![]() ![]() You'll hunt for items and solve puzzles, sure, but the complexity has been dialed up a little. Of course, all plot and no play makes Ravenhearst go something-something anyway ("Go crazy? Don't mind if I do!"), so it's a good thing that the gameplay here is a lot of fun. It's not that it isn't fun, but it lacks the creeping menace and slow boil cinema of previous titles. There's a lot about it that feels sort of random, as opposed to the careful plotting and design of Key to Ravenhearst, sort of like a bonus chapter stretched to its limits. Ravenhearst Unlocked is trying very hard to be scary in some places, but never quite manages it, both because its over-the-top goofy elements never let the mood really take hold, and at this point, you're essentially Harry Potter (now complete with magical scar), going up against your own Lord Voldemort. Be warned, if you haven't played the rest of the Mystery Case Files titles, Ravenhearst Unlocked will make very little sense to you. Once you escape, the game is still just beginning! With a decidedly more morbid bent than its predecessor, Mystery Case Files: Ravenhearst Unlocked is a gleefully bizarre game with a lot of content and entertainment, though perhaps not as well-plotted as the rest of the series. and one of your oldest foes will stop at nothing to complete his plot no matter who gets in his way. But when you finally come back to yourself, you find this place is anything but up to code. ![]() Following directly on the heels of the previous game, in Ravenhearst Unlocked, you've been rescued from the waves of the ocean where you were found battered and delirious, and ultimately transferred to an asylum for care. so it comes as a bit of a surprise that Eipix Interactive has released Mystery Case Files: Ravenhearst Unlocked only one month after Key to Ravenhearst. Mystery Case Files is one of the oldest and most beloved hidden-object adventure series around, and fans know to expect one very highly anticipated new release a year.
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