
This sort of thing could be viewed as a bit annoying but I guess I ought to take the line that non-Americans merely get more challenge out of the game :-) It amazing how many differences there our in our languages actually. For example it once said find a Pound sign, so I looked and looked and couldn't find it but it turned out that they meant a hash sign (#)! What the hell? There are plenty of other things like this including a road sign which turned out to be a yellow American one about deer crossing or something. It doesn't help that the clues have American names and I'm English. This might sound easy except that each room is cluttered with a crazy assortment of items and so finding some clues can be really difficult especially when the clues are a bit cryptic. You visit each 3D rendered room in the manor and have to find various 'clues' which are listed at the side of the screen.


The Queen has also given you a young women's diary with only one page in it, and your mission is to find the other pages to discover what happened at the manor.īasically the gameplay is the same as the other Mystery Case Files games, but that's not a bad thing because it's a proven enjoyable formula. The game is set in England, and you are a secret agent sent by The Queen (no less!) to go and investigate an abandoned spooky manor. Apparently there are going to be a total of six episodes!
MYSTERY CASE FILES 17 TORRENT SERIES
This is the third game in the Mystery Case Files series by Big Fish Games. Players take on the role of that detective, seeking out hundreds of hidden objects spread throughout dozens of different locations in the mansion. When the diary of Emma Ravenhearst is found, the Queen of England sends a master detective to the spooky old Ravenhearst manor to find the diary's missing pages. The Mystery Case Files series of hidden object games continues with this ominously titled entry set in Great Britain.
