Something fishy is going on at the Hotel Dusk. A variety of shady characters have taken up residence in this sleepy, Southwestern hotel a few days before New Year's Eve in 1979. They are apparently unfamiliar with one another yet are seemingly bound
...read the complete Hotel Dusk: Room 215 review at GameSpot
GameSpy
Though it is slow and subtle, it works out in the end, providing a great story that holds its own against the vast majority of current games. Now all you have to do is manage to find a copy.
...read the complete Hotel Dusk: Room 215 review at GameSpy
IGN
Anyone who's been gaming with the Nintendo DS for more than a year will probably remember Trace Memory, a hit-and-miss mystery developed by Japanese studio Cing that masqueraded as a touchscreen-friendly point-and-click adventure. That team
...read the complete Hotel Dusk: Room 215 review at IGN
GamePro
Call me a crotchety-crusty gamer, but I prefer a little subtly these days. And while I'll gladly take an in-your-face title like Gears of War out for a spin, I'd much rather exercise my brain than my fingers.
...read the complete Hotel Dusk: Room 215 review at GamePro
While Trace Memory was certainly a good game, it didn’t exactly prove Cing’s worth in the point and click adventure genre with most people. Fast forward to January 22, 2007 - the release of Hotel Dusk: Room 215. Hotel Dusk is Cing’s latest and - by
...read the complete Hotel Dusk: Room 215 review at Portable Review
Hotel and gamed over. Luckily, I didn't have to start from the beginning of the game and the game just sent me back to the conversation where I made the wrong choice so I could rectify my mistake. Overall, while the game is far from perfect, it's a good s
...read the complete Hotel Dusk: Room 215 review at Modojo
far when it asks you to break out the stylus just to flick a switch or open the back of a toilet.Worth playing for: The black-and-white line art is instantly engaging, and the illustrations serve the characters much better than their dialogue.Frustration
...read the complete Hotel Dusk: Room 215 review at The Onion (A.V. Club)