Reviews from

in the past


The mysteries themselves are quite simple and the unique mechanics behind them (notably the time limit and the fact that the game continues even if you fail your cases) don't get much usage as a result. And while they can be fun in the moment-to-moment experience you probably won't be scratching your head at any point while thinking of a solution.

Normally I would care a lot about that lack of depth and mechanical complexity, but I can set it aside in this case because the game does a great job of compensating in other areas. The old-fashioned visuals, music, and dialogue all mesh with the setting and story in such a strong way that it feels oddly immersive despite being a bunch of animals in Restoration-era France. The core story was far more political than I was expecting given its silly initial premise and the game did a surprisingly good job of handling the topics it brought up with nuance and compassion.

So even though Aviary Attorney was quite weak in the aspects I initially played it for, I still enjoyed my time with it overall because of its strengths in the areas I normally wouldn't focus as much on in a mystery game. So you may want to adjust your expectations accordingly before you start playing, but it should still be a good time regardless.

Pep's Detective Deep Dive - Game 4
The bourgeois are not human (literally)

Well, this was a pleasure. Calling Aviary Attorney "Ace Attorney but with birds" feels like it does a disservice to just how funny, well-written and surprisingly deep this game is. I haven't played Ace Attorney yet (watch this space) but if it's anything like this I'm very much looking forward to it.

The art is gorgeous, with every character and background beautifully illustrated. The writing is sharp and funny, and the socio-political commentary is very clever, even down to the choices of which animal would portray what character.

It's funny, it's profound, and what's more - it's all based on real art, real people and real events. Highly recommended.

Ptákovina. Doslova a do písmene. Herní satira formou jakože bajky s přenádhernou rytinovou stylizací, která zaujme na první dobrou. O to více, že herně jde o neskrývanou poantropomorfizovanou aluzi na Ace Attorney sérii. Tedy typ specifické hratelnosti, která na PC dosud nemá důstojného zástupce (pokud vůbec nějakého). A to, bohužel, platí i po Aviary Attorney, který se o to snaží; sympaticky, ovšem neúspěšně.

V první moment zarazí, že ono se to u kultovní capcomácké série neinspiruje. Ono ji to každou svou mechanikou (i zvuky) nestydatě vykrádá. Jenom v opoznání horším a nedotaženějším provedení. Čili tam, kde se předobraz skládá ze tří složek (adventurní pasáž shromažďování stop a důkazů, obsáhlé dialogy ve stylu vizuálních novel a samozřejmě rozcupování výpovědí svědků během samotného soudního přelíčení), kdy každá je sama o sobě hrou sama o sobě, tak zde zbyla jen kostra tohoto konceptu. Čili adventurní část tu sice je, ale nic moc se v ní dělat nedá. Vizuální novela to je, ale taková, kdy vskutku jen neinteraktivně odklikáváte dialogy a nic více. A samotné přelíčení je průběhem i zvraty příliš nalajnované na to, aby měl člověk (ehm, pták) pocit, že opravdu musí zapojit mozek při vznášení námitek, argumentaci či předkládání důkazů.

Navíc je to krátké (sotva čtyři hodiny, "originál" se v každém díle pohybuje v řádu desítek hodin), málo komplexní, přímočaré (nějaké větvení tu díky přelíčením je, ale dopad na průběh je spíše symbolický), nezamotané a co hůře působí to že tvůrcům došly finance z komunitního zafinancování. Výsledkem čehož je viditelně uspěchaný finální akt, aby to jakž takž vytvářelo alespoň nějaký náznak dějového oblouku a uzavření. Nedaří se to však a nechává si to otevřenou hradní bránu (ne, toto nejsou zadní vrátka) pro případné pokračování. Ono to vlastně ani nijak neskončí, jen se to v jednom momentě utne uprostřed děje a... A nic.

Že dosavadní řádky, krom pochvaly stylizace a výběru žánru, jsou výrazně negativní? No ano, ale pak je tu jeden aspekt, který neradno podceňovat. Má to totiž výtečně napsané dialogy. Zapracování vyspělejších podtónů funguje, esence "lafontainovství" zvířecí Paříže na sklonku 18. století je podchycena přímo výtečně a škorpení ústředního dua nepůsobí nuceně. Ba dokonce je opravdu vtipné. Ostatně právě duo ptačích právníků je tím vůbec nejlepším, co tento titul nabízí. Zasloužilo by si být v lepší hře; respektive ve hře, která by navzdory svému okopírovanému konceptu byla důslednější a dotaženější v tom, o co se snaží.

