll through texts and photos to figure out what happened. I haven't played the sequel Another Lost Phone yet, but it's in my Steam library :D

    • @larastroud6644
      @larastroud6644 Před 9 měsíci

      @@SAmaryllisthe first one is better in my opinion but the second is good too

  • @goldstarsupreme
    @goldstarsupreme Před 9 měsíci +94

    I especially love Paradise Killer because not telling you whether you were right about the killer is a big intentional thematic choice to it, the game plays a lot with what the difference between "a fact" and "the truth". When you arrive on the island from your exile, it is "the truth" that Henry is the murderer, it's a simple, quick & easy answer that isn't hard to swallow and if you just wanna get this case over and done with, you can immediately start the trial no questions asked (literally) and convict him with that. But, whatever you do decide on, whatever accusation you end up making, if you have enough evidence to back it up, that will become the new truth, even if you're totally off base.

    • @ultrajari
      @ultrajari Před 8 měsíci +3

      Pentiment does a similar thing. I'm surprised it wasn't given more of a spotlight in this video, it's a terrific game

  • @scarletice
    @scarletice Před 9 měsíci +183

    I just kinda felt like pointing out another fun part of investigation style games that obscure the correct answer through sheer volume. With a large enough player base, sheer statistics all but guarantees that a player WILL occasionally just bump face first into the answer by complete chance. And while that might sound like a bad thing, it can actually be really fun in it's own way if it's clear to the player just how unlikely it was for that to happen.

    • @TTarragon
      @TTarragon Před 9 měsíci +9

      I don't know... I disagree. It's a bit funny to think that you were a lucky son of a gun, but if it makes you skip part, or the whole game, then that's unacceptable to me.
      Imagine paying some money just for that!

    • @nahometesfay1112
      @nahometesfay1112 Před 9 měsíci +10

      ​@@TTarragonThe magic of procedural generation is you can just play again and have a whole new case

  • @FinnBot_Technologia
    @FinnBot_Technologia Před 9 měsíci +241

    Detective games really need more recognition! I love the feeling of uncovering secrets and investigating! Devs should definitely create more games like these!

    • @LoyalSage
      @LoyalSage Před 9 měsíci +3

      On it, just give me 6-10 years, lol.

  • @toomanytabs
    @toomanytabs Před 9 měsíci +89

    I just wanna say thank you Mark. This video came at a perfect time for me.
    I've been working on an indie detective game for almost a year now, and I've recently hit what has been my biggest challenge yet - writing. It's SO hard to get out of my own head and I just don't feel like any of my puzzles are substantial and I find myself going back to your old detective game video for help unsticking myself. Hearing a fresh, updated take and getting to read the comments of this video gives me a huge mental push forward.
    Thank you Mark, and thank you to the GMTK community. I can't wait to make a DevLog when I finally just crack it and have a field day with puzzle writing, and this community is gonna get me there, I know it.

    • @XCM666
      @XCM666 Před 9 měsíci +8

      Also working on a detective game and man, I feel this comment. I don't consider myself a writer and writing an interactive detective story is no easy feat!

    • @skkkylord
      @skkkylord Před 9 měsíci +6

      If you both need some feedback I'd spare some of my free time. I'd like to see how you are progressing, maybe I even get some ideas to help you out.

    • @toomanytabs
      @toomanytabs Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@skkkylord I hope you don't mind if I keep that in mind, I will definitely be looking for early feedback in the coming months once I have a playable demo :)

    • @skkkylord
      @skkkylord Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@toomanytabs Yes, good luck in any case :D

    • @papa_NCF
      @papa_NCF Před 9 měsíci +1

      Count me in too, if you need any help play testing!

  • @XCM666
    @XCM666 Před 9 měsíci +125

    I'm part of a team developing a detective game and Her Story and your video on it were among the most important inspirations.
    Stoked to watch this and discover if we think alike about what makes a great detective game. I hope we will be able to deliver on that premise.

    • @XCM666
      @XCM666 Před 9 měsíci +10

      So many great ideas and games shared in this video, my mind is racing.
      I hope we'll be able to add something to the book of great detective games and that I'll someday see a video mentioning the game on this channel.

    • @RainisWater101
      @RainisWater101 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@XCM666Good luck with the game! ^^

    • @shawnheatherly
      @shawnheatherly Před 9 měsíci +1

      Good luck with your game!

    • @Galent41
      @Galent41 Před 9 měsíci +3

      Nice! Good luck with the game. Do you have a page where we can follow?

  • @hwkeyser
    @hwkeyser Před 9 měsíci +141

    I would love to see Mark's thoughts on Geoguessr. It's both a game and a quiz, but for the layperson and a gamer, I think it's the best detective game out there. Obviously you can educate or metagame to crazy levels of skill, but my wife and I just play it like a detective game and love it as such.

    • @papa_NCF
      @papa_NCF Před 9 měsíci +21

      Definitely wasn't expecting to see GeoGuessr in the comments, but you're absolutely right. It's definitely about piecing together different bits of information you find combined with facts you already know about countries/regions!

    • @bobthebox2993
      @bobthebox2993 Před 9 měsíci +23

      The main problem I have with seeing geoguesser as a good detective game, is that it requires too much out-of-game knowledge.
      You can't solve it with just information within the game. You'll always need out-of-game knowledge to find an answer.

    • @TheCyanSqueegee
      @TheCyanSqueegee Před 9 měsíci +6

      @@bobthebox2993 Fair, and I may be being pedantic, but Obra Dinn also requires a lot of out-of-game knowledge. For example, I find having it be an international crew with different languages and everything to be super cool, but someone with no or very little knowledge of different ethnicities and languages would have a *much* harder time with the game. Still one of my favorite games of all time though.

    • @bobthebox2993
      @bobthebox2993 Před 9 měsíci +7

      @@TheCyanSqueegee While this is definitely true, it's not needed to solve the game, yeah, out of game knowledge can get you some fates faster, but the game gives you enough i formation to figure out the fates without that out-of-game knowledge

    • @TheCyanSqueegee
      @TheCyanSqueegee Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@bobthebox2993 ok yeah that's totally fair. I retract my statement that the game requires it. I think maybe the only fate I remember relying on outside knowledge was SPOILERS
      Maba the topman, but I suppose you can probably figure him out from elimination?

