Operation Backlog Completion 2026
Aug 282023
 

If you’ve seen my recent Ace Attorney posts, you know I’m very optimistic about Ace Attorney’s future.

To me, Ace Attorney 7 is a matter of when, not if.

For that matter, I even think we have a chance of seeing an Investigations Duology collection, especially given the recent attention it’s received.

But optimism still leaves us with one big question: where is Ace Attorney 7?

The seventh mainline game has been rumored since 2017, and here we are six years later still waiting for a shred of actual news. As I mentioned in my post about Ace Attorney’s future, the data breach leaks that revealed The Great Ace Attorney Chronicles and tentative plans for the Apollo Justice Trilogy also said Ace Attorney 7 was in development.

According to that roadmap, Great Ace Attorney staff would be shifted to the in-development Ace Attorney 7 after finishing work on Chronicles, with Chronicles planned for Q1 2021 release followed by a projected Ace Attorney 7 release in Q3 2021. Chronicles released later than its projected window, but Ace Attorney 7 has come nowhere close. This has led to a lot of speculation about what exactly happened to it, and I think there are three main possibilities.

Possibility #1: The delay is strategic

The Great Ace Attorney Chronicles game out at the end of July 2021 and blew past sales expectations. With Chronicles selling so well, the last thing they’d want to do is release another Ace Attorney game too soon and risk cannibalizing sales – and it might have spurred them to release a collection of games 4-6 before Ace Attorney 7 after all.

Chronicles came out in mid 2021, and then they used Ace Attorney’s success to boost marketing of the Ghost Trick remaster in mid 2023, while preparing the Apollo Justice: Ace Attorney Trilogy for early 2024.

If this possibility is correct, it would mean that Ace Attorney 7 is going well or even finished, but the announcement was withheld to space out releases and bridge the gap for new fans by releasing the Apollo Justice Trilogy first. We’d probably get an announcement later in 2024 or the next year in that case.

Possibility #2: It was cancelled

The worst possibility, of course, is that Ace Attorney 7 was cancelled. Many fans seem to subscribe to this theory, believing the pandemic, Yamazaki’s departure from Capcom in 2020, or general development troubles led to Ace Attorney 7 being scrapped completely.

Obviously, since I’m an Ace Attorney optimist, I don’t believe this – or at the very least, I believe Capcom would un-cancel it after seeing the success of Chronicles. It is a possibility worth keeping in mind, though, because that would account for such a big delay. In this scenario, the Apollo Justice Trilogy could be seen as either a way to fill the gap while restarting development or an alternative release.

Let’s hope it wasn’t cancelled, though.

Possibility #3: It was rebooted or revamped

While this might sound very close to the previous possibility, this is actually the one I think is the most optimistic: the possibility that the in-development Ace Attorney 7 was playing it safe, but the success of Chronicles convinced them to overhaul the project to make it a more ambitious game.

For example, they could have seen how the two Great Ace Attorney games telling a single story allowed for its story and world to be built up so well and decided to give Ace Attorney 7 more than the usual 5 cases. Or they could have realized Ace Attorney doesn’t need Phoenix as the lead character to be a success (the recent poll focusing on the Ace Attorney characters with their own games fits in with that) and retooled Ace Attorney 7 to have a different lead.

This possibility would mean Ace Attorney 7 is potentially still a ways off, with the Apollo Justice Trilogy filling the gap in the meantime, but it could be the best-case scenario. I’d like to see what they could do if they were willing to take some risks.

Conclusion

Right now, there’s no way of knowing what the current status of Ace Attorney 7 is, but I think these are the most likely possibilities. What do you think happened to Ace Attorney 7?

Aug 252023
 

A few days ago, after learning Edgeworth won the poll about which Ace Attorney lawyer you’d most want to defend you if you were sued, I decided to visit the Capcom Museum page in Capcom Town to see if there was anything new.

To my surprise, the Special Exhibits spot notified me that a new exhibit was available… for Ace Attorney Investigations.

Yes, the two Investigations game have their own Special Exhibit in the Capcom Museum. It features art, design documents, and more from both games.

(On Monday, the design documents included a major spoiler for Investigations 2, but I don’t see it there anymore. Just tread cautiously.)

It’s pretty likely this exhibit was added in response to Edgeworth winning the poll, as enough time passed between the poll closing and the results being announced for them to prepare it.

However, I still think it’s a good sign that Investigations is getting this much attention. Unlike the other DS games, Investigations never even got a port to the 3DS. I didn’t expect Capcom to acknowledge it at all, especially not with a whole page devoted to it. They could have highlighted Edgeworth’s role in the main series, but instead they chose to bring the Investigations duology into the spotlight.

