Operation Backlog Completion 2025
Sep 062024
 

Today is the day. The Ace Attorney Investigations Collection is now out for all modern platforms.

Investigations and its sequel were the only games in the series that never made it to the 3DS, which made it feel a bit like Capcom had left them behind. And Investigations 2 had never received an official translation.

That makes this collection a momentous release, much more so than the Apollo Justice Trilogy earlier this year.

I already played the Investigations Collection and reviewed it over at MonsterVine, so you can head there to read my thoughts on this excellent remaster. I’m so happy this collection exists, and I’m thrilled that more people will get to play these games at last.

(Rest assured, I preordered a physical copy of the collection as well and it arrived today. There’s no way I was missing out on that!)

I’ve been waiting for this day for a long, long time.

All the way back in 2012, I blogged about the fan movement “Operation: Objection!” that hoped to show Capcom we wanted Investigations 2 localized. Two years later, we were holding a write-in/call-in event. A few months later, I was still at it. By the next year, we had a newly-revived movement to show our support.

I eventually put Investigations 2 localization on my list of pipe dreams, where it remained year after year after year…

By 2022, I had all but given up. I wanted to believe the Investigations duology would be remastered, but we’d had no new Ace Attorney announcements since The Great Ace Attorney Chronicles (which itself felt like a miracle to have translated). I told myself that if there was no Ace Attorney news by the end of the year, I would finally give in and play the Investigations 2 fan translation. So the following May, I finally played the fan translation and came out of it hoping for an official translation harder than ever so that more people could play.

And now it’s finally here.

I’ve spent so long going into every single video game event hoping for an Investigations 2 localization announcement that it feels strange to no longer have to. What will I pin all my hopes and dreams on now? I guess I’ll just have to double down on wishing for Ace Attorney 7.

In the meantime, I can’t wait to see reactions from people playing these games for the first time. Are you planning to play the Ace Attorney Investigations Collection?

Aug 232024
 

We’re quickly approaching the release date of the Ace Attorney Investigations Collection, and as if that isn’t exciting enough on its own, they’ve actually released a demo.

The Ace Attorney Investigations Collection demo will let you play through the start of each game’s first case, so you can try both the start of Turnabout Visitor and Turnabout Trigger.

Progress will transfer to the full game, too!

They announced it through a new trailer that also lets us hear some of the new Investigations 2 voice lines, but I didn’t embed it here because it includes some out-of-context shots from both games that I feel could be considered spoilers (such as a scene from the first game’s final case).

This is the first time they’ve released an Ace Attorney demo since… well, since we were last getting brand-new Ace Attorney games, back on the 3DS. None of the other collections got public demos.

Since the Investigations games play differently from the rest of the series, I wonder if that’s why they chose to give it a demo – to let players experience the new mechanics for themselves. It’s great to see, and it feels like they really want to give Investigations the best chance to succeed.

Meanwhile, the official Ace Attorney website has now been updated with an official timeline that shows all of the games – excluding the crossover – in chronological order, provides information about each individual game and what collection it can be found in, and shows some basic character relationships.

(It also confirms that they do not see Athena as a main protagonist of Spirit of Justice, only of Dual Destinies, which lines up with how she’s handled in the game.)

Honestly, all of this makes me more convinced than ever that we’re getting a new Ace Attorney game soon. They’re going hard with the Investigations Collection’s marketing and making it easier than ever for players to get into the series. That timeline page feels like the sort of thing you’d bring out to prepare for a new Ace Attorney game – and I’ve still got my hopes set on the Tokyo Game Show.

Are you going to try the Investigations Collection demo? Do you think Capcom is gearing up to announce Ace Attorney 7?

Aug 092024
 

Remember a few months ago when an Ace Attorney tweet of the Earth got fans stirred up thinking it was a hint?

Well, the latest stir is a lot harder to explain.

The Earth incident was simple. It was a difficult-to-recognize screenshot from Dual Destinies, accidentally tweeted without text to give it context. You can easily see how that would happen.

But how could new dialogue about Great Ace Attorney characters end up in the subtitles of Ace Attorney Investigations videos??

A fan on Reddit was the first to draw attention to this bizarre situation, and since then it’s spread as more people learned about it. In two videos posted to Twitter, one from July 6 announcing the updated profile picture and banner, and one from August 7 introducing the “Logic” mechanic in Investigations, turning on Twitter’s captions produces two perplexing, out-of-place lines.

In the first video, a caption immediately displays that says, “Van Zieks, you are the only one who knows the truth about this case.” In the second, around 4 seconds in when the dialogue starts, the caption reads, “Van Zieks, I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to hurt you.”

Neither has subtitles for the rest of the video. While the second video is also on Youtube, the Youtube captions are only available in Japanese and just say that music is playing.

