Video Game Reviews
                  Title: CSI: Crime Scene Investigation
                    Review rating: ***
                    Platform/console: PC
                    Release date: March 2003
                    Genre: Strategy
                    Players allowed: 1
                    ESRB rating: M (blood, gore, violence, mature themes)
                    Production company: Ubi Soft
                    
                    All eight of the main cast members of the TV show of the same 
                    name lend their voice talent to this truly interactive game 
                    that doesn’t take very long to understand and has a 
                    deeply involving process within five replayable crime scenarios. 
                    For some gamers, five might not be enough, but the considerable 
                    task of finding all the clues, viewing some enthralling reconstruction 
                    visuals of the crime (once you’ve done the work) and 
                    the possibility of mastering every level should satisfy most 
                    of you. A perfect score on every level also unlocks additional 
                    bonus material.
                    
                    When you’re ‘scoping’ out the crime scene, 
                    the mouse arrow will turn green when you find a selectable 
                    item for use in your investigation. Click once to select/use 
                    your selected tool (swab, tweezers, etc.) and twice to get 
                    detailed information about the selected tool. Then you place 
                    the item into evidence as a trace/print, document or item. 
                    After the physical work, you can continue with some people 
                    skills and click on various characters to ask questions. You 
                    can even drag evidence items to people and instruments, mostly 
                    in the lab, for further investigation. Be familiar with your 
                    tools so you don’t get annoyed by characters repeating 
                    your misuse of tools/techniques and you don’t worry 
                    about leaving items in the lab microscope and/or computer 
                    (which could’ve lead to more potentially annoying reminders 
                    like “Did you forget something?”
                    
                    All the information you collect gets stored automatically 
                    in your all important case file. It can be helpful to visit 
                    a location more than once and check in regularly on the morgue, 
                    detective office or interactive lab when you’re stuck. 
                    Write some notes while you play if you want to minimize your 
                    mistakes and conquer the game quicker. Just be careful not 
                    to grill a suspect before you have enough evidence and don’t 
                    too ask for too many hints because it lowers your ending score/evaluation.
                    
                    Overall, a great game that tests your skill in problem solving, 
                    analysis and logic. The closed-captioning option enhances 
                    gameplay and makes the game available to a wider audience. 
                    This game is ripe for a sequel with several more crime scenarios. 
                    You have to play within a set of fairly limiting parameters, 
                    so maybe a free range training level would also bring more 
                    appeal to the next possible game installment. One example 
                    of the limited parameters is the lab computer. It would’ve 
                    been nice to have access to the search & compare, web 
                    chat, audio analysis and internet dictionary on the lab computer 
                    at anytime during the game. It might have increased the replay 
                    value, been more realistic and could’ve produced some 
                    amusing scenarios.
                    
                    Review by Michael Siebenaler
                   
 
                    © Ubi Soft