

On no planet and at no age-range does this logic work. For instance, in the first chapter, you’re tasked with repairing a butterfly net, which you have to do by combining it with a spider web. While the folks over at Telltale are busy pushing along the rebirth of adventure games and trying to drive the genre forward with logical puzzle elements, Touch Detective sticks to its roots and instead offers idiotic puzzles that take absurd amounts of trial-and-error tapping to solve. You can pick up the additional chapters individually for $3.99 each, or buy the whole pack for $8.99. Instead of offering a quick glance at the game in a demo, you’ll get the entire first chapter for free, which, depending on your ability to solve absurd puzzles, will give you an hour or two of playtime. What Touch Detective nails best is its implementation of in-app purchases.
TOUCH DETECTIVE 3 RELEASE DATE SERIES
There are also a series of side missions and a bonus escape the room mini-game. In the demo chapter, you’ll need to solve the mystery of stolen dreams, and in later chapters you’ll solve a disappearance, an assault and help a stranded person. With each of the game’s four chapters you’ll be taking on the role of Mackenzie, a fledgling detective who has just received her first case. The game got lukewarm reviews when initially released, but an innovative release methodology on iOS helps break it apart from the rest of the pack.

Case in point, Beeworks Games took to bringing over Success’ Touch Detective from the Nintendo DS, a five-year-old game that never saw massive sales on its initial release, but is given new life on iOS.

With adventure games seeing a serious revival on iOS, it should come as no surprise the ports keep on coming.