  • @Kithara1117
    @Kithara1117 Před 9 měsíci +75

    Since Overboard is on here (and since it's one of my very favorite games) I feel like making mention of Heaven's Vault, which is an archaeology game that involves decoding an ancient language in a search for a missing person. So much of it isn't like a traditional detective game, but it has so many of the elements you discuss (and comes as no surprise that Jon Ingold is a huge detective enthusiast). The game constructs a timeline for you, basically, but it will only put in new information when you solve a language puzzle, and like many detective games Mark described, the game doesn't tell you whether you are right or wrong until later, so you can wind up making red herrings for yourself if you are just treating the language as a multiple choice game. Rather, the best way is to use context clues and logic to really understand how the language works. Both the best and worst aspect of the game is that it's completable without really figuring it out (the game progresses, even to the end, whether your deductions are right or wrong). On the one hand, this means the player is never forced to prove they understand what's happening, but it also means you don't get stuck, and encourages NG+ (with harder, but more informative language puzzles) to try another hand at it.

    • @essneyallen6777
      @essneyallen6777 Před 9 měsíci +3

      Heaven's Vault is excellent and it really needs to be talked about more!

    • @bobthebox2993
      @bobthebox2993 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Didn't expect to find a mention of heaven's vault in this comment section, but I'm so glad it's here!
      Figuring out the ancient language was such a treat! If only the traversal of the game world was more interesting... I feel like that's the main thing that held the game back, a lot of traveling with very little to do in the meantime.
      But only Return of the Obra Dinn has given me the same satisfaction of figuring things out on my own. "Huh, this symbol is used a lot in relation to holy things, so this word must mean... heaven... this is heaven's vault!!"

    • @palebluenarratives
      @palebluenarratives Před 9 měsíci +3

      What a great game :)

    • @CreatrixTiara
      @CreatrixTiara Před 9 měsíci +2

      oooh yes Heaven's Vault is great!

    • @piyam5948
      @piyam5948 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Agree Heavens vault doesn't get enough love. The freedom of exploration and story choices that changes the investigation was really good

  • @seanmaclean1341
    @seanmaclean1341 Před 9 měsíci +42

    I see Shadow of Doubt, I click
    Seriously, I get such enjoyment every time I load that game up and solve a new case. Even on a cold case, trying to step back and re-examine what you have can be extremely cool, because its never cold by design, just by happenstance/luck. I've had cases that I kept open for days while I tackled others only to come across the missing link, and feel like a damn genius when I'm able to connect it together.

    • @ungabunga7879
      @ungabunga7879 Před 4 měsíci +2

      Oh the shame of thinking you've got a killer or a target in a side case nailed down, you break into their house, beat them, and try and find the evidence, to discover, you've just robbed and beaten a totally innocent NPC

  • @DaShikuXI
    @DaShikuXI Před 7 měsíci +10

    My favorite detective game is still "Hotel Dusk: Room 215". It was in a way a rather simple detective game for the DS, but the simple ability to manually take notes on the DS's touch screen (which you hold vertically like a notebook) just added a sense of immersion I've never had with any other detective game. Using the DS the way the game wants you to just makes you feel like you're the detective.

  • @ceanyflamingo5127
    @ceanyflamingo5127 Před 9 měsíci +38

    Orwell is one of my FAVORITE "detective" games. It's an investigation game and nearly everything you do effects the story and it's such a cool game

  • @HateSonneillon
    @HateSonneillon Před 9 měsíci +108

    That original video got me to play Return of the Obra Dinn and I absolutely loved that game. I'm a huge fan of the detective genre of games provided they require some tricky reasoning to solve. Hearing that it spurred the development of more games is awesome! So outdated or not it was a great video.

    • @JR-pf9in
      @JR-pf9in Před 9 měsíci +4

      I was going to finally download it today after this video, but alas, the internet is down in my area. It looks like such a 'me' game.

    • @HateSonneillon
      @HateSonneillon Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@JR-pf9in I hope that you're able to download and enjoy it soon. When you finish, come back and let me know what you think about it.

    • @robertmcabee8016
      @robertmcabee8016 Před 9 měsíci +2

      If you enjoyed it, make sure you play Case of the Golden Idol! It’s so good.

    • @naplockblubba5369
      @naplockblubba5369 Před 9 měsíci +4

      @@robertmcabee8016 Golden Idol and Obra Dinn are some of my favorite games tbh.

    • @bobthebox2993
      @bobthebox2993 Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@JR-pf9in Just placing a comment here in the hopes that I get notified when you finally share your experience of the game

  • @Coffeepanda294
    @Coffeepanda294 Před 9 měsíci +22

    Oh, and can I just say I _love_ that one of the games never tells you if your accusation was correct or not? That's a great touch, forcing you to live with your decision without knowing if it was correct or not, as you say.

    • @TheNeonCaster
      @TheNeonCaster Před 9 měsíci +8

      Paradise Killer is a phenomenal game, in that it will never outlast its welcome by design. Note that you ARE shut down if you accuse someone without enough valid evidence, but that could mean both "you're accusing the wrong person" OR "You haven't searched thorougly enough for the right evidence", and it's not always clear what side of the coin you're falling on. Very cool.

  • @Posby95
    @Posby95 Před 9 měsíci +70

    Her Story and Return of the Obra Dinn are the best "detective" games I've played.
    Her Story is a really short game - only lasts like a couple hours - but it made me think about the case in a way I didn't really think before in any other game. I even used pen and paper to keep track of keywords and relevant info mentioned by the woman. It was electrifying to think about the case, come up with a non-obvious lead word, and finding a good clip that progressed the story, especially later on.
    Return of the Obra Dinn was also fantastic. It was hard as balls, too, but very rewarding. There's nothing quite like it out there. Not only was it absolutely electrifying to figure out someone's identity by linking several clues, but the time travel mechanic that let you chain up several corpses one after the other in reverse chronology to find out the cause of everything felt thrilling. Reverse chronology is a tricky "trope" to do well, but Lucas Pope pulled it off. I'm a bit sad that he'll always be known as "the guy that made Papers Please" instead of "the guy that made Return of the Obra Dinn", because I think it's a much better game (I love Papers Please too, but they're on different levels).
    Also, I wouldn't say your first video is outdated. I think it still applies today. It was interesting, though, to see this new classification of detective games into Deduction, Contradiction and Investigation styles.

