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    Ace Attorney The Eleventh r/AceAttorney Case Maker Contest

    Ace Attorney The Eleventh r/AceAttorney Case Maker Contest


    The Eleventh r/AceAttorney Case Maker Contest

    Posted: 01 Mar 2022 04:35 AM PST

    You know what time it is.

    As has been done in quarters past, your task is to write up an Ace Attorney case where a noun I supply below is an important part of the case. After the deadline passes (see below), submissions will no longer be taken and the community will vote for submissions in a Google Form. The top three submissions will move to the second round and community members will vote on which will win first, second, and third place. The prizes for those respective places are:

    1st Place: 5 credits of Reddit Gold

    2nd Place: 3 credits of Reddit Gold

    3rd Place: 1 credit of Reddit Gold

    In the comments, I will make a post that will give a template of what your submission should look like. If possible, please fill in all the sections in the template, including N/A if needed.

    Regarding the description area, feel free to be descriptive as possible! If you fear the post is too long, you may post the description over several comments or through another source such as Pastebin or Google Docs. There is no word limit, so please do not worry about such.

    The comment I'll supply below, feel free to reply to it in regards to questions or general discussion. The rest of the thread is for submissions only.

    And remember, don't hold back your creativity! Your case can be a standard AA case, it can be a reminiscence case, or an Investigations-styled case! However, there are some limitations.

    Firstly, your case shouldn't involve any topics of sexual abuse of any kind. If your case does involve so, you're disqualified. Overly gory cases are allowed, but make sure there's a reason for that, and don't have it be gory just for the sake of being so. You won't be disqualified, but you may lose some credibility points. Also, joke posts are allowed, but only ones that are well-thought out, clever, and/or high-quality. Anything like "ThE PHoEnIX wiRIGHT TUnraBOOT: sOMEONE DIED aND phEENIX HAd TO dFEENdED THem!!!1!" is not allowed.

    If you're concerned about crossing one of these lines, message me and I'll work with you to make sure your case abides by the guidelines.

    Other than those limitations; don't hold your creativity back!

    The noun for this contest is: Mathematics

    The deadline for this contest is Tuesday, March 22, 11:59 PM EST. This gives entrants three weeks to plan and write their cases.

    Good luck, and good cases!

    submitted by /u/teamcrazymatt
    [link] [comments]

    Godot drawing, just wanted to hear everyone’s opinions on it before I move on to the pen and colored pencil stages!

    Posted: 04 Mar 2022 12:03 AM PST

    Been getting into the series through watching my friend play and I wanted to try drawing Franziska!

    Posted: 03 Mar 2022 10:31 AM PST

    I wish the AAI games had been more successful.

    Posted: 04 Mar 2022 01:59 AM PST

    I'd love to see some of the other prosecutors get their own game like Edgeworth did. The only prosecutor I can think that I wouldn't want to get his own game is Manfred von Karma. I like the idea of Manny just being pure, unadulterated evil. I feel like having his own game would result in the writers trying to humanize him in some way.

    submitted by /u/Sir_Toni
    [link] [comments]

    Started playing the games while stuck at home sick, below is a doodle of the absolute best interaction in the series.

    Posted: 04 Mar 2022 03:49 AM PST

    The -nth Trilogy character tier list you've seen by now.

    Posted: 03 Mar 2022 07:43 PM PST

    I gifed that scene of Trucy sleeping soundly on Edgeworth's shoulder

    Posted: 03 Mar 2022 12:09 AM PST

    Why I love The Monstrous Turnabout

    Posted: 03 Mar 2022 05:18 PM PST

    I replayed The Monstrous Turnabout recently and it was a seriously fun experience that I struggle to understand the dislike behind. I know general distaste for Yamazaki's direction is a thing that exists, along with general distaste for filler cases, but even at the baseline there's absolutely nothing wrong with what this case does. Maybe the humor doesn't work for you, I certainly can't claim to have laughed at everything Filch and L'Belle said, but after sitting through trash like Doctor Hotti, Sal Manella, Benjamin Woodman, Jean Armstrong, and Victor Kudo, this is a massive breath of fresh air for me. Let's just forget that Robin Newman also exists in this game okay. If I had to guess it's because Trucy appears to be Apollo's assistant at first before exiting the case once Athena arrives and this a bit of a insult to the previous game and it's fans, but it's not really something that matters to me. I understand what corporate decision making was involved behind DD's direction and well, I'm just trying to meet the game where it stands. It's a great fun time that manages to explore some really cool ideas and I think everyone should reevaluate it.

