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FOUL PLAYA Review of Foul Play (Mystery at Awkward Manor)by Brad JeskeA murder is about to be committed. One of John Stiffning's quests: Mrs. Thatcham, Mrs. Drabble, Miss Sang Lo, Dr. Quandry, Major Gallop or Senator Bluster is going to kill Mr. Stiffning before eight o'clock.
The game can be played by 1 - 6 players. You begin by choosing your character, and a time limit for searching for clues. The time limits are 1.5, 2.5 and 3.5 minutes, and can vary between players. Each player is then privately shown a list of clues telling you what room your character had been in between the time of 7:25 to 7:55; if anyone had been with you, or if you had been alone, and if you were the murderer, what type of weapon your character preferred.
Playing the game is simple. You travel from room to room gathering clues.
Clues can be found nearly anywhere in the rooms, under chairs, on chairs,
inside cabinets, behind curtains, inside fireplaces, on bookcases, on top of
the mantels. Or maybe the phone might ring, and it's the police with more
information.
Along with finding clues, you will encounter other characters in rooms. For
example, find Senator Bluster in the billiard room, and ask him where he was
at 7:40. He might respond, "I was in the kitchen at 7:40, and I was alone."
Levels 1 - 3 are strictly beginning levels, only the first floor is accessible. You must solve the mystery by finding out who committed the murder and with what weapon. But at level 1 - 3, you will receive lots of on-screen help in aiding you along the trail of finding the killer. At mid-levels you must find out who was the murderer, which room, and the weapon. At higher levels it is all of the latter plus the time of the killing. I found moving between rooms can be sluggish if you are using a machine with less the 8 MEG of RAM, and the sound had a tendency to be choppy with sections of sound dropping out. This might cause some frustration and loss of intrested with some people playing the game. However, running it with at least 8 MEG or more, you will definitely see a noted improvement.
I enjoyed Foul Play, it's a entertaining, fun game that the whole family can play. There are no complicated rules to understand, and you can be playing the game in no time. And with so many different solution possibilities, it's a game that can be played over and over, which makes Foul Play worth looking into.
Gamer's Zone Scorecard
System Requirements:
Macintosh:
Breakdown:Fun Factor 4 Graphics 4 Sound 3 Interface 3 Replayability 5 Overall Score:
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