So… what’s going on?

This is incredibly bizarre. It’s the sort of thing that feels like it has to be an accident instead of a hint toward a new game, but at the same time, it’s hard to think of a logical explanation for two Ace Attorney Investigations videos with no voiced dialogue to have subtitles referring to a Great Ace Attorney character. Moreover, those two lines of dialogue are not from either existing Great Ace Attorney game or any promotional material that I could find. These are two entirely new lines of dialogue addressing Van Zieks.

Let’s run through the possible explanations for how this could have happened.

Possibility #1: It’s an auto-caption error.

What seems on the surface to be a simple explanation is actually the least plausible. When videos have automatically generated subtitles, it often results in lines that don’t match up with what is actually being said. (For example, I remember an Xbox video that started out, “I’m Larry Hryb, Xbox Live’s Major Nelson,” and the subtitles rendered it as “I’m Larry her black box lies Major Nelson.”) Automatically generated caption mistakes usually stand out not only because they’re out of place, but because they make no sense.

And these videos have no voiced dialogue! For automatic captions to misinterpret the soundtrack and text at the start of the videos as coherent sentences, and then not generate captions for the rest of the video, would be hard enough to believe, let alone that they managed to get “Van Zieks” out of it. I don’t think it’s actually possible that these lines could be automatic subtitles.

Possibility #2: They were intentionally added as a tease.

This was the first thing I thought when I saw it: an alternate reality game (ARG) using these mysterious lines to tease the existence of an upcoming new Great Ace Attorney game (possibly the Great Ace Attorney Investigations game I want so much). It would explain why each video has one line of dialogue. Presumably we would get another trailer next month with a third line of dialogue.

On the other hand, Capcom has never advertised Ace Attorney like this before, and there’s nothing else that would suggest an ARG. More importantly, the second video’s subtitle does not exist in the corresponding Japanese tweet, and the first video wasn’t posted in Japanese at all. It would be very strange for them to tease a new game through English channels first.

Possibility #3: They were intentionally added as a prank.

We can’t ignore the possibility that someone running Capcom’s social media added these captions solely to stir fans up, with no deeper meaning behind it.

But at the same time, it doesn’t feel like a joke. The lines aren’t funny, and they aren’t referencing anything in particular. If this is a prank, the whole joke would be just “you want another game and aren’t getting one,” which would be rather mean-spirited for an account that has otherwise engaged with fans in a friendly way.

Not to mention the lack of attention being drawn to it, which seems unusual for a prank.

Possibility #4: They were accidentally added and are meant for a new game announcement.

It’s plausible that the Twitter videos were supposed to have a “music playing” caption like the Youtube video does, but someone uploaded the wrong subtitle lines. Instead of adding the music indicator, they used lines meant for an entirely different video announcing a new Great Ace Attorney game.

Voiced trailers aren’t uncommon for Ace Attorney, which would explain why those lines have captions. They could also be for a video where the text is only in Japanese, with subtitles created to share it with the English-speaking audience. That’s the sort of thing that might happen if they were announcing a new Ace Attorney game in Japan with Japanese game assets for the trailer but wanted to announce localization from the start.

Since I really want more Great Ace Attorney (and especially The Great Ace Attorney Investigations), I can’t help but hope for this option.

Possibility #5: They were accidentally added and are meant for a non-game video.

Finally, it’s also possible that the previous case occurred but the accidental subtitles are meant for a video that isn’t a new game announcement, but rather something else. For example, Capcom recently held a lot of polls in Capcom Town where the results were presented by Phoenix and Maya, so it could be something like that with Great Ace Attorney characters (though it would be strange for that to be voiced).

The only problem with possibilities #4 and #5 is that this would require the subtitle to accidentally be added to the wrong video twice. With two different lines. In videos spaced almost exactly a month apart.

I’m baffled.

Once again, these are not existing lines of dialogue from The Great Ace Attorney. These are new lines of dialogue. No matter what they’re for, Capcom has new lines of dialogue addressing van Zieks.

This situation is bizarre. I think we need Professor Layton to help us solve this one, because while hoping this is a tease for a Great Ace Attorney Investigations game feels like a huge stretch, the “logical” alternatives are almost harder to believe.

When I finished The Great Ace Attorney Chronicles, I realized to my surprise that I no longer cared as much about Ace Attorney 7. I wanted more time with the Great Ace Attorney cast instead. I especially wanted a Great Ace Attorney Investigations, but that hope felt impossibly out of reach. Now… could it actually happen?

I know one thing for sure: as soon as a new Ace Attorney trailer appears on Twitter, I’ll be checking for subtitles.

What do you think is the explanation behind these perplexing lines?