    • @bobthebox2993
      @bobthebox2993 Před 9 měsíci

      One other game that managed to scratch that same itch Return of the Obra Dinn and Her Story scratched, is Heaven's Vault.
      I will say that the game had it's fair shares of flaws in my eyes, however, the feature that I liked the most was unaffected by these flaws:
      Uncovering an ancient language.
      Your knowledge of the language is very limited, whenever you find some text in this language, you get to assign your own meaning to the words. You get very little confirmation on whether your guess is correct or not, you might get some confirmation later down the line, but you'll mainly have to rely on the knowledge that you yourself have gathered about the language.
      Over time, you start recognising patterns and understand how the language works, and it makes you feel like a genius when you feel confident about your guess, even if the game doesn't confirm whether it's correct (yet).
      It's a very unique experience and I have a feeling you'd enjoy it.

    • @panampace
      @panampace Před 9 měsíci +3

      My only problem with Her Story is I didn’t realize there technically isn’t an end answer. You’re meant to finish whenever you “feel” finished and the true story is a little open to interpretation.
      My only problem with Obra Dinn was that you could brute force the last 12 or so identities because you’ve eliminated most combinations. I suppose that’s intended but it did make me feel I missed out on how I was “supposed” to solve them.

    • @bobthebox2993
      @bobthebox2993 Před 9 měsíci +4

      @@panampace For Obra Dinn, I think it's important you set a personal rule of "no filling in a person's entry until I think I know the actual answer"
      That way, the fate validation is there so you know when you made a mistake, instead of a tool used to force the correct answer.
      One thing that annoyed me for example, is that most people I've seen play this game, didn't actually figure out which of the brothers was which. They just brute forced it until the game told em they had the correct answer. A similar thing happens with the carpenter & carpenter's mate, and with the chinese topmen. There are enough clues to solve those situations, but most people seem to use the fate validation system to figure those things out.

    • @Kumagoro42
      @Kumagoro42 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Although Her Story, conceptually, is an anti-detective game. Its core statement is that the truth cannot be established. There are several conflicting narratives in the game, and each of them is equally valid.

  • @Blue-gp3vn
    @Blue-gp3vn Před 9 měsíci +98

    Wish Disco Elysium had been discussed more, given that footage from it was shown in the opening segment. But good video!

    • @tritonis54
      @tritonis54 Před 9 měsíci +69

      Well, I'd say that Disco ELysium is not a detective game but more a game about a detective. Like, the gameplay is not at all detective related while the story totally is.

    • @sewerentropy5217
      @sewerentropy5217 Před 9 měsíci +38

      ​@@tritonis54 there is a ton of investigation in Disco Elysium. yeah you're trying to figure out who you are but you're also supposed to find who killed the man behind the hotel and how everyone connects to it. you get witness statements, do crime scene investigation, and follow leads. it is 100% a detective game. just an incredibly well-written and quirky one.

    • @U.Inferno
      @U.Inferno Před 9 měsíci +23

      ​@@sewerentropy5217Agreed. Disco Elysium itself is pretty interesting as it's an RPG, so unlike the other examples shown here, from what I can tell, you have multiple routes of pursuing the mystery. For example I built HDB around Visual Calculus and Reaction Speed, and so the interrogation on the morning of Day 2 had me size up my opponents and immediately latch on to any tick they may give me. It truly felt like I was backing them into a corner throughout it.

    • @moonlitxangel5771
      @moonlitxangel5771 Před 9 měsíci +8

      @@tritonis54 Sounds like you need to actually play Disco Elysium. It literally just throws you into a scenario and you have to do all the leg work to figure out who killed the guy behind the hotel. And that leads you into having to figure out other things and how to handle different people in order to get information out of them.
      It is 100% a detective game.

    • @hugofontes5708
      @hugofontes5708 Před 9 měsíci +17

      ​@@moonlitxangel5771you do play as a detective who has a crime to solve, do have to interrogate witnesses and suspects and collect evidence
      But I guess that disco Elysium is just so much freaking more than that, people don't see it as a detective game. The fact you don't remember literally anything makes it quite unusual, even though it has amazing mechanics and writing to support great detective gameplay. I guess it sort of reminds me of What Remains of Edith Finch? Kinda like saying Zelda is a metroidvania or something

  • @TheSemiAngryGamer
    @TheSemiAngryGamer Před 9 měsíci +10

    one great detective game that I really rarely hear about is "Unheard - Voices of Crime", great game focusing on dialogue and audio to deduct who is who and what happened

  • @sinisterdesign
    @sinisterdesign Před 9 měsíci +40

    I adore Paradise Killer, but moreso for the truly strange and imaginative setting than for the mechanics that underlie the game's detective work. I'd love to see that dev team make a second detective game in that same universe that's less straightforward in terms of the deductions you're asked to make.

  • @vizthex
    @vizthex Před 9 měsíci +17

    i think both Orwell games do this quite well.
    you work as an investigator trying to find out what caused a bombing in the first game, and try to investigate a suspicious family in the second game.
    you have to find little datachunks that can progress the story - and while the game does kinda give them to you, they're fairly well hidden (and sometimes contradict each other, or are useless information). The real detective work is trying to weed out useless information from what's actually relevant.

  • @Ashtarte3D
    @Ashtarte3D Před 9 měsíci +54

    Glad to see Paradise Killer mentioned in this game. The legwork of investigation is kind of mundane but putting all the pieces together for the final trial was so goddam fun. Also the game is completely bananas in the best way.

  • @lukemoonwalker8444
    @lukemoonwalker8444 Před 9 měsíci +37

    I wish Pentiment and its open ended mysteries were discussed more but I can't complain because this gave me plenty of new game suggestios

    • @moooseman3
      @moooseman3 Před 9 měsíci

      I'd categorize it as an investigation type game. The accusations are definitely brutal in that game though, both because of the punishments and the uncertainty due to the time limit.

    • @Magrior
      @Magrior Před 9 měsíci +3

      I feel Pentiment is less of a detective game than any of the games mentioned in the video. While you do investigate crimes, the game is not really about the investigation or really about finding "the criminal". It is, in my eyes, more of a meta commentary about how stories are remembered and told. I'd say Pentiment is almost entirely narrative-focused while Return of the Obra Dinn or Shadow of Doubt are almost entirely gameplay-focused.

    • @unadulterated
      @unadulterated Před 8 měsíci

      @@Magriori disagree. the overarching narrative doesn't change the fact that you are performing detective work - collecting evidence, interrogating suspects and witnesses, drawing conclusions.

