
The Raven Remastered
If your idea of a good time is playing an Agatha Christie novel rather than reading one, Constable Zellner's slow-burn 1960s caper delivers - just pack patience alongside your magnifying glass.
GamerScout Verdict
Worthwhile for mystery novel fans and patient point-and-click players; too linear and slow-paced for anyone else.
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About The Raven Remastered
My first instinct with The Raven Remastered was mild skepticism: a remaster of a 2013 episodic point-and-click, originally released in three chapters, now bundled and given a fresh coat of HD paint. That skepticism faded once the story got its hooks in. You play as Anton Jakob Zellner, a middle-aged, decidedly unglamorous Swiss police constable who stumbles into a high-stakes theft case that opens on the Orient Express and hopscotches across Europe before landing in Cairo. The setup is pure Christie pastiche - a stolen ruby, a legendary ghost-thief called The Raven, a cast of suspects who each have something to hide - and KING Art executes that premise with genuine wit. The writing earns a few real laughs, the multi-chapter structure shifts perspective across different characters, and the mystery sustains its tension right through to a third act loaded with surprise twists. Gameplay is classic point-and-click, leaning 3D rather than the flat 2D of old-school genre entries. You move Zellner through environments, collect and combine items from an inventory menu, lockpick restricted areas, interview suspects by cycling through dialogue options (and yes, you will eventually have to say everything), and log deductions in a journal that tracks each suspect's profile. There is a point system tied to clue discovery, and those points can be traded for hints when you get stuck - a sensible quality-of-life feature that keeps progress from grinding to a full stop. Puzzles lean toward the gentle end of the difficulty curve; the game never wants to wall you out, which suits its "interactive crime novel" identity more than it suits genre veterans hungry for a Monkey Island-style brain buster. Here is where the caveats pile up. Zellner controls like he has somewhere better to be but forgot how to walk there - movement is sluggish, occasionally clunky, and there is no run button. The character models wear their age visibly, with facial expressions that never quite match the quality of the voice work behind them, and lip sync drifts enough to be distracting on close-up shots. The remaster does deliver clearer lighting, improved animations, and better hair rendering over the 2013 original, but critics broadly noted that the visual upgrade is modest - hardly a ground-up rework. Load times between rooms were a recurring complaint at launch, though the PC version tends to fare better than the console ports in that department. What holds the whole thing together is the story, and more specifically the voice acting. Every character carries a distinct European accent - German, French, Swiss, Italian - and the cast commits fully. Zellner himself is oddly endearing precisely because he is not a sharp-jawed detective archetype; he is a bumbler who fumbles his way toward the truth, and spending roughly 10 to 12 hours in his company is more charming than it has any right to be. If you have ever bounced off point-and-click adventures because the puzzles felt arbitrary or the pacing glacial, The Raven Remastered will not convert you - the linearity is total and the interactivity is light. But if you are the kind of player who reads Poirot on a train and thinks "this could use a cursor," this is exactly the game built for you.

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Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 7, 8, 8.1, 10
- Memory
- 6 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 11
- Storage
- 25 GB available space
- Graphics
- GTX660 / Radeon 7870 / 2GB
- Processor
- Q9650 / AMD Phenom II X4 940
Recommended
- OS
- Windows 7, 8, 8.1, 10
- Memory
- 8 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 11
- Storage
- 25 GB available space
- Graphics
- GTX770 / R9 290 / 4GB
- Processor
- Intel Core i7 3770 3,9 Ghz / AMD FX-8350 4 GHz
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Game Info
- Developer
- KING Art
- Publisher
- THQ Nordic
- Release Date
- Mar 13, 2018