    The Best Locked Room in Ace Attorney

    I want to start off by praising the mystery. It's seriously incredibly well-designed and just by far the best locked room mystery I've seen in the entire series. Breaking down each aspect of it is thrilling and there's a beautiful simplicity to the key trick that puts a bow on everything. The way the witnesses' stories adapt in response to Apollo's deductions without ever seeming like they cede any ground to him carries through the entire case. I can't even be upset about revealing L'Belle's involvement from the start because I never once felt like we were wasting time on the weeds instead of pinning it on the obvious culprit, thought they probably shouldn't have included that part anyway. There is a nice moment where it seems like all the targeted suspicion of L'Belle was unnecessary and Filch is the real culprit, and while this doesn't last for long, it would've been nice to have it ambiguous at that stage too. I did previously regard I2-2 as the best traditional mystery in AA, and while I still stand by it being incredibly good for how it achieves much of the same things, I enjoy so much more about 5-2, such as it's cool characterization aspects.

    In Justice We Trust!

    Bobby Fulbright the Phantom is introduced in this case and uh he doesn't really do Phantomy things that's his whole deal, but he's also really fun as a detective in a way that differentiates him from Gumshoe and Ema. Gumshoe is basically your friend for the trilogy save for the first couple cases of AA1, and even when he's trying to do his job properly, he accidentally lets things slip all the time. Ema likes Phoenix A LOT, understandable after RFTA, and so she's just incredibly cooperative with Apollo by association, especially in combination with her dislike for a certain Glimmerous Fop. She's also very eager to assist you with forensic stuff because yeah that's her big hobby. Bobby Fulbright is someone who's simply trying to fulfill his role as well as possible. He believes in Justice, and the way he ends up being helpful is how Athena and Apollo are able to make him question what his role in relation to Justice even is. Is it Just to keep the defense completely in the dark and not let them investigate? Is it Just to decrease Blackquill's advantage by doing this? It like massively confuses him and Athena is able to use that to her advantage because she studied psychology yeah that's a thing, and while this isn't the deepest character thing, I find it very entertaining and it slots itself nicely into the larger questions about role and identity that DD tackles later on in 5-5.

    Je t'Aime L'Belle

    The next star of the show is Florent L'Belle. I like to think of Dual Destinies as a story about the masks we wear, and L'Belle exemplifies this quite nicely. He is just covered in layers of deception. His hair color is fake, he's caked in makeup, he's clouded by perfume, he masks his financial situation, and also wears an actual mask during the events of the case. L'Belle obsessively presents a persona of himself that his superior to others, but it's built upon several layers of artificiality to the point that the real man underneath is, one that we don't even get to see. Obviously, I think the Phantom delves into the reality of his real self a lot better, but the clear similarities are very intentional.

    I think it's also great that the very driving force behind his spiraling debt is his own created persona. L'Belle runs a cosmetic company with an extensive product line, and yet he refuses to sell it to the public and makes them exclusively for himself, or well, himself and Inga. Mainstream cosmetic products aren't enough for him. L'Belle needs his uniquely superior persona to be built on uniquely superior makeup, or else no matter how much of he uses, he'll still be the same as anyone else who shares his brand choice. It doesn't take a genius to see where the issue lies when he isn't making any money off of his products, and L'Belle is a very crafty genius, but his obsession with his role and identity, that supersedes any other thought he could have about how to properly run a business. It also puts him in line with the previous culprit of the game, Ted Tonate, who is similarly an example of how obsession with an identity can lead to ruin.

    Up for a Game of Simon Says?

