Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney

aka: Gyakuten Saiban: Yomigaeru Gyakuten
Moby ID: 20581
Nintendo DS Specs
Note: We may earn an affiliate commission on purchases made via eBay or Amazon links (prices updated 4/17 9:21 PM )
Conversion (official) Original Special Edition

Description official descriptions

Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney is an enhanced port of Gyakuten Saiban. This version features all of the cases from the Game Boy Advance release, with the addition of a fifth case which is longer than any of the previous ones and while it retains the same gameplay, it adds many new features that are unique to Nintendo DS such as microphone (to yell "Objection!" or use it to blow the fingerprint powder). Also, the inventory in the new fifth case adds a feature to examine each item in more detail and adds full 3D representation of every object which can be rotated by DS stylus or zoomed in for closer examination.

The new case continues after the ends story of the original game where Miles Edgeworth was the suspect in murder examination but has been acquitted by none other than Phoenix Wright, his childhood friend and a defense attorney. Maya Fey, Wright's assistant, also went to study and fully learn about her inherent powers of a mystic. New case, titled "Rise from the Ashes", introduces all new characters, and Phoenix finds himself defending a chief prosecutor Lana Skye who has been charged with murdering a police detective, Bruce Goodman. While Lana is all but admitting her crime and refuses to give any information that would play in her defense, her younger sister, Ema Skye, who aspires to one day become a forensic investigator, is not giving up on her sister and teams up with Phoenix in order to find out what really happened.

Spellings

  • 逆転裁判 蘇る逆転 - Japanese spelling
  • 逆转裁判:新生的逆转 - Chinese spelling (simplified)

Groups +

Screenshots

Promos

Credits (Nintendo DS version)

56 People (46 developers, 10 thanks) · View all

Reviews

Critics

Average score: 81% (based on 100 ratings)

Players

Average score: 4.1 out of 5 (based on 71 ratings with 4 reviews)

What a weirdly wonderful game

The Good
It is weird, fun, silly and surprisingly emotional at times. I couldn't get a bead on where this game goes at times. One moment it's all fun and games, and the next, it's a tragic story.

Gameplay is as basic as it could get on a DS. It's mostly a visual novel. You get your occasional puzzle and a few options to ask questions and change locations; otherwise, it's a visual novel with puzzle game elements in it.

Music, while repetitive, was interesting and quite memorable. It never felt boring or irritating.

I also enjoyed all the characters, defendants, prosecutors. antagonists, and the almost pervy Judge.

Again, I can't tell why I loved this game. I think it was the mixture of courtroom drama, mystery, comedy and sillyness that made me want to know more. Each episode gets better and better.

The Bad
It is a visual novel. It is meant to be played in short bouts. If I didn't like visual novels in general, this one may not have clicked with me.

The Bottom Line
This is a great game. After playing it, I tried to find games similar to this one and found that there aren't any. It is just that addictive, weird, quirky and fun. I loved this one.

Nintendo DS · by Lal Fam (68) · 2024

Hilarious, clever and really fun to play... Order in the court !

The Good
"Phoenix Wright" is quite hard to explain to someone who never played the game. So let's put it simply : you assume the role of a young attorney with great potential (and spiky hair). The game is a succession of cases in which you must prove your client is not guilty. Each case divides between investigation and trials, in which you confront and cross-examine witnesses. So, basically, Phoenix Wright (PW) looks a lot like japanese investigation games like Snatcher. But in terms of game mechanics it is totally different, most notably because of the trial scenes (we'll talk more about it later)

Beside its original concept, PW is also filled with a wacky, witty sense of humor. The witnesses' names are all pun-intended ("Mr. Sawhit", "April May", and so on), they all have their own, distinctive way of talking (for instance the over-arrogant Redd White uses words like "fantabulistic" on a daily basis) and the dialogues are full of jokes and punchlines. The humor is also on the graphical side : the faces of the witnesses change as you cross-examine their testimony, your character sweats when it is not going as good as planned, with a clever use of the graphical codes of the anime/manga Super-Deformed style....

