Nancy Drew: Secrets Can Kill REMASTERED
Nancy Drew: Secrets Can Kill REMASTERED
- Play the game that started the award-winning Nancy Drew series!
- Explore a high school and snoop through confidential files on the suspects
- Dust for fingerprints and inspect everything with your magnifying glass.
- 80th Anniversary REMASTERED FEATURES include new ending, 3D characters, new puzzles, enchanced sleuth kit, and single disc installation.
- Choose from two difficulty settings (Jr. or Sr. Detective) to allow players of all skill levels to solve the mystery
Play the Game that Started the Award-Winning Series! As a tribute to Nancy Drew’s 80th Anniversary, Her Interactive is remastering the first game that launched the award-winning adventure series. With completely updated graphics and new puzzles, this special edition will appeal to old and new fans alike! Death, danger, and deception weren’t on the curriculum at a Florida school, but when Jake Rogers is murdered to protect a lie, everything changes. With the town in fear and the students in shock, you, as Nancy Drew, are the only one who can uncover the truth. Dig into a deadly mystery and discover a secret worth dying for before the murderer strikes again!
List Price: $ 19.99
Price: $ 17.99
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January 14th, 2011 at 5:14 pm
A Short, But Sweet, Mystery That Makes You Fall In Love With Nancy Drew All Over Again!,
Nancy Drew 1: Secrets Can Kill REMASTERED
-Before I Begin…
My review will be spilt up into sections and have a in-depth look at that topic. Then at the end of the review I round up the stars and give an overall rating.
**Also you should know that this is not a completely new release by Her Interactive, it is a refresh of their very first game ever, which was made in 1998 and is rather outdated. With that said, I have not played the original Secrets Can Kill (except for the very beginning until I got frustrated with the two disk swapping, impossible to navigate, no direction of the game). So I do not know all the differences of the original compared to this Remastered edition.
-Interface
First off you should now that the original Secrets Can Kill (SCK) had a much different interface than this game does. SCK was very hard to navigate and play in with comparison to the refreshingly simple one in this game: Secrets Can Kill Remastered (SCK2). The inventory, task list, journal, and the camera icons are all new to SCK2. I love the interface Her Interactive uses, and is so much better to play in than the difficult original game.
*****
-Plot
Finally, the first (and only thus far) plot surrounding a murder. You may have noticed with 98% of the Nancy Drew games that the plots are pretty tame. They usually revolving around a treasure, mysterious accidents, sabotage, or, every so often, a kidnapping. This game is refreshing because somebody was killed and there is a vicious murder on the loose. I was instantly intrigued and as you played through the game, the plot thickened and grew even more interesting as you questioned suspects and gained leads. And don’t worry, the murder isn’t shown or described in a gory detail (Her Interactive would never go higher than an E 10+ Rating) so you shouldn’t worry about scaring yourself or any children playing this game. Although I would definitely say this game is older kids who can understand what is going on a little better because there is a steroid reference, a tiny bit of violence, and blackmail. Overall this simple plot is very entertaining and appeals to even older audiences.
*****
-Characters
The characters have been rendered from 2D in SCK, to 3D for SCK2. From the pictures I have seen, the 3D characters are a huge improvement from the lifeless 2D ones. Her Interactive did a great job at developing each character and giving them a distinct personality, background and motive for killing the school bully Jake Rogers. Also, SCK2 has a brand new character! If you would like to be surprised on who it is then don’t read any further about the charcters. The new character is very helpful in solving the case, his name is Detective Beech and he hangs out at Maxine’s Diner. He is pretty uptight and old compared to all the young teenager characters, but he is a great addition to the mix. The interaction with the characters was great too, there was a lot to talk about if you exhaust every question and find every clue. You felt like you were really getting to know the characters as real people, I had my own deductions and suspicions of each and every character. These characters and their interactions are what makes a fantastic Nancy Drew game that we know and love. I was throughly impressed with these characters!