    Yup, Prosecutor Blackquill's an Inmate! This is his debut case, and he made such a strong impression on me during Trial Day 1 that I'm honestly ready to say this is the best case at being a prosecutor introduction case in the series. I2-2 could be that, but it feels unfair to count Sebastian as the primary rival. Who cares, Blackquill is awesome here regardless. I've seen people talk a lot about how DD does not achieve 'show don't tell' with regards to Blackquill's manipulation gimmick and I couldn't disagree more it is so well demonstrated in this case. I mean Athena and Apollo do directly remark on it when it happens, so it's certainly not subtle, but subtlety is overrated anyway. It starts off small with how he convinces the Judge to give his opening statement, and sure this is a little gag maybe it's not indicative of anything. He then employs this meaningfully when, after Apollo proves that Filch couldn't have seen Tenma Taro, Blackquill directs Filch into confidently testifying that he heard Tenma Taro by praising his hearing ability. The fact that this also didn't happen and it's clear that it's something Blackquill made up on the spot to get around Apollo also offers a nice example of Simon being corrupt. Yes, a man who unintentionally initiated the Dark Age of the Law while acting genuinely pure, has decayed into being the same corrupt criminal prosecutor as the image the public has assigned onto him. Fucking Awesome.

    The third major act of manipulation is how Blackquill convinces Damian to falsely confess to murder with the threat that Jinxie would get arrested for tampering with the crime scene otherwise. Damian up till now has been shown as impulsively quick to attempt to defend his daughter, even threatening to break out of the detention center itself out of care for her, and Blackquill perfectly preys on that fatherly instinct of his before Apollo even gets a chance to defend Jinxie from the accusations of being in the Tenma Taro costume. Damian reacts to this by claiming to be possessed by the real Yokai Tenma Taro, and Blackquill, someone who had adamantly denied the existence of Yokai up till now, immediately changes his tune to put forward the theory that the real Yokai Tenma Taro used Damian's body to commit murder and explain away the other supernatural happenings of the case. I previously praised 5-1 for how it succeeded in showing how the Dark Age was distinct from corruption in previous titles with Gaspen's behavior, and Blackquill achieves much the same. Not to mention the way he preys on Jinxie's fear to silence her pre therapy session is not unlike how Gaspen treated Juniper.

    Blackquill's twisted sense of respect for others is also demonstrated well in this case. He denies Apollo the use of his perceive ability because of its unreliability but has absolutely 0 complaints with Athena using her mood matrix. This one is obvious because he's well verse in psychology along with how he respects Metis, the creator of the mood matrix. But I think Blackquill's quick move to argue for Damian's Yokai possession is also motivated by this same mutual respect he has for those who engage in the same behavior as him. A false confession in favor of protecting someone vulnerable you care about? He put Damian in much the same position as himself, and when Damian passed the test laid out for him, he had no problems with supporting him fully, regardless of how outlandish the argument was in the first place. All in all, excellent depiction of Blackquill's character here in this case.

    I don't have a good section for this part but,

    I also want to mention that I appreciate how this case exists as setup for Apollo's arc in the finale. My problem with the trilogy isn't necessarily the fact that it puts forward the message of always believing in your client, but rather how it never contextualizes why the characters feel this way, nor ever challenges the premise itself. 5-2 has an extended conversation with Phoenix explaining how he has served as an inspirational mentor figure to both Apollo and Athena, and regardless of this discontinuity with AJ, Apollo latching onto Phoenix's words here feels like a natural extension of the respect demonstrated during that conversation. It's somehow able to accomplish much more than any of Phoenix and Mia's interactions from my memory. The important thing about 5-2 is that, when all the cards are stacked against him, Apollo looks to Phoenix's belief maxim as comfort and motivation to continue pushing forward, and he succeeds. Yes this plays it completely straight, and I think it's quite important to both show how the advice CAN be demonstrably successful as reason to blindly follow it without examination, and to also show that Apollo's beliefs aren't something he's decided for himself and rather an extension of his relationship with someone else. Almost none of this would be impressive in a game that ends up playing this straight but considering the context of the full game, I am very appreciative of how the set up was handled.

    Cross-Cultural Examination

    You may be asking what on earth makes The Monstrous Turnabout such a good case for me then. I've barely talked about things that are relevant to its actual core, but I assure you, set up for future cases and mystery quality is not what makes this case as amazing as it is. The most impressive aspect of 5-2 is its rich examination of culture and its societal effects. I'm also a big SoJ fan for these reasons but it's not the same situation. Khurai'nese culture is also contrived centering the legal system for the purposes of the narrative, which isn't necessarily a bad thing obviously, but I generally appreciate when Ace Attorney can use its format to explore commentary a bit removed from the court system itself. Yokai are a real-world concept, and superstitions built on creating a culture of fear around a certain thing is present in just about every belief system, so as wacky as Ace Attorney is, the cultural landscape of Nine-Tails Vale is one that's still impressively developed and utilized. And it's not just the Yokai that matter to this examination because 5-2 also examines wrestling culture, at least with regards to their masks.

