Ace Attorney’s spinoffs are great mysteries, if you can deal with their minigames

Ace Attorney’s spinoffs are great mysteries, if you can deal with their minigames

Capcom’s Ace Attorney Investigations Collection, the spinoffs to the popular if wildly legally inaccurate Ace Attorney series, are finally out. The two-game collection includes a long-awaited gift for Ace Attorney diehards: the official Western release of Ace Attorney Investigations 2: Prosecutor’s Gambit. And though Investigations suffers from gameplay issues that run counter to the spirit of the overall series, the characters and story make the collection a must-have for any Ace Attorney fan.

Though there are two games in the collection, I’m going to focus exclusively on Ace Attorney Investigations 2: Prosecutor’s Gambit. Despite getting a Japanese release on the DS in 2011, the game never officially made it to the West until now. Prosecutor’s Gambit puts you in the cravat of prosecutor Miles Edgeworth, Phoenix Wright’s childhood friend, opposing counsel, and, if you subscribe to certain parts of the fandom, longtime lover. (Not me, though, I’m firmly a Gumshoe / Edgeworth girlie.)

The game plays similarly to Ace Attorney. Somebody gets murdered, somebody innocent gets accused, and Edgeworth must investigate crime scenes for clues. Once the necessary information has been gathered, Edgeworth interrogates people, pointing out contradictions in their testimony with evidence to eventually determine someone’s guilt or innocence.

I often visited the game’s bonus content just to rewatch all the outrageous, “Oh no, I’ve been found out!” animations

In Prosecutor’s Gambit, the characters are wonderfully colorful, and it’s always a treat to watch them fall apart whenever Edgeworth discovers their lies. I often visited the game’s bonus content just to rewatch all the outrageous, “Oh no, I’ve been found out!” animations. 

“Oh no, I’ve been found out!”
Image: Capcom

Because Ace Attorney Investigations is a spinoff series, you don’t need any knowledge of the main games to understand what’s going on. But if you do, oh man, are you rewarded. I was geeking out playing a case that has a massive — and I mean massive — impact not only on the events of the first Ace Attorney game but also on Miles Edgeworth’s entire reason for being. 

Though the game’s story and characters are just as charming as they are in the main series, Prosecutor’s Gambit sets itself apart with its unique gameplay features, both of which are a bit lacking. New in Prosecutor’s Gambit are the Mind Chess and Logic minigames. The Logic game requires putting together two pieces of information found during an investigation to create new clues. During an investigation at a prison, Edgeworth learns that a critical piece of evidence — a key — has gone missing. He also knows that a metal detector went off in the vicinity of the prison’s alligator enclosure. (Listen, in any Ace Attorney game, things can get very… quirky.) You very literally smash those two pieces of information together to deduce that the alligator swallowed the key. Armed with new information, the game can progress.

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An example of the Logic mini-game in Ace Attorney.
Image: Capcom

Completing Logic games is exceedingly easy, demanding none of the deductive puzzle-solving skills that make Ace Attorney games so enjoyable. They’re so simple that they’re actually a waste of time. It’s as though the developers needed to add something to make this game distinct from the main series but couldn’t figure out anything interesting, so they came up with what is essentially evidence gathering with superfluous steps. 

Mind Chess, however, suffers from the exact opposite problem. It’s a worthwhile gameplay addition, but the logic required to beat it is completely impenetrable. In Mind Chess, a subject has a piece of information they don’t want to give up, and Edgeworth must pick from a rotating selection of dialogue options to wear them down until they spill the beans. 

The problem with Mind Chess is that, unlike anywhere else in the game, you’re not using evidence to pick apart false statements. Rather, you’re trying to read and respond to an opponent’s… vibes? If you pick a dialogue option that doesn’t jive with your opponent’s emotions, you fail. The game does try to help you out with clues. In one case, Edgeworth notes that a mentally weak opponent will clam up if I pick aggressive options, so when they inevitably got all weepy on me, I correctly remained silent. However, those clues didn’t work in every situation, leaving me floundering. I lost that game of Mind Chess because I once again stayed quiet when that weepy opponent got even more weepy.

The great thing about both Ace Attorney series is that I’m rewarded for being thorough. I feel like a genius when I catch someone in a lie because I took the time to learn everything about every piece of evidence, which often involves noticing the tiniest or most cleverly obscured detail. And when I’m wrong, it’s not difficult to revisit my case files to find what I missed. 

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Guessing until you get to the right answer is the antithesis of that — no brain power, just button mashing. And since Mind Chess relies on what the player can somehow intuit (from a bunch of pixels, no less!), instead of what they concretely know, I wound up guessing in every instance. I might as well have been playing Cookie Clicker.

But suffering through Mind Chess is well worth the clues you get to solve the game’s greater mysteries. In the main Ace Attorney series, most cases aren’t too closely related, and if they are, the connections are incidental. An important character from one case will show up as a brief cameo in another, or one murder might have minor implications for a later one. But Prosecutor’s Gambit is the first time I’ve seen every single case and every single character (even the dead ones!) have a direct and major impact on the game’s climax.

All of those connections did muddy the story and create a voluminous record of evidence that was difficult to sift through. But when I finally uncovered the grand mastermind, my body did that slow transition from relaxed and reclined to straight and alert. It was exactly like a scene in a murder mystery when the detective happens upon the one perfect clue that cracks the case, something that playing every Ace Attorney game should feel like.

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