But the greatest part of the game still are the trials. Using the evidence you found in the investigation scenes, you'll try to prove the contradictions in the witness' testimony. But rather that a dull procedure, it is filled with hysteria, humor and excitement. "Objection !", "Stop It !", "Take This !" blows the upper screen as you - or the prosecutor, who you will soon learn to hate - try to change the course of the judgment. Those scenes are incredibly funny. And if the first trials are quite easy, it becomes quickly very complicated, as your opponent is better and better able to break your defense and put your client in danger.

Finally, one last word on the great quality of writing. Even if the game is mainly a comedy, it does have its tragic moments (those are murder cases, after all) and they are handled very well.

The Bad
"Nothing !" I would answer, but actually there are one or two things that are a bit annoying.

First, the introduction sequence of each case shows you who is the murderer, and if it makes your job easier it kills a bit the mystery. But like a good old Lieutenant Columbo episode, the important part is less "who" did it, but rather "why", and of course, "how can I catch him/her" ?

Second, the stories are sometimes a bit far-fetched, but don't forget it is COMEDY, after all.

The Bottom Line
Probably the best game so far on the DS, and an instant classic. DS proved it was a great machine for adventure games (with titles as "Trace memory" or "Lost in Blue") and "Phoenix Wright" is only the confirmation of this statement.

Nintendo DS · by Pirou Julien (2968) · 2006

Objection!

The Good
Phoenix Wright is one of those special games for the Nintendo DS. Here you play as the novice lawyer Phoenix Wright, a defendant attorney who really believes in the innocence of the person that he defends.

You may think that this is a boring game because of the starting concept, well, laws aren't the funniest things out there, but this game is just the opposite. To start with you will feel really soon the Japanese sense of humor in all the game, and you'll laugh a lot with the things that the characters say during all the turnabouts (chapters in the game) and the things that Phoenix Wright is thinking at any moment.

Gameplay is quite simple, you start the game with a case in the court and you have to defend your client. Once you've done it the real game starts (in the second chapter), the first one is just an introduction that really works as an inducement, but the real gameplay is divided in two parts. In the first part you're more like a detective than a lawyer. The second part takes place in the court.

About the first part, the "investigation" part, the game works as a simple graphic adventure. You point to different things on the screen and you examine or take them. You can also talk with the people, presenting them evidences from your court record and getting valuable information to use later in the court. The way is the same as any other graphic adventure, even more simple. You can't miss any object or information during your investigation because the game won't continue until you get what's necessary. Once you've done it you'll go to the court, which is the funniest part of the game.

In the court you'll have to defend your client with all the evidences taken during your investigation. You must read carefully what people say in the court, from the other lawyers to the witness. Phoenix Wright will help you during the court by thinking about what they're saying, it works like clues for you.

To sum up, the process is simple, you have to cross examine the witness and find contradictions in his/her testimony. Once you've found the contradiction you should present the evidence as a proof. It sounds easy, but it isn't, and it's not just because you'll have an amount of things in your court evidence... it's because there are some different ways to get to the contradiction. For example, a witness' testimony could be clean, but you can press him by asking concrete things to find the contradiction. You can't try again and again every single proof because you have "lives", so, the game's not as easy as it looks in the beginning.

All the chapters aren't related at all. They have some things in common, but you can solve all of them without knowing nothing about the previous ones. Each chapter is interesting and will caught your attention from the beginning, all of them are imaginative and really hard to predict.

Anyone can play this game because you only control the stylus (you can use the buttons too if you want) during the whole game. You can also use the mic of the DS to say "objection", "hold it" (if you want to press the witness) or "take that" (when you're presenting a proof). Fortunately, you don't have to shout like an insane person and you can make all with your stylus. So, no need special skills for playing this, just deduction, logic and paying attention.

Of course, you can solve some parts by chance, but the developers tried to get over it and they really did a good work. In the game you'll have to be very specific, not only presenting the correct evidence, you'll have to point the exact part of the evidence that proofs your theories. For example, if you have a report, you'll have to point the page where the proof is.

Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney is a remake of the game for Game Boy Advance. There are four chapters and a special one made for this game which uses the hardware and capacities of the Nintendo DS. If you didn't play the game for the Game Boy Advance (which was only released in Japan) you'll enjoy anyway all of them, but the last one is different because all the things that you can do on it.

To finish with, you'll soon love your character and all the people involved in every chapter. Every character is special because of the humor, charisma, and essence of the game. You really want to know a lot about Edgeworth, Gumshoe and Phoenix himself, and you'll discover a lot of things during the game about all of them. A good example about creating charismatic and deep characters for a game.

The Bad
Sometimes Phoenix Wright is the one who will solve many situations, not you. It happens when he's suspecting about something and you have to select just an answer for a direct question to continue. It feels like Phoenix Wright is the one who realized about that but you didn't.

Pressing the witness' is always useful to get to the contradiction, but when you're pressing the witness' and he modifies something in his testimony because of that you'll know for sure that the contradiction is in that thing that he modified, and you won't pay attention to the rest of the testimony, which makes things easier.

"Detective" parts are a bit boring because they aren't special at all. Defending the client in the court is the most exciting part of the game, and this previous part is just a formality that sometimes is long, and something that you'll have to do many times during the game.

Try not to leave the game for a long time because you'll forget most of the info. You can save your progress at any time but you can also start the chapter again from the beginning, if it's been a long time since you've played last maybe you should take that second option. It's not something that I didn't like of the game, but it requires special attention to follow the story, and of course, some of your time during constant periods to finish the game.

The fifth chapter included for this game is perfect, but there are two problems that come from it. The first one is that you'll want more, and you'll realize that the previous chapters weren't using the possibilities of the Nintendo DS. The second one is more serious. The fourth chapter's story is the best one, and it worked as a perfect climax for the game. To include the fifth chapter once everything's finished ruins a bit the good taste of that ending. The fifth chapter is as interesting as the others, but it's not as relevant as the fourth is.

The Bottom Line
Prepare to point your finger to anything/anyone in the court with this original game that makes the practice of the law something funny. A nice remake of a game that was never released out of Japan, that will establish some basic elements for a new wave of games of this charismatic character.

Take that!

Nintendo DS · by NeoJ (398) · 2010

[ View all 4 player reviews ]

Trivia

1001 Video Games

Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney appears in the book 1001 Video Games You Must Play Before You Die by General Editor Tony Mott.

Distribution

Due to issues regarding distribution rights between Nintendo Australia and THQ, Australia didn't see the release of the game until well after the sequel was available overseas, and a year after the European release.

Japanese version

The Japanese version of the iPhone port requires a constant connection to the Internet, unlike its western counterpart.

Awards

  • 4Players
    • 2006 – #2 Best Adventure of the Year

Information also contributed by Keeper Garrett and VVP

Analytics

MobyPro Early Access

Upgrade to MobyPro to view research rankings!

Related Games

Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney - Justice for All
Released 2002 on Game Boy Advance, Windows, 2006 on Nintendo DS...
Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney - Dual Destinies
Released 2014 on iPhone, iPad, Android
Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney - Trials and Tribulations
Released 2004 on Game Boy Advance, Windows, 2007 on Nintendo DS...
Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney - Spirit of Justice
Released 2017 on Android, iPhone, iPad
Apollo Justice: Ace Attorney
Released 2007 on Nintendo DS, 2016 on iPhone, Nintendo 3DS...
Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney Trilogy
Released 2013 on iPhone, 2014 on Nintendo 3DS, 2019 on Windows...

Related Sites +

Identifiers +

  • MobyGames ID: 20581
  • [ Please login / register to view all identifiers ]

Contribute

Are you familiar with this game? Help document and preserve this entry in video game history! If your contribution is approved, you will earn points and be credited as a contributor.

Contributors to this Entry

Game added by Ben K.

Wii added by sgtcook.

Additional contributors: Unicorn Lynx, Jeanne, Hitman23, LordRM, Patrick Bregger, yenruoj_tsegnol_eht (!!ihsoy), FatherJack.

Game added December 27, 2005. Last modified January 4, 2024.