    Humans have always looked for an explanation for concepts they don't yet understand, and while superstition and mythology has arisen to explain a lot of natural phenomena, this has also gone in hand with people using general superstitious culture to inject in some more self-serving artificial myths. An example that comes to mind is the Catholic Church previously collecting payment in exchange for 'forgiveness' through Indulgences. The Curse of Tenma Taro is an instance of such a created myth for the purpose of controlling people as opposed to simply explaining the unknown. As the lore describes, Tenma Town was built on land given away by Nine-Tails Vale in exchange for a giant lump of gold. But as just as how that treasure is responsible for the current day conflict, it's had a bloody history that brought about the Tenma Taro legend to scare people away from anything to do with the treasure. The intention here is undoubtedly good, and maybe there wasn't a better form of protection for such a treasure at the time, but the establishment of this legend was a double-edged sword that causes harm in the present as well.

    Fear is a natural emotion, but a culture of fear that ostracizes people who are different by arbitrary standards continues to cause real-world harm today, and Nine-Tails Vale is not inaccurate in how it depicts this. A main tenet of the Tenma Taro superstitions is that people who admit to having seen him are forced into leaving the village, which is obviously unhealthy, but I think the best demonstration of this is through Jinxie Tenma. Jinxie is precious I love her they make great use of 3D animations with her. She also is responsible for the first use of Running Wild Mood Matrix song and it's a fucking amazing song so thank you for existing Jinxie. Oh yeah I should mention the reason that mood matrix segment is because working in Nine-Tails Vale has fucked her up so badly that she sees ordinary household objects as Yokai. These superstitions have preyed on the weak constitution of a young girl. And most importantly, her fear is do debilitating that she is hopelessly overworked relative to the amount of sleep she's getting, and it causes her to fall into states of sleepwalking that the other villagers incorrectly fearmonger as possession by Tenma Taro. Strange medical phenomena being labelled as the work of demons is an unfortunate historical trend and seeing it depicted here just adds to how well realized this examination is.

    There Weren't No Tenma Taro in the Foyer

    All of this sets the stage for how the two criminals of this case, Phineas Filch and Florent L'Belle, use the cultural beliefs of Nine-Tails Vale as a smokescreen for all of their misdeeds. Yes, just as how cultural beliefs result in communal harms, it also enables bad people to make use of them for their own ends the more distanced they are from reality. Even before we get into their actual criminal acts, there are a lot of examples of general deception that they use the curse of Tenma Taro as an excuse for. Filch explains away his denial of seeing Tenma Taro on Day 1 as fearing for his life according to the superstitions, and earlier during the investigation, Apollo finds out from Jinxie that the reason she had been keeping quiet about seeing Tenma Taro in the hallway is because L'Belle warned her about the superstitions. L'Belle's excuse for lying about not seeing Jinxie in the hallway also stems from this faux concern for her where he doesn't want her to be pinned as the obvious suspect for wearing the Tenma Taro costume based on how the entire town already views her, and uses this to fuel the prosecution's suspicion of her. This very rumor is also what drives Damian to pretend to be possessed by Tenma Taro himself in his Day 1 Confession, though this is more of an unintentional help for L'Belle.

    But there are also misdeeds beyond simple lies. Starting with Filch, he's the one who was asked to wear the Tenma Taro costume in the public wrestling act, but after holding onto the costume, he gets the bright idea to use it as a cover for his attempt to steal the treasure, banking on no one admitting to having seen him due to the superstitions. Funny then he goes on to use this same excuse. And L'Belle? His entire calculated plan is centered on a simple trick involving the Amazing Nine-Tails Mask, in which he exploits an important aspect of wrestling culture to pretend to be Damian Tenma and confess to murder as him in front of Jinxie, giving himself convenient corroboration of his testimony for when he states those claims himself in court. I love how this case doesn't just make L'Belle out to be a rare bad egg in these circumstances because the addition of Filch's actions makes the questions it raises about the ethics of Nine-Tails Vale's belief system actually hit hard.

