Search
The 25th Ward: The Silver Case cover image
Links

68

CRITIK

The 25th Ward: The Silver Case

2018
GenresAdventure, Crime, Horror, Puzzle and Logic, Interactive Movie, Visual Novel, Mystery, Single Player
AvailableMar 13, 2018
PlatformPC, PlayStation 4
DeveloperGrasshopper Manufacture
Overview

The remaster of The Silver Case sequel, originally released on mobile devices, that was know as "Silver Jiken: 25-Ku" in Japan or "The Silver Case: Ward 25" in English. This was the first time the game is released outside of Japan.

Other Scores

Metacritic Score

68


Opencritic Score

65

Small logo

Critik


Scorecard

Info icon

Scorecard unavailable :(

Reviews

31 reviews found

90

Invisioncommunity.co.uk

Apr 22, 2018

The Silver Case, besides being weird as hell, is a solid visual novel game. The story works well despite its division into three campaigns and if you can struggle through the puzzles you’ll find an enjoyable experience for any Suda51 fan. Just be prepared for crazy.


90

Digitallydownloaded.net

Mar 6, 2018

To say that The 25th Ward is niche would be an understatement, but that’s what’s so impressive about it. It respects the intelligence of its players, allowing them to wade through the feverish surrealism that the game often depicts, and melds that perfectly with a traditional noir thriller than Raymond Chandler himself would have been proud of. Goichi Suda might be known for his action games today (and they’re usually very fine games in their own right), but what I wouldn’t give for him to go back for another spin or two at the visual novel.


85

Ps4blog.net

Mar 13, 2018

Summary and quote unavailable.


81

Vgprofessional.com

Apr 14, 2018

Summary and quote unavailable.


80

Cubed3.com

Apr 24, 2018

The 25th Ward: The Silver Case, while not for everyone, is still a unique visual novel experience that oozes creativity. Its gameplay elements do slightly bog it down, but the stylised writing, entertaining characters, and one of a kind story more than make up for it. It's a truly memorable adventure accompanied by wonderful music and artwork, all coming together to make something that visual novel fans should definitely look into.


80

Dualshockers.com

Mar 13, 2018

The 25th Ward: The Silver Case takes chances and pushes the boundaries of storytelling and character development."[/pullquote] As a gamer, playing through The 25th Ward: The Silver Case had me thankful to be playing a game that would have otherwise been lost.


80

Eurogamer.it

Apr 23, 2018

Summary and quote unavailable.


80

Hardcoregamer.com

Mar 6, 2018

The Silver Case was a seminal example of an incredibly influential game creator’s early days while he is finding his creative footing. It still remains a flawed, but genius, masterwork. The 25th Ward: The Silver Case manages to fix some of those flaws, keep others and introduce whole new ones.


80

Ricedigital.co.uk

Mar 27, 2018

Summary and quote unavailable.


80

Pssite.com

Mar 9, 2018

Summary and quote unavailable.

Similar Games
left arrow
left arrow
sliderImage
Star Icon

76

Emio - The Smiling Man: Famicom Detective Club

2024
sliderImage

67

The Silver Case

2016
sliderImage

73

Tokyo Dark

2017
sliderImage

73

Dry Drowning

2019
sliderImage

68

The Chrono Jotter

2021
sliderImage
Star Icon

80

The Witness

2016
sliderImage

88

Immortality

2022
sliderImage

88

AI: The Somnium Files - nirvanA Initiative

2022
sliderImage

88

AI: The Somnium Files - nirvanA Initiative

2022
sliderImage

67

Sherlock Holmes: The Devil's Daughter

2016
sliderImage

81

The Red Strings Club

2018
sliderImage
Star Icon

82

Ace Attorney Investigations Collection

2024
sliderImage

84

Her Story

2015
sliderImage

76

Famicom Detective Club: The Girl Who Stands Behind

2021
sliderImage

80

Stories Untold

2017
sliderImage

83

AI: The Somnium Files

2019
sliderImage

84

Paranormasight: The Seven Mysteries of Honjo

2023
sliderImage

80

Murder by Numbers

2020
sliderImage

84

Doki Doki Literature Club Plus!

2021

About

Contact Us

Terms of Use

Privacy Policy


Follow Us

© 2024 Critik.ai