
Hector: Badge of Carnage - Full Series
If you have any tolerance for weapons-grade British toilet humor, this three-episode point-and-click comedy is one of the funniest adventure games the genre has produced. Go in forewarned: it pulls absolutely no punches.
GamerScout Verdict
Built for classic adventure fans who want sharp writing with their crude humor - Episode 1 is the roughest; stick through all three.
Compare Prices(0 stores)
Loading prices...
We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.
Screenshots & Media
About Hector: Badge of Carnage - Full Series
I went into Hector: Badge of Carnage expecting a cheap, shock-value cash-in riding the early-2010s Telltale wave. What I got instead was a surprisingly well-constructed point-and-click comedy that earns its laughs through genuine writing rather than just relying on the gross-out moments it absolutely does not shy away from. The premise sounds simple: Detective Inspector Hector, an alcoholic, corrupt, curry-obsessed slob described accurately by his own department as "the fat arse of the law", is the only negotiator left alive after a terrorist sniper picks off 37 colleagues in Clappers Wreake, the most aggressively depressing fictional British town ever committed to a screen. His job is to meet the terrorist's demands. Your job is to figure out how. The core mechanics are classic LucasArts-lineage stuff: single-click to examine, double-click to interact, inventory combining, and dialogue trees. Episode 1 (We Negotiate with Terrorists) uses a satisfying three-parallel-task structure where you can tackle the sniper's demands in whatever order you like, which keeps the pacing lively and stops the puzzles from funnelling you into a single solution path. The puzzles range from moderately logical to genuinely devious, and the built-in hint system offers tiered nudges without just handing you the answer. Episode 2 (Senseless Acts of Justice) introduces character-switching between Hector and his meek, polite partner Lambert, letting you trade items between them to solve puzzles that neither could manage alone. Episode 3 (Beyond Reasonable Doom) commits harder to that two-character mechanic, and it pays off well. At one point you can literally put Lambert in your inventory and use him as a puzzle item, which tells you everything you need to know about the escalating absurdity the series builds toward. The writing is the real argument for playing this. Hector himself could easily have been an insufferable one-note lout, but the script keeps finding angles that make him darkly compelling rather than just obnoxious. The voice cast, mostly one actor doing a full ensemble, holds up surprisingly well, and the cartoony flash-animation art style suits the tone perfectly. Where it stumbles: the humor is relentlessly crude, and if toilet jokes and sexual vulgarity lose their effect on you quickly, the middle stretch of Episode 2 will wear you down. The series also has essentially zero replay value once you know the solutions. You play it once, you laugh (or you don't), and it's done. Total runtime across all three episodes sits somewhere in the four-to-six hour range depending on puzzle tolerance, which is short but feels complete rather than truncated. The three episodes were developed by Straandlooper and published by Telltale, and the story arc wraps with a proper climax that ties callbacks from Episode 1 all the way through. If you bounced off the first episode's opening, the series genuinely improves from there in polish and puzzle design. If crude British satire aimed squarely at hypocrisy and low-life culture sounds like your wavelength, the full series bundle is the only sensible way to play.

Catch-all
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- XP / Vista / Windows 7
- Sound
- Audio Card required
- Memory
- 2 GB
- DirectX®
- 9.0c
- Processor
- 1.8 GHz Pentium 4 or equivalent
- Video Card
- ATI or NVidia card w/ 256 MB RAM
- Hard Disk Space
- 500 Mb
Recommended
- OS
- XP / Vista / Windows 7
- Sound
- Audio Card required
- Memory
- 3 GB
- DirectX®
- 9.0c
- Processor
- 2.0GHz Pentium 4 or equivalent
- Video Card
- ATI or NVidia card w/ 512 MB RAM
- Hard Disk Space
- 500 Mb
Keep exploring
Community Discussion
Be the first to comment on Hector: Badge of Carnage - Full Series.
Reviews & Ratings
Game Info
- Developer
- Telltale
- Publisher
- Telltale
- Release Date
- Apr 27, 2011