    Announce the Truth

    It's powerful then that the resolution of the case involves cutting through the beliefs surrounding both Nine-Tails Vale and Wrestling to expose the real monster at the heart of this crime. L'Belle attempts to block Damian's imminent identity reveal as the Amazing Nine-Tails by using the destabilizing of Nine-Tails Vale as a threat, knowing that the reason the existence of the gold was covered up in the first place is because of the conflict it incited. But Nine-Tails Vale has outgrown any of the grounding it had for its beliefs. The treasure was stolen decades ago, and all that's left is a vestigial, harmful culture, that L'Belle attempts to use for his own ends before Apollo demystifies this reality. The simultaneous exposure of the true identities of Tenma Taro and the Amazing Nine-Tails bring about victory, in a metaphorical homage to the friendship that both cities were founded on, and emblematic of 5-2's main takeaway that while beliefs themselves aren't inherently bad, there's a point where they get so distanced from reality that they lose their intent and become a harmful structure on their own. I also want to grant extra points for how this moment is relevant to the overall themeing around identity because after getting the true nature of Tenma Taro and revealing how hollow it really is, the story proceeds to expose L'Belle's true hair color and financial status, another example of a hollow center to an artificial myth. The real monster here is not Tenma Taro, it is just a miserable man.

    Bit of an aside but I kind of love the concept of getting to the heart of a supernatural phenomenon and finding the person responsible, who in their actions, have ended up personifying the supernatural phenomenon in the first place. For example, TGAA2 Spoilers William Shamspeare is the one responsible for the Convict's Curse of Briar Road, with his multiple attempts at poisoning tenants with gas. But his motive behind this is how he was consumed by greed after hearing about Selden's treasure and became an embodiment of this Curse stemming from the Convict Selden. L'Belle is an extraordinarily similar character in how he ends up embodying the true curse of Tenma Taro, violence fueled by greed, despite having used it as a smokescreen for many of his actions.

    Anyway, back to exposing culture for what it is. People often think that 5-2 is meaningless filler case awkwardly inserted into the rest of the game. And while it is true that it's inessential in some ways, Dual Destinies would not be the cohesive masterpiece that is without a case like this. Because when you think about a set of societal beliefs that stemmed from a reasonable reaction to real events but have since mutated into a superstructure of its own that encourages harm, that's literally the Dark Age of the Law baby! Phoenix did present forged evidence, and Simon Blackquill did get convicted of murder. And so the public reasonably reacted with extreme concern, that criminals like this were able to infiltrate pillars of justice that people once felt security in. Perhaps mass hysteria would incite reform that would clean up the trash so to speak. However, both of these events are hollow at their core, merely proxies for the real villains behind the scenes, and with the public's culture of fear regarding legal systems, they have only encouraged lawyers to embody the same nasty actors that the public believe them to be. L'Belle is the hidden evil using a cultural scapegoat, Damien Tenma embodying the Tenma Taro that people believe him to be, and just as 5-2 rejects these metastasized beliefs about Yokai, the conclusion of Dual Destinies is about getting to the heart of how fake this Dark Age really is. This is why as I mentioned earlier, I find appreciation in AA using its format to explore ideas removed from the court system, because then when they do eventually relate to the main ideas of the game, it gives the game an entire additional dimension that only enriches its themes.

    submitted by /u/Inspector_Espresso
    [link] [comments]

    Turnabout Gala - Part 4 (2/3)

    Posted: 03 Mar 2022 03:10 PM PST

    Take this Apollo drawing! >:O

    Posted: 03 Mar 2022 05:02 PM PST

    電撃オンライン on Twitter: “An orchestra concert to commemorate the 20th anniversary of "Ace Attorney" will be held!”

    Posted: 03 Mar 2022 12:59 PM PST

    Kristoph and Klavier comic

    Posted: 03 Mar 2022 05:54 PM PST

    Simon Blackquill Commission

    Posted: 03 Mar 2022 04:25 AM PST

    I'm Streaming a First Playthrough!

    Posted: 03 Mar 2022 05:58 PM PST

    In about 30 minutes (@ 8:30 PM CST) I will be streaming Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney on my Twitch Channel, Cosmic Churro! This will be my first playthrough, and I am going in blind. If you'd like to watch me solve some mysteries, be sure to stop on by and join in the fun! I hope to see you there!

    submitted by /u/FunBear5
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    Who called Phoenix this?

