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top 20: #12: The Last Express
"Excuse me, can you tell me which compartment is Tyler Whitney's?" But the feature that I really love is the way time passes whether or not you're doing anything. I always wished that games would incorporate this more. Willy Beamish was one notable game that I appreciated this about. In this game, there are fifteen other passengers aboard, and they work under their own schedule. Herr Schmidt will go have dinner with Miss Wolff at 7:40 whether or not you intercept him in the hall, or sit next to them and eavesdrop, or simply sit in your compartment and examine your inventory. This feature makes it impossible to experience everything in the game the first time through, providing for immense replay value. I hope that more games will utilize this feature in years to come; I'd love to think how it could be utilized in a detective mystery game. The Last Express is not very useful as a Pepper's Adventures in Time-ish history education device. The European political situation in mid-1914 is complicated, and not easily explained by a computer game. You will find that you enjoy the game much more if you have a fairly decent understanding of what was happening; otherwise the characters' motivations will remain cloudy. Perhaps this can be seen as a weakness, but the game would have lost a tragic amount of its dramatic edge otherwise, and if anything here's a reason for you to bone up on your pre-WW1 history. Sadly, Broderbund was led to believe there was no audience for this game as a result of the high level of storytelling, and the marketing was minimal at best. Suffice it to say the game was a financial failure, and without a doubt the saddest non-success story on this countdown. The Last Express is not without flaws; it's too short and in true Hollywood fashion, the romantic subplot feels contrived and unnecessary. But five years later, the story is still brilliant, the intrigue and intensity is authentic and believable, and the graphics and voice acting are marvelous. The game still feels brand new. The Last Express is without a doubt worth the price of the ticket, and the #12 adventure game of all-time. Last time: TLE is the first game so far to have moved up since the last countdown, after checking in at #14 three years ago. The reaction was incredibly mixed between adoration and disgust (for the game, not me); we'll see how it ends up this year! Click here for the complete top 20 of best adventure games of all time!
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