HomeFeaturesScene Investigators
This detective puzzle game requires a lot of meticulous collecting of receiptsI mean that in a good way
I mean that in a good way
Image credit:RPS/EQ Studios
Image credit:RPS/EQ Studios

The answers are extremely specific, but can be found in the scenarios, which are eerie snapshots of events that remind me ofEverybody’s Gone To The Rapture, and its interesting to paw through them and figure out which things are evidence you need to pay attention to, and which are just evidence of a life. (Although some of them make me feel… something; I’m not sure the simulation of a pimp’s house where you have to figure out which ‘client’ stole which girl’s money is handled with the kind of rigour a scenario like that demands).
Image credit:RPS/EQ Studios

But at the same time, Scene Investigators doesn’t meet you half way. Like, this is not a game where, whenever you pick up a bit of paper, your little HUD inventory icon lights up gold, and then your character (gruff, investigatory) narrates “Huh. Looks like the dad was spending a lot of time in this one casino in Vegas.” This is a game where you will find various receipts, some of which are in Vegas, and can, once you have found the dad’s credit card, note which ones are his so you can track his movements up to the date his children were taken. The impressive attention to detail and the - and I can’t empahsise this enough - complete lack of any help - extends to having to check handwriting on Post-its. There’s an in-game notebook where you can type up things to remember yourself, but honestly, it’s not a lot of help.
It’s why I bounced off, but when I went back and played it more like I was playing a Lucas Pope game (i.e. scribbling all over a physical notebook on my desk) it clicked a lot more. Sometimes it’s hard because the UI doesn’t really feel a need to be user friendly, but sometimes it’s hard because it goes: “Come on then, you listened to Serial, put up or fuck up.”
Scene Investigators is marketed to true crime enthusiasts, and I think a lot about the ethics of true crime as I disentangle myself from the habit of watching lurid documentaries when I’m sick. Playing Scene Investigators is a better outlet for that interest than posting TikToks that start “I’m not a psychologist, but I’ve watched a lot of Criminal Minds.” Look, I’m writing a whole other article now. Scene Investigators is a dense, difficult, unforgiving puzzle game that constructs artful vignettes. And a lot of paperwork.