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| New game! |
Developer
Spooky Doorway already made an incredible entry in the adventure game business with their two pixel art style
Darkside Detective games. Under publishment of Raw Fury, they have now released a totally different game:
The Séance of Blake Manor. It's a first person point 'n click game which combines a mouse interface with directional keys to move around the 3D environment; or you could play it with a controller, of course.
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| How huge is this place? |
We find ourselves in Ireland. It's the year 1897. Detective Declan Ward has been summoned by an anynomous party to Blake Manor. A woman, Evelyn Deane, has disappeared. This is linked to a séance that's planned for the weekend. Ward is tasked with figuring out where Evelyn went.
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| Cozy... |
But that's not all... There are seventeen guests staying at the manor, hoping to participate in that séance. One of them is indeed responsible for the fate of Ms Deane. Yet everyone else has their own mysteries for Ward to solve. Doing so will make them change their plans regarding the séance. And once that happens, the dial on a mysterious, green glowing device drops down.
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| Looks like something out of Steampunk Ghostbusters... |
I've played
The Séance of Blake Manor for 100 minutes and already two guests have said bye bye to their séance plans. So I think I'm doing a good job. However, Ward only has a good 45 hours to make sure
nobody attends the séance. And contrary to regular point 'n click adventure games, almost everything you do here takes time. Each hotspot you examine takes away one minute of your time. You are assigned different tasks over the course of your stay, and they all have a strict deadline. Miss the deadline, or get caught doing something you shouldn't, and it's GAME OVER! Thankfully there's both a manual save system and an autosave function...
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| I'd barely done anything! |
I think I already have ten save files.
The Séance of Blake Manor is making me extremely nervous. It looks and feels a bit like a combination of
Return of the Obra Dinn with a bit of
The Case of the Golden Idol and some Sherlock Holmes thrown in, and also a bit of
Cruise for a Corpse and
The Colonel's Bequest, in that you need to go to specific places at specific times to get a whiff of all the secrets. There are maps and timetables and connections on a type of deduction board, and frankly I'm very much overwhelmed by it all. I think I'll be seeing that FAIL screen a lot, but for now let's just hope for the best.
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