  • @armaggedon390
    @armaggedon390 Před 9 měsíci +18

    Recently I've played Gamedec, a Polish game about a cyberpunk detective. You can get clues in different ways, sometimes different clues, and at many points are forced to make a deduction to proceed. You need to form your own idea of what happened during the case, with the clues provided for you. Bruteforcing is not an option (unless you abuse saves)

    • @sinisterdesign
      @sinisterdesign Před 9 měsíci +1

      I tried that game recently, but got softlocked because the game didn't account for certain choices I made. Sent a bug report to the devs and no reply. A shame, really--I was enjoying it until that

    • @armaggedon390
      @armaggedon390 Před 9 měsíci +4

      @@sinisterdesign And that's why I save all the time. It's not a very long game though, so I hope you'll give it a go again in the future. Really like the later part of the story, changed everything I saw from the start.

  • @birdboys1877
    @birdboys1877 Před 9 měsíci +7

    Previous video was my favorite of yours, go back to watch it frequently. So hype to see you revisit this topic.

  • @viktor8552
    @viktor8552 Před 9 měsíci +31

    I would argue that Tunic is a detective game as well. Finding the manual pages and then deciphering what all the notes mean and putting information from different pages together.

    • @frodobrommelkamp9119
      @frodobrommelkamp9119 Před 9 měsíci +6

      I think for it to be a Detective game specifically you tend to have a situation and try to figure out what exactly happened. Be a Detective, literally or implied.
      Tunic is an amazing game, but feels more along the lines of general "These are hints towards puzzles" game play, not necessarily "Something happened here, figure out what!" - well, aside from the usual environmental storytelling/unravelling story thing that Dark Souls (re)popularized. It scratches a similar itch, following hints and feeling clever once it clicks, but it rarely those "Oh, THAT'S what must've happened here!" feeling a good Detective Game gives you.

    • @EriesAston
      @EriesAston Před 9 měsíci +3

      Those are just puzzles, not every game that has them is a detective game

    • @paultapping9510
      @paultapping9510 Před 7 měsíci

      while it's not the focus of the game, so I don't think Tunic qualifies as a Detective Game, I do agree that the instruction manual system is a really, really clever idea that did a wonderful job of making me scour it for clues, make deductions and so forth. I would be very interested in a game that took that idea and expanded on it.

  • @random65axe3
    @random65axe3 Před 9 měsíci +7

    One of the games that got my brain feeling smart is the ARG game The Black Watchmen, where the gameplay takes place on your browser and stuff where you have to wiki dive Google Maps around the place to try and find the answers

  • @MrCovi2955
    @MrCovi2955 Před 9 měsíci +3

    Shadows of Doubt has blown my mind, and its still in early access with a lot of planned work to be done. As long as they don't mess the game up by making it too easy or too formulaic with an easy tool or synth upgrade, I believe that it will become the gold standard for detective simulation.

  • @Exarian
    @Exarian Před 9 měsíci +4

    I really like the way hints in Golden Idol work tbh. The tedious minigame alone is a great way to jog your memory of who's who from people you already know and the hints themselves are written so personably like a letter that doesn't directly give anything away.

  • @DumbMuscle
    @DumbMuscle Před 9 měsíci +2

    17:40 Another thing Obra Dinn does is to ask you questions before you could figure out the answer - meaning there's often no way to know whether you *could* determine a particular fate at this point in the game. This firstly means that the player feels less completely stuck - there's always the option that they can't figure it out because it's not possible yet - and also means that there's no ability to limit the search for clues to a particular fate to only what's come before the question was asked, leaving them all open ended.

  • @TheCalComics
    @TheCalComics Před 9 měsíci +6

    I played the demo for Shadows of Doubt during one of the recent Steam Next Fests and immediately thought “Oh this is primed for a GMTK episode. Mark’s going to love this.”

  • @josephkeen7224
    @josephkeen7224 Před 9 měsíci +7

    One game that might be a good example is Orwell:Keeping An Eye On You, which feels like it fits some of your points, in particular for deduction style games (although keep in mind I only recently started playing, so there might be flaws I’m not seeing). You operate a computer software to look through peoples online history, and send them through an interpreter. The program the character is using highlights important information to keep you from having to scrub every bit of information, but some information contradicts other pieces of info, so you have to think of what’s the right info to send to the interpreter, who feels like a good in story reason to help nudge the player along, the possible concern is that you could just shove all info and brute force, but from what I’ve played the way the game is written and designed seems to make it so that would just make the player go in circles.

    • @Kithara1117
      @Kithara1117 Před 9 měsíci +3

      Orwell (there are 2 of them, yeah?) was really fun, seconding this, and importantly I think it adds an element of moral doubt where you sometimes feel the need to withhold information from the interpreter.

    • @shrimpboom8
      @shrimpboom8 Před 9 měsíci +1

      That one did come to mind while he was listing off games, though I personally found it underwhelming, particularly after having played hypnospace outlaw. The one moment that really grabbed me was when the highlight system misinterpreted something (in universe) and I uploaded it anyway. In hindsight, it was likely intended to foreshadow a later part of the game, where your choice of whether to upload something has an impact on the story, but the lack of negative consequences directed at the player (not that there's much they could punish you with) meant that I still didn't feel particularly clever clicking through blue text.

    • @careless_daughter
      @careless_daughter Před 9 měsíci +1

      ⁠​⁠​⁠@@shrimpboom8Agree, personally I enjoyed it and think it’s worth playing but it does feel like the Great Value version of Hypnospace Outlaw. The web interface setting really does the heavy lifting in terms of immersion for a game that’s much less choice/consequence-based than is implied.

  • @laurengrinder6719
    @laurengrinder6719 Před 9 měsíci +4

    I am always surprised that the Nancy Drew games aren't on your list of detective games. They are also puzzle games so I guess it makes sense, but they are always centered around a mystery.

  • @MarkusAndersen96
    @MarkusAndersen96 Před 7 měsíci +1

    The puzzle at a certain door-lock in Dishonored 2 was very fun and reminded me of this video! It's a deduction-style puzzle where you're given information about attendees at a party. You have to find out which items belongs to which guest by deducting their placement in the chair, their clothing colors etc. Incredibly fun!

  • @keir_ks9753
    @keir_ks9753 Před 9 měsíci +8

    Watching the video I was thinking about Paradise Killer and was excited when you brought it up. I like that the gameplay is very simple so it puts all the actual thinking and detective work onto the player. It was also extreme satisfying when I had a eureka moment and deduced the answer to a problem that I had been stuck on.

  • @Jigsawn2
    @Jigsawn2 Před 9 měsíci +32

    Good to see Paradise Killer mentioned here, it's criminally overlooked as one of the best detective games out there. I urge anyone who likes these kind of games to give it a go!

