(Hm... not my best title card... I had no idea what else to do.)
I don't usually start a review on a Monday, but this is a special case. And no, it's not to avoid having two reviews posted on two days at the end of March.
We continue this look at the Ace Attorney series with
the fourth game, Apollo Justice, released for the Nintendo DS. Yeah, I know,
I’m skipping over two games, but I do not own them and at the moment, I’m
broke. So I have no plans to buy them, much less review them. I know the third
game is pretty good, but if you’re waiting for me to discuss it, if you’re waiting
for Godot, you’ll be waiting for a long time.
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Buuuuut.... Here's a picture of him regardless.
Hey, at least we know he exists, unlike the OG Godot. |
Apollo Justice brings us about ten
years after the first game (seven years after the third game). Phoenix Wright had become a legend, two
years after he started defending clients in court (the cases in
Justice For All
and
Trials and Tribulations certainly helped). One can’t take down a
legend such as Manfred Von Karma and avoid becoming a legend themselves. Since
the original trilogy, a series of doubtful practices in the justice system became commonplace from shadier attorneys on both sides, leading to the public’s confidence in the justice
system reaching an all-time low. This is what we now call “The Dark Age of the Law”. Take note that we’re in 2026 by then. Attorneys and prosecutors constantly circumventing the system only leads to trouble. Evidence forging has
become a common tactic.
It is in a gloomy time that we meet our new
protagonist for this game: Apollo Justice, a young but promising
defense attorney, with hair even more notable than Phoenix Wright’s. Hell, his name is more notable than Phoenix’s. Oh, but our
previous protagonist is still around, don’t worry. He will be tied in some way
to three of the cases in this game.
Of course, a form of disillusionment against the
system is nothing new, in fact I’d say this is exactly what many of us are
feeling nowadays. There are many things I could say about this game’s backstory
that are scarily close to the mood around the world in this day and age, mostly
towards politics. However, this isn’t a political blog, so I will try not to
talk about it much. I mean, the justice system is affected by politics (even though it shouldn't be), but I
won’t make any mention of the current political scene. Why would I? This game
takes place in 2026, after all. Okay, enough blabbering, this is Apollo
Justice: Ace Attorney.
We start the first story of this game, called…
Turnabout Trump… Aw, for fuck’s sake!
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Proof. I'm not making that up. |
No, seriously though, it’s really called that – look it up. However, it’s called such because it refers to poker and strategies – the expression “having a trump card”. This is just poor timing for me,
I guess. No kiddie gloves, either: Remember how the first case of the previous
game showed the killer in broad daylight? Here, nope. The flashback pins the blame quite clearly on the defendant, but what’s the truth? Figure it
out yourself! Have I mentioned that the once-proud attorney Phoenix Wright is
not only reduced to a piano player in a restaurant, but he’s also the defendant
in Apollo’s first case?