(I’d place more importance on Investigations 2 being featured on an English Capcom site if not for the memory of Bandai Namco celebrating the anniversary of the Tales series with English tweets about untranslated games.)

The biggest thing to take away from this is that Edgeworth is popular, and Capcom knows it. A couple months ago, while discussing my optimistic beliefs about Ace Attorney’s future, I said I thought the success of The Great Ace Attorney Chronicles and the announcement of the Apollo Justice Trilogy showed that Capcom no longer felt Phoenix’s name had to be in the title for an Ace Attorney game to succeed. Between that and the clear evidence of Edgeworth’s popularity, our chances of getting an Investigations duology collection now look better than ever!

Are you surprised to see Investigations featured on Capcom site? Would you play a duology bundle if it was released?

Aug 142023
 

I’ve been looking forward to Master Detective Archive: Rain Code ever since it was announced.

The newest game from the creator of Danganronpa, Rain Code follows a detective named Yuma who travels to a mysterious isolated city where it always rains after making a pact with a death god.

This pact caused him to lose his memories but gain the powers of Shinigami, the death god, who can materialize the aspects of a mystery into a Mystery Labyrinth. By exploring a Mystery Labyrinth and overcoming obstacles with evidence, you can reach the truth of the case.

Some people refer to Rain Code as a visual novel, but I’d say that’s stretching the definition a fair bit. For one thing, Rain Code features full 3D exploration as you walk around the city and investigate the crime scenes.

In between cases, each chapter has a handful of side quests you can take on. These are fairly basic and only require you to talk to people, but their stories are interesting enough that I found them to be an enjoyable diversion from the main plot. (Although I expected some of them to have follow-up quests due to their endings, only for that to never happen.)

You can also find collectibles around the city that allow you to view conversations with the other major characters. These are basically bonding events like in Danganronpa, except instead of seeking a character out to talk to them, you instead find these collectibles to “remember” conversations that are supposed to have happened off-screen. I enjoyed this way of handling it, and the conversations were pretty entertaining.

As for the main story, each chapter features a major mystery for you to investigate. Once you’ve gathered all the clues, the story reaches a point where you enter the Mystery Labyrinth to find the answer.

The idea of a materialized mystery with elements of the case given a physical form to explore is pretty interesting and made me think of Persona 5’s Palaces or Psychonauts’s mental worlds. In practice, however, Mystery Labyrinths are just Danganronpa trials with more running. You’ll be confronted by Mystery Phantoms, representations of people trying to conceal the truth of the case, who will throw statements at you that you have to dodge before attacking a contradictory statement with the correct Solution Key. At other times, you’ll need to answer a question by choosing the correct path to take, or spell out the solution to the current problem. And sometimes you literally just run forward while discussing the mystery.

But despite how much I’ve complained about Danganronpa’s mini-games, they didn’t bother me here. While they have a lot of similarities, it never felt like the action part took precedence over the logic part.

Unfortunately, Mystery Labyrinths can be pretty boring. For me, this comes down to two things. First, you aren’t interacting with the actual people involved in the case. Mystery Phantoms only exist to argue until you present the correct evidence, so it’s a lot less debating a case with other characters like in Danganronpa or Ace Attorney, and more answering questions until you reach the solution.

Click for Rain Code spoilers
And since the most interesting cases in the game are Chapters 4 and 5, in which you do argue with real people instead of just representations, I think that points toward just how much of a difference it makes (even if both chapters have significant strengths beyond just that).

Second, this also means you only rarely learn new information in a Mystery Labyrinth. For the most part, you have all the facts of the case from the moment the Mystery Labyrinth begins, which makes it much easier to figure out the case ahead of time and then need to sit through half a dozen other questions before you can finally reach the part you guessed ages ago. Some of the cases are painfully boring as a result.

However, the final sections of the story make up for it with much stronger emotional highs, important plot revelations, and exciting confrontations. I went from tearing my hair out at how tedious Chapter 3 was to being completely hooked and unable to put the game down for the remaining chapters.

The overall story ends up being pretty interesting, and the game has a pretty likeable main cast. Even characters who felt annoying at the start grew on me over time, and I found myself especially attached to Shinigami (despite her irreverent attitude toward everything, being a death god and all).

I would love to see a sequel to this game, but I hope a hypothetical Rain Code sequel will address its flaws to make the mystery-solving more interesting and engaging. Four DLC episodes are planned, but since the first is reportedly quite short, I’m waiting on reactions to the others before I decide if I want to buy them or not.

So if you’ve had your eye on Master Detective Archive: Rain Code, just know that while it might have some tedious parts to trudge through, the later parts of the game make it worth seeing it through to the end.