    • @MaverickMyth
      @MaverickMyth Před 9 měsíci +4

      And the soundtrack slaps!

    • @Badabooom163
      @Badabooom163 Před 9 měsíci +2

      highly agree

    • @CogsofCogitation
      @CogsofCogitation Před 9 měsíci +3

      Definitely the first time I've played a detective game and really felt like I was solving the mystery, without it ever fully becoming clear how the crime transpired until near the end. Not to mention how strong the game was in world building and atmosphere

  • @RoozenB
    @RoozenB Před 9 měsíci +3

    @GMTK, I don't expect you'll do a third video on detective games but I can highly recommend Rusty Lake Paradox, a point and click game about a detective, only watch their short movie after you've played through both chapters. Oh and there's a small bit of hope that you actually get to make a third video at some point, because your analysis of games surely will impact the future direction of game development. Love your work!

  • @PCgameandgamer
    @PCgameandgamer Před 9 měsíci +1

    You have no idea how happy this video makes me. The old one was my all time favorite video of this channel and kick-started my game design journey

  • @Table53
    @Table53 Před 9 měsíci +2

    4:07 I'm glad Strange Horticulture managed to appear in the video (if only as a clip). Who knew looking at flowers could make you feel like Columbo..

  • @UmbrellaGent
    @UmbrellaGent Před 9 měsíci +46

    It's a bit of a shame games tend to come either 100% scripted or 100% procedurally-generated. I would really love a detective game with LA Noire + Disco Elysium dialogue management, storytelling and data collection with procedural or at least somewhat randomised elements (e.g., randomising the clues or suspects location, the suspect's emotional state, stuff like that) to make the mystery solving have less hand-holding.

    • @gnanay8555
      @gnanay8555 Před 9 měsíci +2

      Isn't shadows of doubt a scripted scenario immerged in a procedurally generated environment ?

    • @ShlickMick
      @ShlickMick Před 9 měsíci +7

      ​@@gnanay8555it procedurally generates citizens, a city and murder cases, but the cases are very often solved in the same way every time, so it's not quite fully random or scripted either

    • @gnanay8555
      @gnanay8555 Před 9 měsíci

      @@ShlickMick oh, ok. Seems a bit disappointing ^^'

    • @ShlickMick
      @ShlickMick Před 9 měsíci +6

      ​@@gnanay8555the best way of describing it is that each case is scripted to generate a "clue" to tie the murderer to the crime scene. The murderer, victim, place and method change, but the clue is usually the same
      In 90% of cases, the scripted clue is a fingerprint. It's rare to actually catch the murderer in any other way. In this video the example given shows a murderer being caught by finding the matching fingerprint. It's cool at first but after a while it gets very repetitive

    • @kiddkd7242
      @kiddkd7242 Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@ShlickMickHopefully they add more variety in future updates.

  • @8stormy5
    @8stormy5 Před 9 měsíci +4

    Fallout 1 actually has a good first quest for this. You're asked to find a new water purification chip for your vault, and are told you'd likely find one in Vault 15 nearby. You go to Vault 15 and stumble across Shady Sands, a tiny desert town, and they have no idea what you're talking about. So you go to Vault 15, and it's a complete dead end with not even a hint of where you might actually find one. The only lead you have now is to go back to Shady Sands, who tell you the small trading town of Junktown could help... but they also have no clue what you're talking about. If you ask about other traders though, You get pointed to the main trading hub, literally called The Hub. Almost nobody knows what you're talking about there either, but will figure that you must mean the water merchants in the town. The water merchants *also* have no idea what you're talking about, but tell you Necropolis might have one because they're the only established town who doesn't buy from the water merchants. You then have to actually find the water chip in Necropolis, and you aren't told where it is right away- the group controlling it doesn't want you taking it, and the group opposing that group needs you to fix their well first. You could go fix the well, or just try to find the chip yourself.
    In any case, you the player need to put the pieces together and decide which leads are worth following up on- you're also given the names of The Boneyard and The Brotherhood as places to look, but neither actually have one and you're not given as compelling reasons that there *might* be one there. Maybe it's not a detective mission truly, but you do actually need to do your own thinking and investigating beyond a quest telling you what to do.

  • @casanovafunkenstein5090
    @casanovafunkenstein5090 Před 9 měsíci +2

    An interesting game to throw in with these would be "Who's Lila?"
    The game begins as a game where you play a socially challenged individual whose facial expressions you need to manipulate in order to best respond to the situations he finds himself in. Rather than selecting dialogue you're actually providing the emotional context to what is being said, influencing the reactions of the other characters to you.
    This guy may be a killer and over the course of several play throughs you use different responses to see alternate versions of how the events of the game play out, ultimately leading down a rabbit hole where the relationship the player has with the characters of the game is redefined several times as they work towards the goal of learning who or what Lila is and what its motivations are.
    I'm trying not to spoil it but it's very trippy.
    As a bit of a warning for people interested in the game: you will need to go outside of the game and engage with ARG content if you want to see everything, making for a relatively shallow game if you weren't aware that you'd need to do that.

  • @Powder-Point
    @Powder-Point Před 9 měsíci +1

    I think Ghost Trick would be right up your alley. You manipulate objects with your Ghost Tricks to prevent people from passing away. The main objective is how to use these several objects to allow these characters to survive, 4 minutes before they experience their imminent demise. As such you figure out how you can prevent it. You experience the plot twists alongside the narrative. Also it has the best narrative and dog in all of the video game industry. It is on Steam, Switch, Xbox and PS4. Would recommend!

  • @snm_dyxtra
    @snm_dyxtra Před 9 měsíci +27

    Detective Grimoire and Tangle Tower were 2 detective game that I absolutely enjoyed after a long time, they're a must try

    • @Manachi93
      @Manachi93 Před 9 měsíci +4

      I second that! the atmosphere is amazing on both games, apart from the godlike voice acting in tangle tower (first time ever in a game where i never skipped any dialogue's voice)

    • @Terranigma23
      @Terranigma23 Před 9 měsíci +3

      Someome know if they are working on another "grimoire" game ? ,😁

    • @TrickyNick79
      @TrickyNick79 Před 9 měsíci

      They announced it in 2020 but no news yet@@Terranigma23

    • @essneyallen6777
      @essneyallen6777 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@Terranigma23I'm following them on steam and hoping for the best. Tangle Tower was so much fun and had such an amazing ending.

