It may have been doing the rounds on PC for many a month already, but today Artifex Mundi continue to enhance their Xbox One catalogue of games by pushing out Ghost Files: Memory of a Crime to Xbox One.
Following on from previous Artifex launches like Scarlett Mysteries: Cursed Child and Path of Sin: Greed comes a new detective novel in the form of Ghost Files: Memory of a Crime.
Priced up at £12.49 – with an initial launch discount dropping that down to below a tenner – Ghost Files looks set to deliver the usual Artifex Mundi goodness, plunging you into a world of a private detective who is under investigation, attempting to prove his innocence. Like all good stories, this is a matter of life or death and by working your way through this ex-cop’s life all manner of memories will unfold.
As you begin to understand who you can and can’t trust, Ghost Files will see you becoming immersed in the darkness, unable to understand which way to turn. With ‘The Executioner’ rocking up for good measure, this tale sure gets dirty real quick.
If you have been taken in by any of the previous Artifex Mundi tales and need another reason to indulge in another well established tale then heading to the Xbox Store in order to grab a download of Ghost Files: Memory of a Crime should be your next port of call. Let us know if you grab it. We’ll no doubt have a full review for you soon too.
And if you like what you find here, then you’ll also discover Ghost Files available as part of a trilogy of games included in the Detective Novels Bundle. That will set you back £29.99 and includes this new game, the previously mentioned Path of Sin: Greed and Noir Chronicles: City of Crime.
You should also be able to find Ghost Files on Nintendo Switch and PS4 too.
Game Description:
The life of a private detective is tough and no one knows it better than Arthur Christie – an ex-cop, effective and tough as a nail. This time he will face an investigation in which not only truth is at stake, but also his life. They say a good story begins with an earthquake and works its way up to a climax. The story of Arthur Christie begins with a painful wake up in a dark basement with an unknown murder victim and memory gaps larger than bullet holes. A moment later the building is surrounded by howling police sirens. And all this before the sun even reached noon. The day began lousy and chances for improvement are slim – so now he has to start his own investigation and prove his innocence. For this detective Christie will need to recreate his lost memories and immerse himself in the dark reality of a serial killer called The Executioner. Who can you trust when the police are tailing you and following the evidence only raises further questions? What kind of important information has been forgotten? Who’s face is it behind the Executioner’s mask?