*****
-Setting & Graphics
The graphics in this game are absolutey beautiful and realistic. They did a great job at updating the original 1998 graphics, which were very cheesy looking (no offense). There are three different locations you can explore from smallest to largest, Aunt Eloise’s House, Maxine’s Diner and Paseo Del Mar High School. The school is eerie and realistic, and the diner has a interesting 50′s vibe to it. I loved exploring and snooping around every corner of the library and school grounds. The diner and Aunt Eloise’s are pretty limited in exploring, but you will spending a majority of your time at the high school anyway. Personally I would have liked more to explore (but I always want more to explore anyway) in the school and Aunt Eloise’s. Like seeing Nancy’s room, searching a classroom for clues or getting food at the Maxine’s diner. But Her Interactive still did a great job with the environments, and they managed to fit the entire game onto to a single disc.
****
-Puzzles/Activities
The puzzles in this game are very straightforward and only midly challenging. I understand because this was the first game that Her Interactive ever made, so they didn’t really have a grasp on their puzzlemaking skills. Most of the puzzles are word/code puzzles which are fun and easy to figure out. But each of those little puzzles adds a piece to the ultimate puzzle near the end of the mystery which is only in SCK2, not the original. There were not a lot of puzzles so the game felt pretty short, I think I finished in…
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|January 14th, 2011 at 5:28 pm
Nancy Drew Remastered–and Rebooted.,
I confess, I’ve played every Nancy Drew game in order beginning with the original Secrets Can Kill. Playing this remastered version of the first effort is an interesting and fun way to see how the series has changed.
What’s the same? The plot remains, although the ending differs significantly. Unlike the typical ND game now, you’re solving a serious crime–a murder–and dealing with more adult themes, such as drug use. All of the original characters appear, with what to my memory are their original slightly awkward scripts. You visit the same locations–including the still somewhat difficult to navigate high school hallways that all look alike–and solve many of the same puzzles, which mostly aren’t particularly needed to finish the game. Playing the game was definitely not a new experience, and I was not surprised by the culprit because, well, if you’ve been down this road before you will see it coming. Trust me.
So, where’s the remaster? There are some much appreciated technical improvements: the newer, user-friendly interface; the introduction of Nancy’s cell phone; the replacement of the old three-level difficulty system with the now-standard Junior/Senior Detective selection; and other good stuff like improved graphics. Thanks to Nancy’s notebook, I did not have 150 Post-its with clues all over my desk. The game’s main puzzle is new, and the ending is now much more elegant. The developers have replaced a lot of non-essential original content with nods to series games, which gives SCK a bit of a greatest hits feel.
On its own merits, the game–groundbreaking and innovative in its day–doesn’t really stand up to its successors. It’s easy, it’s short, and it’s not particularly quirky. If you’re a fan of the series, however, it’s totally worth playing; due to all of its technical shortcomings, the original SCK isn’t very accessible to the modern player, and this version certainly is. Even as a replayer, I’m glad I had the chance to visit with Nancy’s history.
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|January 14th, 2011 at 5:50 pm
Nancy revisits the past in this game,
HERinteractive, the company who create the Nancy Drew games, decided to remaster the very first game out – Secrets can Kill, for Nancy’s 80th Anniversary. I have not played the original game so I won’t be comparing it to the original, just judging the game on it’s own merits. In this game, Nancy goes undercover as a student at the local high school, where her Aunt lives. Nancy is working with a local police officer, and has the task of finding out what happened to Jake Rodgers, a student who was murdered. The game does not show the body or anything gory, nor does it go into detail about what happened to Jake, so it would be fine for kids to play, but they should have an adult there to explain some of the other things in the game.
When you, as Nancy, arrive in town the first thing to do is meet the other students. All of these kids have something to hide. Daryl works at the local diner, Connie spends most of her time studying, Hal, an exchange student, and Hector, a football player who is obsessed with playing pro ball someday. I found the different students fun and interesting to talk to, so I enjoyed that. You have three places to explore – The diner, Maxine’s, the school, and Aunt Eloise’s home. To help you out in the game, you also have access to a notebook, a to-do list, and Nancy’s trusty phone. The puzzles in the game were not extremely hard, and in fact I didn’t need to use spoilers for most of them.
Another special part of the game is that in many places you will be able to see references to the Nancy Drew books, from the book covers to the pictures from inside them. In addition to this, you will also be able to see actual drawings from Nancy Drew fans in the game. I loved this, it was so fun to see all of the amazing artwork. Overall, I found this game really fun and interesting to play. It had a good plot, and interesting characters, and for someone who hadn’t played the first, it was great to see how the games first started out!
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