Evidence: the last ritual pc game free download






















Jack and the police are presented with evidence that the Phoenix will be performing another ritual murder at a different castle, and rush to capture him. The realize, after finding a women's severed hand, that it was ruse. Upon returning to the safe house, they find Jessica missing and the entire household guard dead. At this level in the game, lines of code begin running through various portions of the puzzles. This is, revealed by emails, a spyware program, written by Adrian and the Phoenix, to decode Book XIV using the distributed computing system created by the duplication of the game disc.

Then the player is tasked with discovering the Phoenix's username and password, which was hidden, by Adrian, in the various films of the CD, as a failsafe in the event of his death. The Phoenix's location is tracked to northern Scotland, where Sharons mutilated body is discovered, along with addiitonal victims from the surrounding countryside. Gerde Hanke, the profiler from the previous game, tracks the Phoenix to his hideout, an excavated warehouse. After cracking the Phoenix's password, the player is given access to the warehouse's surveillance system, and guides Gerde through a series of gates meant to be similar to and symbolize the interior of a pyramid tomb.

Upon reaching the culmination, a new security system is accessed. The body of «Osiris», assembled from the various body parts of the Phoenix's victims, lies hanging against a wall, with Jessica slumped on the floor nearby. Gerde enters and is attacked, presumably by the Phoenix. He knocks the person out as the room catches fire.

Grabbing Jessica's prone form, he dashes from the room, presumably leaving the Phoenix to burn alive. Following the end of the plot, an email is sent to the player from a helper who infrequently contacts the player and is strongly hinted at being the actual Phoenix, still alive. Sold by: Newegg Shipped by Newegg. This item is currently out of stock and it may or may not be restocked.

Out of Stock. Add To Wish List. Are you an E-Blast Insider? Close double click image to zoom in. Although not gory, some of the images are potentially disturbing.

Pictures of women held hostage, blood stained doodles, and eyes scratched out of faces, to name just a few, reflect the disturbed nature of the Phoenix's mind and emphasizes the fact that this game isn't for those who are slightly squeamish.

With the exception of some background imagery, many of the visual, audio and interactive elements on the page are clues to solving the puzzle, which may require you to type in such things as a place name, the name of a templar Grand Master or enter specific dates. How you reach the solution depends on the type of puzzle involved, which can range from sound-based challenges, looking up map co-ordinates, searching for keywords on the Internet, researching historical pictures, piecing together photographs, or a culmination of different types of activities.

Sound puzzles usually involve stringing together clips to echo a name or play a melody heard on the radio. Although you repeat several of the same actions throughout the game, the variety of clues, presentation and ways to reach the solution ensures that it never really feels like the same puzzle on loop, although Internet searching can become repetitive.

One of the main complaints of In Memoriam was the number of timing puzzles demanding dexterity. Thankfully, only a couple of these are present in EVIDENCE, such as a Tetris-style word game where the correct letters have to be quickly placed into the right slots to form the correct word without being intercepted by skulls which make the letters disappear. The result of this focus shift is a far more consistent sense of deductive puzzling, as opposed to a collection of disjointed mini-games.

The live action video clips featured throughout the game follow the thread of two storylines. The first features a familiar face in Jack Lorski from the original game and Manuela Ortiz, who are on the trail of a serial killer who appears to have a different M.

These clips are unlocked gradually by the Phoenix as a "reward" for solving particular puzzles. The acting featured is spot on; you really can believe that the individuals involved are genuinely starring in their own documentaries and not part of a game.

Somewhere near the middle of the game, the two storylines converge into one and develop into a dramatic climax, although it's a somewhat disappointing ending that leaves far too many questions unanswered. In later stages of the adventure, some of the clips become creepier, even featuring dead bodies and dark foreboding shadows. Although you know it's not real, the portrayal of the characters and sinister goings-on can be genuinely unnerving.

If there is one complaint, some of the films are too scratched and grainy, making it a little difficult to see what is happening, although in some instances this can make events even more disturbing.

As puzzles are opened up, even if they remained unsolved, fictional characters will email you offering important clues for your investigation, useful website links and tools that can be downloaded. The information offered to you delves into the world of Egyptian mythology, the Knights Templar, secret societies and biblical conspiracies, expounding upon the material featured in many of the puzzles, which in turn reveals the motives behind the Phoenix's ritualistic killings.

The cryptic messages from the Phoenix between each level highlight his sadistic nature and the demented workings of his mind. The tools are slowly unveiled to you as required, including a text decoder unscrambling strings of numbers into key words , image analyzer finding hidden images in pictures , video decrypter revealing secret messages in video clips , tracer tracking the Phoenix and finally a root kit, used to access a secret website.

These can be selected via the tool bar and are easy to use. While not strictly necessary, it pays to be online at all times while playing so you can check for incoming emails that may unlock an all-important clue or tool.

Better yet, the Phoenix himself will send intimidating emails from time to time just to rattle your nerves.



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