    Posted: 02 Mar 2022 06:40 PM PST

    Out of all cases in AA, AAI, and GAA, where would you place 6-5?

    Posted: 03 Mar 2022 10:19 PM PST

    For 6-4...

    Top Ten (Score of 5): 3 Votes, 15 Points

    Below Top Ten (Score of 4): 12 Votes, 48 Points

    Middle Ten (Score of 3): 21 Votes, 63 Points

    Above Bottom Ten (Score of 2): 19 Votes, 38 Points

    Bottom Ten (Score of 1): 26 Votes, 26 Points

    Total Points: 190

    Total Votes: 81

    Average Vote: 2.3456790123

    Ranking: 3-5 > 2-4 > 1-4 > 1-5 > 5-5 > 4-1 > 6-2 > 3-4 > 5-DLC > 3-2 > 4-4 > 3-1 > 2-2 > 6-3 > 5-4 > 5-3 > 1-3 > 6-4 > 3-3 > 4-2 > 1-2 > 5-1 > 6-1 > 1-1 > 5-2 > 2-3 > 4-3 > 2-1

    View Poll

    submitted by /u/KaleBennett
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    Turnabout Storyteller is the worst case I've ever played so far

    Posted: 03 Mar 2022 07:55 AM PST

    The three first cases of the game were really good and exciting, but this one is the worst of the six games, I'd put it lower than Turnabout Serenade and Big Top. It's an awful combination of irrational logic, boring story and hard to watch characters. I swear at the end I was just tapping the screen to make the dialogue go away as fast as I could I didn't even care how the case was about to turn out. The only entertaining moment was when Simon shaked Athena. It worked, it woke me up. Please tell me I'm not alone.

    submitted by /u/Vireauvert
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    Well that's just factually incorrect

    Posted: 02 Mar 2022 11:39 PM PST

    Finished my first AA game/series, where to next?

    Posted: 03 Mar 2022 07:25 AM PST

    I just finished DGS2 / TGAA2 with the (somewhat) recent Great Ace Attorney Chronicles release, after having been a fan of the first game for years. It's easily become one of my favorite games of all time, and I love it dearly.

    However, looking upon some of the past entries, I feel like I've made the mistake of playing seemingly the most polished one first. Not trying to throw shade at a game I've barely played yet, but what I've played of the first AA game with Phoenix just doesn't hit the same at all. Maybe its the music or the 2D sprites (which are all charming, but doesn't give off the same appeal).

    While I intend to return to the first game at some point, does anyone have any recommendations for a game more recent in the series I could tuck into? Thanks!

    Edit:
    Thank you for all the responses! I think I'll be playing from the start then. It wasn't as though I hated the first game, I'm just on the DGS high. I want a third installment so badly T-T

    submitted by /u/lowxre
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    Since others have done it, I made a tier list of the trilogy characters

    Posted: 02 Mar 2022 02:55 PM PST

    Some of my favourites I doodled ^^

    Posted: 02 Mar 2022 07:32 PM PST

    Ace Attorney 20th Anniversary Orchestra Concert

    Posted: 02 Mar 2022 06:11 PM PST

    Second-Degree Burns is a Payne

    Posted: 02 Mar 2022 11:40 AM PST

    Ok guys, so I f‘d up

    Posted: 03 Mar 2022 05:59 AM PST

    Basically, I was pretty much at the end of chapter 5. I had only two points in my bar left so I saved the game before I had to present evidence, so that I could instantly try again if I fail. So basically after failing, I accidently clicked save instead of load and now i kinda got softlocked. My last other save is like 4-5 hours of gametime ago, so now the question is, can I do anything to not have to play again up to this point? If not, is there something to maybe speed up the process?

    submitted by /u/Akinator08
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    Small, but sad, hypothetical easter egg for AA7

    Posted: 02 Mar 2022 07:29 PM PST

    Imagine Gumshoe returns in AA7, and in one case, you get to go to his house to retrieve something. In his living room, you can see an old Missile lying on a doggy bed taking a nap.

    In a future case, you go to his house again and Missile isn't on the bed, but now there's a new framed picture of Gumshoe and Missile in the room next to an urn.

    How would you feel if you saw this?

    submitted by /u/KaleBennett
    [link] [comments]

    See all evil.

    Posted: 02 Mar 2022 05:16 AM PST

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