x
Breaking News
More () »

REVIEW: Murdered: Soul Suspect (PS4)

Sony PlayStation 4 / Rated M / $59.99 / released June 2014 OFFICIAL SITE: murdered.com PURCHASE LINK: Amazon FINAL: You should TRY this game. 3 out of 5 stars A...
murdered_soulsuspect_screen17_bmp_jpgcopy
murdered_soulsuspect_screen17_bmp_jpgcopy
  • Sony PlayStation 4 / Rated M / $59.99 / released June 2014
  • OFFICIAL SITE: murdered.com
  • PURCHASE LINK: Amazon
  • FINAL: You should TRY this game. 3 out of 5 stars

As “Murdered: Soul Suspect” begins, Salem detective Ronan O’Connor is thrown out of an attic window and shot to death in the street. Trapped in the foggy, arcane world of ghosts, Ronan is unable to move on until he deals with the obviously unfinished business of his own murder.

It’s a compelling set-up, and even if “Murdered” can’t quite overcome the limitations of being a video game trying to tell a mystery story, the game is definitely worth a look.

The first thing the game does is lay out just how it chooses to define and deal with ghosts. Yes, you – as newly intangible Ronan – can walk through walls, but only interior walls. The explanation given is that most building exteriors have been “consecrated” against spectral visitors (this is Salem, after all, a town with a history of supernatural events). You have some minor poltergeist powers, allowing you to futz with telephones and printers. You can possess the living to eavesdrop on their secrets, and you’re even allowed to inhabit alley cats whose bodies you can use to explore hidden areas.

As a ghost, portions of Old Salem are now visible to you. Functionally, these psychic remnants are just something else that blocks your path, as ghosts cannot walk through other ghostly things. But in terms of adding to the game’s pensive atmosphere, the scraps of old buildings and nautical leftovers give you a sense of the harbor town’s history while keeping you tantalizingly separate from it.

Murdered: Soul Suspect” is not a scary game, despite the setting. There are some unsettling spirits that leer at you from a distance and then vanish as you approach, but nothing like the jump scares you’d find in a modern horror film. This game is 100% about atmosphere.

The big problem with “Murdered: Soul Suspect” is that it has to shove you along the mystery’s path whether or not you’re good at sleuthing. Random guessing will get you to the end of the story easily enough, which saps any urgency or drama from your detective work. “Murdered” rates you on how well you solve mysteries, but it means nothing to both you and the game. The game fails to make you feel smart for piecing things together, making the overall experience more akin to a linear movie than an interactive one.

This tact might be fine if “Murdered” did not keep tossing half-baked video gamey elements at you in an weird attempt to make it more game-like. Evil ghosts patrol certain areas, requiring you to awkwardly sneak behind them so you can “kill” them. Then there’s an unfortunately memorable sequence where you have to distract cops while escorting a young girl out of custody. Let’s just say the Salem police force’s propensity to stare at malfunctioning photocopiers stretches credulity.

Murdered: Soul Suspect” delivers a solid ghost story, with the added benefit of you being able to explore a claustrophobic mash-up of historic Salem. The one mystery that Ronan O’Conner can’t solve is how to make a detective video game where you actually feel like a detective.

This review is based on product supplied by the publisher. “Murdered: Soul Suspect” is available for PlayStation 4, PlayStation 3, Xbox One, Xbox 360 and PC. Image courtesy Square Enix.

Before You Leave, Check This Out