    • @CrowJoestar
      @CrowJoestar Před 9 měsíci +1

      They’re super great! Loved them

  • @lynchie2073
    @lynchie2073 Před 9 měsíci +6

    i know the contradiction style is pretty linear, but i do really like how helpful it is. with how often im stumped playing them already, i think id be way in over my head with a detective game that gives you more free reign. i also think it allows for more crazy plots. theres loads of crazy stunts people pull in ace attorney and danganronpa games that are so ridiculous i think you kind of need to be led to it a little bit or youd never consider it otherwise

    • @hellothere9520
      @hellothere9520 Před 2 měsíci

      Ok but I'd honestly argue that if a player has no way to think of the twists on their own, without the developers leading them there, whatever they're playing just... isn't a good detective game; it's essentially rigged against you. The later entries in the DR series especially suffer from this problem, with a lot of information just straight up being withheld from the player until the middle of the trial because the developers don't trust their ability to write non-obvious plot twists otherwise.

  • @piyam5948
    @piyam5948 Před 9 měsíci +2

    Obra din and Paradise Killer gave me another detective experience which is maybe the reason I love them so much. Its the "OMG this changes everything!" moment. Painscreek Killing did this too but it was more of a confirmation of what was suspected than a OMG moment.

  • @sass2836
    @sass2836 Před 9 měsíci

    It's always exciting to see a new GMTK video on my subscription feed. Thank you for all the incredible work you do.

  • @thegreatapathetic9836
    @thegreatapathetic9836 Před 9 měsíci +3

    GMTK always uploads right after I think they haven’t in a while.

  • @Artichuth
    @Artichuth Před 9 měsíci +5

    I think a big problem with detective games is the amount of possibilities available and how there aren't many games that fully use that. It's hard to make a game about a profession where everything is a clue and everyone is a suspect. We obviously can't do that currently with our hardware. I watched a playthrough of LA Noire where someone complained about how you could pick up random objects. And while I agree, I also disagree. Yeah, why should you be able to pick up a random cigarette or detergent box? It doesn't add anything and wastes time. But on the flipside, if you could only pickup important objects, then it's not a detective game anymore and like Mark said "It's a game about a detective". It's a hard genre to tackle and I feel like the only people doing it incredibly well are mentioned in this video, Sam Barlow with Her Story and Lucas Pope with Obra Dinn and even Papers, Please. The mechanics and gameplay of both of those are, i feel, perfect for a detective game in that they allow you to actually investigate and deduce without musical cues or cutscenes to tell you the important things that you should be focusing on.

  • @NickWright872
    @NickWright872 Před 8 měsíci

    This video came out about a week after I had watched the older version! So happy you remade this- it’s given me some thoughts on my coop adventure detective game with very little dialogue

  • @dizzyhungry
    @dizzyhungry Před 9 měsíci +1

    I really appreciate you crediting the music used, not many people do that for some reason.

  • @JamesTM
    @JamesTM Před 9 měsíci +6

    I feel like some spoiler warnings would have been in order. :'(

  • @bobthebox2993
    @bobthebox2993 Před 9 měsíci +4

    I just need to comment on Return of the Obra Dinn. Learned of the game a few years ago, thanks to you, and its cemented itself as one of my favorite games of all time.
    Just hearing the game's music in this video made me emotional. Truly a masterpiece

  • @Cynt3r
    @Cynt3r Před 9 měsíci

    Insanely good timing on this! I've watched precious videos of yours trying to satisfy my current craving of mystery/detective games. Very recently finished Obra Dinn and Grim Fandango, and just finished The Forgotten City today. This video had more than a couple of new tips!
    I've also been into escape room type games recently and can highly recommend Escape Academy (couch co-op) and the We Were Here series (online co-op).
    I hope you'll also do another puzzle game video in the future as that's my favorite genre and it's been a while since I found a game as satisfying as Portal 2 and The Witness. Thanks for all your hard work Mark!

  • @starblaiz1986
    @starblaiz1986 Před 9 měsíci

    That original video is how I found your channel several years ago, so it's great to see things come full circle 😊 here's to the next 5 years and beyond! 😊❤

  • @micahjones7837
    @micahjones7837 Před 9 měsíci +36

    Looking for detective games really makes you *feel* like a detective

  • @popgamer2602
    @popgamer2602 Před 9 měsíci +6

    I was waiting until GMTK mentioned Shadows Of Doubt

    • @SL4PSH0CK
      @SL4PSH0CK Před 9 měsíci +2

      😂 same, I think it's well use of AI in gaming for immersive sims regards dynamic writing

  • @chrispybacon3
    @chrispybacon3 Před 9 měsíci +1

    I also like the detective missions from Assassin’s Creed Unity & Syndicate. I remember in Syndicate, there was one where you had to see the trajectory of the shooter’s bullet from across the street and it showed the lines. In order to see the height of one of the shooters and confirm his position, I drove a horse carriage to line up exactly with where the shooter would be sitting on the back of the carriage. Being able to do that in game to assist the investigation was so satisfying!

  • @punchpomelo
    @punchpomelo Před 9 měsíci +1

    I referred to the original video again and again conceptualizing something for a demo :D Glad to see a sequel, Mark! Learned a lot, again. Haha

  • @louiegallagher990
    @louiegallagher990 Před 9 měsíci +3

    I think you should do more of these sequel/remake followups to older videos! Plus you've mentioned before that you regret how you did some older videos, so it'd be pretty cool to see even better updated versions of them!!

  • @fmgs31
    @fmgs31 Před 9 měsíci +3

    Unheard voices of crime is a hidden gem a la Her Story (the difference being that you actually have access to all the information but you can't absorbe it all at once because it has time and space as constraints). I totally recommend it, including the free dlc

    • @Jigsawn2
      @Jigsawn2 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Nice, I just posted about that as well. I can't remember how I found it, might have been a Steam recommendation, but yeah hardly anyone knows about and it definitely deserves more attention!

    • @AnnaTyrrell
      @AnnaTyrrell Před 8 měsíci

      I loved Unheard! Did you play the Chinese version of the DLC (that's all I can see on Steam) or is there an English version available somewhere?

    • @fmgs31
      @fmgs31 Před 8 měsíci

      @@AnnaTyrrell I have good news for you then. From the 3 dlcs, there is one that is available in English, it's called The lethal script.

    • @AnnaTyrrell
      @AnnaTyrrell Před 8 měsíci

      Amazing, thanks so much@@fmgs31!

