Compare Carmen Sandiego prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Gameloft. Published by Gameloft. Released on 3/3/2025. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Adventure, Strategy.

Nostalgia bait with a mobile game skeleton underneath: solid pick for a parent hunting an edutainment title for a 10-year-old, a tough sell for anyone else at PC prices.

My spreadsheet brain wants to find the decision tree worth optimising here, and Carmen Sandiego 2025 keeps telling me there isn't one. That is the clearest way I can frame the core tension in this release: the franchise built its reputation on genuine geographic deduction and clock-pressure routing, and Gameloft has delivered a version that largely automates those decisions for you. You gather clues, feed them into the Identikit suspect filter, the game narrows the list, and you issue a warrant. The thinking is done before you finish reading the clue card. For a genre-adjacent puzzle player expecting any real deductive weight, that gap is going to sting. The structure itself is familiar to anyone who touched a Carmen game in the 1990s. Each caper sends you globe-hopping across roughly 15 city locations, picking up clues about which VILE operative pulled off the latest theft and where they are headed next. The twist this time is that Carmen works alongside ACME rather than against them, chasing down operatives with pun-heavy names while a ticking timer adds nominal pressure. Between city stops, gadget mini-games break up the travel: lock-picking by rotating tumblers, safe-cracking with a feedback device, rewiring circuit boards, grappling between rooftops, and dodging laser grids. There is variety in the mini-game roster, which is the brightest mechanical spot in the package, and a handful of the puzzle-oriented ones genuinely require a moment of focus. The action-oriented ones are forgettable. Voice acting coverage is thin across the board, and the explorable 3D location segments are small enough that two solid clue finds close them out. The secondary mode, the ACME Files, is the more interesting structural choice. It presents 46 randomised cases in a pixel-art 2D style lifted directly from the 1985 Broderbund formula, and it sits closer to what fans of the original games actually want: clue-driven suspect deduction without the narrative scaffolding slowing things down. If you are buying this for yourself and have any nostalgia investment, the ACME Files will occupy more of your time than the main campaign. The main campaign clocks in at under nine hours for a full clear, and the locations repeat often enough that city fatigue sets in well before the final caper. The honest problem with Carmen Sandiego on PC and Xbox is provenance. This is a port of a mobile-first Netflix game, and the interface, explorable area scale, and overall production ceiling all reflect that origin plainly. The menu system is built around large touch-friendly buttons, the in-game music is underwhelming during play, and the animation budget shows its limits in cutscenes. The art direction and set dressing are genuinely appealing, and the cel-shaded style borrowed from the 2019 animated series translates well to screen. But competent art cannot compensate for a depth deficit that is baked into the design from the ground up. Critics who reviewed the PC version noted that the game's better challenges only surface in the second half of the campaign, which means early sessions mostly function as a very slow tutorial. Who should actually consider this? Kids in the 10 to 12 bracket who are early in their gaming journey and have an appetite for world geography. The edutainment intent is real, the ESRB rating is E, and the mini-game variety will hold that audience. Adults hunting a Carmen fix should temper expectations dramatically: the deduction loop demands almost nothing, the city count is half what older entries offered, and the runtime does not justify premium PC pricing. The ACME Files mode saves it from being a total write-off for returning fans, but only just. Diego, Scout Team

Carmen Sandiego
AdventureStrategy

Carmen Sandiego

Mar 3, 2025Gameloft
GamerScout Says

Nostalgia bait with a mobile game skeleton underneath: solid pick for a parent hunting an edutainment title for a 10-year-old, a tough sell for anyone else at PC prices.

PCXbox
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About Carmen Sandiego

My spreadsheet brain wants to find the decision tree worth optimising here, and Carmen Sandiego 2025 keeps telling me there isn't one. That is the clearest way I can frame the core tension in this release: the franchise built its reputation on genuine geographic deduction and clock-pressure routing, and Gameloft has delivered a version that largely automates those decisions for you. You gather clues, feed them into the Identikit suspect filter, the game narrows the list, and you issue a warrant. The thinking is done before you finish reading the clue card. For a genre-adjacent puzzle player expecting any real deductive weight, that gap is going to sting. The structure itself is familiar to anyone who touched a Carmen game in the 1990s. Each caper sends you globe-hopping across roughly 15 city locations, picking up clues about which VILE operative pulled off the latest theft and where they are headed next. The twist this time is that Carmen works alongside ACME rather than against them, chasing down operatives with pun-heavy names while a ticking timer adds nominal pressure. Between city stops, gadget mini-games break up the travel: lock-picking by rotating tumblers, safe-cracking with a feedback device, rewiring circuit boards, grappling between rooftops, and dodging laser grids. There is variety in the mini-game roster, which is the brightest mechanical spot in the package, and a handful of the puzzle-oriented ones genuinely require a moment of focus. The action-oriented ones are forgettable. Voice acting coverage is thin across the board, and the explorable 3D location segments are small enough that two solid clue finds close them out. The secondary mode, the ACME Files, is the more interesting structural choice. It presents 46 randomised cases in a pixel-art 2D style lifted directly from the 1985 Broderbund formula, and it sits closer to what fans of the original games actually want: clue-driven suspect deduction without the narrative scaffolding slowing things down. If you are buying this for yourself and have any nostalgia investment, the ACME Files will occupy more of your time than the main campaign. The main campaign clocks in at under nine hours for a full clear, and the locations repeat often enough that city fatigue sets in well before the final caper. The honest problem with Carmen Sandiego on PC and Xbox is provenance. This is a port of a mobile-first Netflix game, and the interface, explorable area scale, and overall production ceiling all reflect that origin plainly. The menu system is built around large touch-friendly buttons, the in-game music is underwhelming during play, and the animation budget shows its limits in cutscenes. The art direction and set dressing are genuinely appealing, and the cel-shaded style borrowed from the 2019 animated series translates well to screen. But competent art cannot compensate for a depth deficit that is baked into the design from the ground up. Critics who reviewed the PC version noted that the game's better challenges only surface in the second half of the campaign, which means early sessions mostly function as a very slow tutorial. Who should actually consider this? Kids in the 10 to 12 bracket who are early in their gaming journey and have an appetite for world geography. The edutainment intent is real, the ESRB rating is E, and the mini-game variety will hold that audience. Adults hunting a Carmen fix should temper expectations dramatically: the deduction loop demands almost nothing, the city count is half what older entries offered, and the runtime does not justify premium PC pricing. The ACME Files mode saves it from being a total write-off for returning fans, but only just. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supporttier:indieEdutainmentPoint-and-ClickDeduction PuzzlesMini-Game CollectionGlobe-TrottingMobile PortRetro ModeKid-Friendly

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck Verified

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Verified.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10
Memory
2 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
5 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA Geforce GTX 970
Processor
Quad Core Processor
Additional Notes
Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system

Recommended

OS
Windows 10
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
5 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA Geforce GTX 1070
Processor
Quad Core Processor
Additional Notes
Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system

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Game Info

Developer
Gameloft
Publisher
Gameloft
Release Date
Mar 3, 2025

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Carmen Sandiego is available on PC, Xbox.

When was Carmen Sandiego released?

Carmen Sandiego was released on 3 March 2025.

Who developed Carmen Sandiego?

Carmen Sandiego was developed by Gameloft.