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Red Crow Mysteries: Legion

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GAME SUMMARY

Red Crow Mysteries: Legion

Rating: 3.4 (36 votes cast)

Your extraordinary gift is also your biggest curse. It is a burden you must bare. The ability to see things others cannot is an unbelievable challenge and responsibility. And evil never sleeps. Evil is never far away. He who has many names, has awakened again - hungry for victory and power. Can you past the test and prove you are the one who will defend mankind when judgment day comes?
But, remember, fear is your worst enemy! Never let him see your fear! He will use it against you and everything will be lost!
Dive into an alternative dimension alive with ghosts and demons in Red Crow Mysteries: Legion- a dark and thrilling puzzle, adventure game!

  • Confront ancient evil and prove yourself worthy to the afterlife spirits
  • Investigate eye-catching locations and solve dozens of  puzzles
  • Search for clues and follow the path
  • Beautiful graphics and mysterious atmosphere
  • Fantastic music and voice-acting
  • 3 fully customizable game-play modes: Easy, Casual and Adventure
  • Native wide-screen support
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Red Crow Mysteries: Legion review

By ArenaTVro posted 29th November 2011

The puzzles of the game offer little in the way of guidance, most being repetitive matching pattern and obscure leaps of logic that don't make a whole lot of sense. There's even a bejeweled sequence. The story doesn't make much sense either. If I were going into this expecting a slightly better hidden object game, I would have been pleased, but going into it expecting an adventure game leaves me very disappointed.

Red Crow Mysteries: Legion review

By sebapulido posted 29th November 2011

Red Crow Mysteries: Legion is one of the strangest adventure games in recent memory, and not in a good way. This crazy quilt of well-worn puzzle concepts, tired mystery cliches and over-used notions regarding the battle between good and evil presents itself as a supernatural thriller but comes off as something unfinished and ill-conceived.

You play a “gifted” young girl who wakes in her own home to find “something” gone horribly wrong. You're informed by your dead mother's ghost that your special powers make you the next in your transcendental family's line to be tasked with confronting and defeating Satan (referred to here via Biblical quote as “Legion”). After giving you this decidedly un-encouraging pep talk, your mom urges you to prepare yourself for the coming conflict and disappears. From then on, it's up to you to discover what in blazes she was talking about.

Unfortunately, poking around your family's run down country house and overgrown grounds doesn't shed much light on the situation. As games like this require, you go around unlocking doors, picking up random objects and solving various puzzles. The problem is, doing these things doesn't teach you a single thing about who you are, what beef Satan has with your family or what evil he's ultimately supposed to enact. You're just pushed along from room to room, piecing torn paintings together, replacing missing fuses and repairing mechanical devices for no good reason. Occasionally, the ghost of your mother or grandfather appear to repeat what you've already heard regarding your “chosen one” status and there's even a fireside chit-chat with Satan himself, but none of it comes to anything.

Actually, the chat with Satan at least provides a little (unintentional) comic relief. No doubt to avoid animating his face, Cateia Games opted to have him hold a newspaper in front of his mouth throughout the entire conversation and peer over the top of it like some kind of demonic Kilroy. It's completely absurd and makes what should be sinister, fairly ridiculous. And you'd think a chat with Satan would be scary or at least interesting, right? Well it's neither. While the Horned One does go through the motions of persuading you to come over to his side (that's his job after all) he then falls back on your family's oft-repeated line about the conflict to come.

Cateia deserves some credit for trying to provide voice-overs for all the characters and the acting isn't the worst you've ever heard but the characters aren't saying anything. There's no story for them to work with because there's no context, no definable peril and nothing concrete at stake. People just keep repeating the same vague good/evil patter in order to move you along to the next locked door or empty fuse box and the unsurprising result is that you just don't care what happens next.

Worst of all the game's offenses though, worse than poor story structure, predictable puzzles and gameplay unmotivated by well... anything, after a couple of hours the game ends abruptly on a note that doesn't even deserve to be called a cliffhanger. Receiving yet another admonition regarding your need to prepare, you find a map with a big X on it, mutter something about how you should “check it out” and then the credits start rolling. Does this criminally truncated finale imply that Cateia Games thinks we'll be snapping up the next Red Crow Mysteries to find out what happens? If so, they could be in for a big surprise.

Red Crow Mysteries: Legion review

By jamietdpress posted 26th November 2011

Scenes are okay, but lack of colourblind awareness meant it felt more like pixel hunting than "spot the difference" to find necessary objects. Characters are, quite frankly, godawful, and the plot is, unless it sees vast improvement in the hypothetical continuation of the series, similarly bad. Voice acting isn't very good at all, many puzzles can be brute forced (and, again due to lack of colourblind awareness, had to be in some situations). Puzzle explanations generally lacking, hint system is not, in fact, that helpful.

Next to no replay value, and I find it somewhat apt that the game has an achievement called "Who's To Blame" for watching the credits. On the other hand, no bugs to speak of, and, as mentioned, scene rendering at least passable. Overall, would not recommend this game except to hardcore puzzle fans who are slightly masochistic.

Red Crow Mysteries: Legion review

By punktgie_press posted 25th November 2011

If You played Tales from the Dragon Mountain: The Strix, You will feel deja vu. Of course we have different story but gameplay is this same: mix of adventure game with puzzles and hidden objects. This title is maybe not so funny and playable like for example Puzzle Agent 1 and 2, but if you want to test Your brain with logical quests, that's ok. Anyway I hope Cateia games will make some advance in next titles.