  • @petertownsend9148
    @petertownsend9148 Před 4 měsíci

    I watched your original video on this more times than I can count. As a huge fan of mystery games I essentially used your recommendations and examples as a list of games to one day get. Because of you I have bought and played through The Detective Grimoire Games, The Blackwell series, The Shivah, Her Story, The ABC Murders, The Sherlock Holmes Consulting Detective games, and one of my favorite games of all time: Return of the Obra Dinn.
    Several of the games you mention in this video are going straight onto my Steam wishlist.

  • @Puddincess
    @Puddincess Před 9 měsíci +2

    Very pleased to see a sequel on this topic. I'd love to see more revisits if you feel there's any you can meaningfully add onto

  • @useronuralp
    @useronuralp Před 9 měsíci +3

    There ain't a better way to kick off the weekend with a new GMTK video, woooo!

  • @barborakubisova9330
    @barborakubisova9330 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Perfect timing! I am making my detective game concept right now and your videos are great to follow :)

  • @ardynamberglow3124
    @ardynamberglow3124 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I think what makes a good detective game goes beyond the core concepts of Deduction, Contradiction, and Investigation, and mixes a bit of all three.
    Disco Elysium, for example, while it only has 1 ending with the case, the lengths and flow of deducing who might have killed the guy, Listening to the witness statements and pointing out inconsistantencies, and investigating the leads you are given all lead to a tight feeling of being a proper detective.
    When you find a piece of evidence, or a discrepancy in a suspect's statement, and you figure it out on your own, it feels rewarding, and satisfying because you made the connection.
    As someone who has pretty good deductive and analytical skills, I ALWAYS take notes in detective games because I like to try and solve it for myself and see what bits of information I can learn. Sure the case might solve itself, but seeing where I was right, and where I was wrong is part of the fun.

    • @scootmaloot4583
      @scootmaloot4583 Před 4 měsíci

      I’d be pretty impressed if u predicted the deserter on the island was the killer before the tribunal

    • @ardynamberglow3124
      @ardynamberglow3124 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@scootmaloot4583 While I didn't guess the Deserter as the culprit right off the bat I was able to narrow the murder weapon and location with just my own knowledge of firearms, and understanding of ballistics.
      Which was further solidified by witness statements, because _that bullet_ is essentially an Ace up your sleeve.
      When Titus Hardy says "Oh yeah, we took him out back and hung him up, and watched." You know he's full of shit because you quite literally have the smoking gun, and it makes you _Feel_ like a detective when you present the slug and say "aha! No you didn't!"

  • @h31602685
    @h31602685 Před 9 měsíci +4

    Shadow of Doubts is so good when it works! Its so immersive too. I remember scared to shit when the police is coming for me for trespassing for the 1st time! But its sometime kinda clunky in a weird way. Looking forward to the full release.
    Love this video btw!

  • @jkitty542
    @jkitty542 Před 9 měsíci +14

    One great detective style game you didn't mention was the Murder on Eridanos expansion to Obsidian's The Outer Worlds. With that and Pentiment, Obsidian is really seemingly into this sub-genre.

    • @whimshroud
      @whimshroud Před 9 měsíci +1

      wait, was it like a murder mystery themed dlc? i played about 15 hours of the game but it got pulled out of game pass before i finished it. now im intrigued about this expansion..

    • @jkitty542
      @jkitty542 Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@whimshroud It's heavily inspired by Murder on the Orient Express. It's a great story that allows you to engage in deduction and investigation, but it breaks a few too many of the rules a good investigation game should follow.

  • @mrburger
    @mrburger Před 9 měsíci +1

    I know it's not a video game, but I would have loved you to explore the intuitive elegance of the Sherlock Homes tabletop games; the ones with the map, newspapers, directory, etc. They simulate sleuthing via a series of co-op choose-you-own-adventure stories with accompanying map of London; while each case is its own contained mystery, the cases begin to interconnect as you near the end-game. The cases/modules are brilliantly written, engagingly clever, and maybe best of all, super easy for newcomers to pick up. The X-mas that I got it, I was able to open it that same day and get the whole family engrossed.

  • @liamcrowley
    @liamcrowley Před 9 měsíci

    Fantastic video, I feel like I learned a lot as a designer and I also am super motivated to go back and tie up some of those games that I left unfinished after getting stumped.

  • @siraaron4462
    @siraaron4462 Před 9 měsíci +6

    I would love a game that mixes deduction, contradiction, and investigation. In a narrative that casts you as the protagonist (genre blending wouldn't hurt either) so that the deeper you get into the case the deeper the risk to you personally

    • @alikeremozfidan288
      @alikeremozfidan288 Před 8 měsíci

      so no police protection? would work pretty well on a spy story, where you must find evidences withput blowing your cover

  • @GertrondeBaggins
    @GertrondeBaggins Před 9 měsíci +4

    Haven't watched the video yet but I know the answer : Kim Kitsuragi

  • @TorQueMoD
    @TorQueMoD Před 9 měsíci

    Great update video! You've made me realize that I need to change the description of my game to "Mystery Adventure Game" instead of Detective game :P

  • @shaynola1
    @shaynola1 Před 9 měsíci

    It's been awesome to see this channel and community grow so much, every single year. Been incredible to get to witness

  • @sambeckettcat
    @sambeckettcat Před 9 měsíci +4

    One of the issues of some of these games, imo, is sometimes they can expect the player to make connection while having very little to draw their attention to it.
    Like, Obra Din spoiler, many of the crew can only be identified by details having to do with the cots in the sleeping area, but I never even noticed there was anything about the cots that would help there (and iirc, there was another level of obfuscation) and so I didn’t figure out that part until I looked it up online, which is never a good thing.

    • @plaguefellow4956
      @plaguefellow4956 Před 4 měsíci

      I can relate however detective games usually require a different way of thinking I'm not saying I'm smart or anything at them I'm pretty bad myself. They just usually require unique thinking such as for the obra. If there is a crew there must be beds they sleep on somewhere and possibly more information I could pull from them to learn identities

  • @hajimethefool
    @hajimethefool Před 9 měsíci +17

    Paradise Killer is truly a masterpiece, and the soundtrack makes the journey one of the most memorable ever.

  • @devaughnjay
    @devaughnjay Před 9 měsíci +1

    Great video GMTK! I liked the original video on detective games and this follow up! The funnily enough, I will definitely try out scene investigators and shadow of doubt mentioned here but also went on to play LA Noire and passports please based on the initial GMTK video. I even watched Mystic River film that was referenced earlier as well 😂

  • @infiniti2011
    @infiniti2011 Před 9 měsíci

    I watched your old detective video a couple weeks ago, and I was just thinking about Shadows of Doubt so it's cool to hear you talk about it.

  • @Rihnoswirl
    @Rihnoswirl Před 9 měsíci +2

    A Hand with Many Fingers is one of my absolute favorite hidden gem-games that I almost never see anyone talk about, so even though it only got referenced visually, I'm superglad it got included in the video. Even if I'm not sure it should technically count as a detective game...

  • @johnjekyllson28
    @johnjekyllson28 Před 9 měsíci +3

    Great to see Scene Investigators on this! It’s such a good induction game.

  • @zacharywong483
    @zacharywong483 Před 9 měsíci

    Fantastic video! Love your selection of games and really love your script here!

  • @lados7145
    @lados7145 Před 9 měsíci +1

    I just got my first game design job, opened CZcams, and saw GMT uploaded ^^

  • @Stairmaster_
    @Stairmaster_ Před 9 měsíci +3

    You all have to play Ghost Trick.

  • @haitas8501
    @haitas8501 Před 9 měsíci +4

    "Why Am I Dead At Sea?" is another very intresting detective game that uses character interactions to unravel its mystery.

  • @odorF13
    @odorF13 Před 3 měsíci

    To this day, one of best games that truly made me feel like a detective has been The Painscreek Killings. Its gameplay being incredibly simplistic, it just gave you a (small) completely open world to traverse and piece together where to go next. Almost impossible to stumble on something in random, one of the earlier first person Unity mechanic games, I played it from start to finish in a couple sittings. From the creators of Scene Investigators.

  • @leehazell7633
    @leehazell7633 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Amazing video. Great job Mark

  • @tabeatamm3594
    @tabeatamm3594 Před 9 měsíci +5

    I loved Obra Dinn, but I realized I just wasn't smart enough to solve it. I had to look up like 90% of the answers, because I just couldn't figure it out.

  • @DrEcho
    @DrEcho Před 9 měsíci +5

    I can say with certainty that Return of the Obra Dinn changed my life, my gaming life anyway. The overwhelming majority of titles I've played since have been deduce-them-ups and I've seen, played, if not bought every single game mentioned in this video, chasing the feelings I had while playing ROTOD for years now by trying every game that sounded remotely like it, including the demo for Scene Investigators and having already put dozens of hours into Shadows of Doubt in early access. Overboard! was my game of the year for 2021. Strange Horticulture was captivating. Golden Idol was a mastapeec, so was Outer Wilds. I devoured Contradiction and Her Story, but saw mixed reviews of Immortality, so I passed. A little late to the party but I just finished Paradise Killer this year which was a wild romp. Scene Investigators was already at the very, very top of my wishlist (as the demo left me wanting more), followed by the likes of Lucifer Within Us, This Bed we Made, Cronique des Silenceux, and Call of the Sea, for when I knock Plainscreek Killings, CaseCracker, Elsinore, Heaven's Vault, and Eternal Threads, etc. off my queue.
    I'm obsessed.
    I wanna give a super special shoutout to Unheard which is an excellent spin on the formula, using audio conversations that you have to move between in physical space (represented as 2D floorplans) as denizens and suspects converse, collab, and connive, and most importantly, move. You can't be in two places at once, you can't hear anything out of earshot, and you can't see what who you're not within line of sight of. But you can rewind and move freely. You have to name all the people for full marks, not just the perp. It relies a lot on some goofy contrivances for name-dropping, but the scenarios themselves are convoluted enough to still give you a challenge: twins, impersonators, lies, mistaken identities, phone calls, and even a theatrical production with [spoiler] and [spoiler] to make you keep thinking, just to name a few.
    Also excellent were a few cyber/hack-em-up mystery types, where you have to infiltrate someone's PCs or phones to glean clues: My very favorite is Greyhat: A Digital Detective Adventure, followed by Cyber Manhunt and A Normal Lost Phone (on mobile) to name a few of the outstanding ones from the dozens I've tried.

    • @careless_daughter
      @careless_daughter Před 9 měsíci +1

      I would give Immortality a shot. It’s understandably polarizing because it’s so insane but personally I think it’s a masterpiece. Amazing production value and finding out the twist was one of the most viscerally shocking moments I’ve experienced in any media.
      And thanks for the list of your played/queued titles, Obra Dinn had the same effect on my gaming life and it’s nice to hear from someone who’s been on a similar path of follow-up games.

  • @okbutwhatif9905
    @okbutwhatif9905 Před 2 měsíci

    My favorite detwctive game was dishonored 2. And you don't even play a detective.
    But in dishonored you get clues, find texts, you have to go into the menus to look at the map, loom where you are to identify the area you're in (no pointers in the menu). They tell you about x or x and you have to find it through the map, while still being stealthy and moving around carefully. It makes it feel like you're really gathering clue and trying to understand your environment and where the items you're looking for would be. The clue as to how you can take your revenge. Who is who. Etc. great game I recommend it warmly.

  • @jessical4866
    @jessical4866 Před 9 měsíci

    The original detective video is one of my favorites from this channel. I’m so excited that the topic is being revisited!!!

  • @themris
    @themris Před 9 měsíci +3

    Brute forcing is a major part of solving Obra Dinn. When you know 2 people's fates and names, you're pretty incentivized to partially brute force the name of a third person whose fate you know.

  • @arthurcuesta6041
    @arthurcuesta6041 Před 9 měsíci +5

    I think Phasmophobia could be mentioned as well. Your whole job is determining the ghost type after all, through either tools at hand or the ghost behavior itself. At higher difficulties you only get one or two evidences, leaving deduction to fill the gaps. Amazing game.

    • @Galadhatan
      @Galadhatan Před 9 měsíci

      I was looking to see if anyone had mentioned Phasmophobia (if not, I was going to). Yes!

  • @papayacatproductions
    @papayacatproductions Před 9 měsíci +1

    Riley & Rochelle's date entry (and its resulting inability to be bruit-forced) in reminds me of the constellation puzzle in Myst, where you had tens of millennia worth of sky positions to look at, so finding the right points was impossible without finding the correct dates.

  • @mikhaelgribkov4117
    @mikhaelgribkov4117 Před 9 měsíci +3

    Yo, sequel I never expected. I still stand that Her is still not as deep as you made it sound to be due to ez to find keywords, but Immortal does improve a lot on that idea in really interesting way.
    And I really want deep dive on Shadow of Doubt, because it is my dream game which I never expect to happen.