Sights & Sounds
- The visual design is extremely eye-catching. It's consistently good throughout the game. It's hard to not have a soft spot for a game that looks like a bunch of old-timey political cartoons
- The character designs all follow the "realistic animal head on human body" theme
- The music is all classical all the time. I'm not a classical music whiz, but I did recognize some Bizet and Debussy. Not sure if all of the composers are similarly French. Some of the music also appears to be original, and these tracks do a good job fitting in with the classical composers
- There's no voice acting, so you'll just have to imagine all the animals speaking with exaggerated French (or in one case, Belgian) accents. That's what I did anyway

Story & Vibes
- It's basically Ace Attorney with animals. You're a bird person instead of a person named after a bird. Your sidekick is a spunky little sparrow instead of a spunky anime schoolgirl. Similarly, your rival is a also no-nonsense prosecutor with whom the protagonist shares some backstory. But in this game, he's a rooster (with a riding crop, for some reason)
- The vibes are also similar. Like the Ace Attorney franchise, Aviary Attorney doesn't take itself too seriously either
- With all these similarities, you may be tempted into suspecting that this is a parody. It's really more of an homage
- The story has its own unique flavor, fortunately. Everything takes place during a French revolution, and the class struggle between the idealistic, democracy-starved laborers and the entrenched, greedy nobility makes for a surprisingly interesting backdrop for the narrative

Playability & Replayability
- The commonalities aren't merely surface level; the gameplay is very similar. If you've tried an Ace Attorney game, you'll be familiar with what's going on. You travel around and investigate different locations, gathering clues and conducting interviews to help you defend your client
- Eventually, you'll wind up in front of the judge to cross-examine witnesses and make good use of the evidence you gathered and point out inconsistencies
- None of this is too difficult if you're paying attention. The game does hold your hand a little too much at times, in my personal opinion. There were a few times where I was about to screw up, but the game essentially screaming, "Are you sure?" then, "Are you SURE you're sure?" quickly set me down the more favorable path
- There's three different endings, but I'm fairly pleased with the one I got. I might try to shake things up in a replay, but it'll be a while before I'm back for that

Overall Impressions & Performance
- I'm pretty sure this game could run on anything, and there's not a ton of action going on at any point, so I didn't encounter any bugs or other issues
- If you wind up buying and enjoying Aviary Attorney, also check out Chicken Police. It's an extremely similar game, right down to the character designs (the protagonist and his sidekick are also birds) and investigative gameplay

Final Verdict
- 7/10. Now let's say you and I go toe-to-toe in bird law and see who comes out the victor?

A game that succeeds in exactly what it sets out to do. had a lot of fun with this one. If you love detective games don't skip this one.


This review contains spoilers

This game would have been good if it was longer, in more ways than one. The story is that in a world of anthropomorphic animals, is a falcon who works as an attorney during revolutionary times in France, and his job is to defend those he believes to be innocent in court, now the idea of a different kind of Ace Attorney game could work, and the first case of the game is great, and shows how this game should be, but the second case, although not bad, is not as good as most Ace Attorney cases, and I find it dumb that Falcon only got attacked because he went to a secluded area after getting a threatening note, and the third case has interesting stuff to it, like tying it to the French Revolution, and having 2 different endings to the story, the things that happen in them are dumb, like with the trial, if felt too similar to Turnabout Goodbyes, also there is no way Falcon would burn Paris after only seeing a prosecutor get murdered, and the whole needing a metal detector to get the good ending is dumb, when you didn't need it because if the male guards had searched his body without it leading to the same outcome, ruining the whole finale. The Characters are based on public domain ones, to avoid copyright issues, and in this game, they do their jobs well, but Cocorico feels like another Miles Edgeworth, and Valerti is an unlikable jerk in any of the endings thanks to his scheming, and his behavior towards Falcon. The Graphics are simple, yet artistic, a great style to bring to the table in an investigative story. The Gameplay has you investigate and defend in court, like in Ace Attorney, but here the investigations don't have as much depth to them, they are shorter and there is less stuff to find, and the trials are really short where the investigations take longer, and the fact this entire game was only 3 cases long isn't enough to sell it, even 1 more case in between 2-3 would have made it's duration good. The Music is also public Domain as well, and it is beautiful to listen too, they didn't need to create their own. Aviary Attorney shows what it can achieve with what it does, and only fails because it didn't go far enough.

Despite the absurd premise of a story centering around the adventures of a bird defending others in 1848 France, I'd say that Aviary Attorney is a pretty darn good game. The story manages to blend the outlandish premise of the game with serious, post-French Revolution politics in a way that manages to show the best of both worlds, and when it's time for the heavier story beats to reveal themselves, they don't feel out of place at all. There's a very real sense of life to the setting; to giving money to a starving mother and her child, to settling down and playing cards with a patron at Falcon's favored pub, and just taking part in chitchat with the various characters you come across, Aviary Attorney manages to create a bustling, engaging world despite its short runtime.

While we're on the topic of the game's setting, it makes great use of its time period of nearing the second French Revolution, from how many characters are intrinsically tied to either the fate of the revolution's success or the past French Revolution and their struggles in the present, and it creates this sense of uniqueness in its story that isn't replicated else anywhere much, if at all. And by that the game also enhances its character writing as a result, as their flaws, virtues, and ideals feel so real and human that in spite of its cartoonishness of Aviary Attorney's artwork, the grounded nature of them work. And above all, the game's also plain hilarious and has that same charm as the source material it openly acknowledges that it emulates.

Though it's not without its flaws (the trials and mysteries being disappointingly simple, even during the end and the penultimate trial being a near identical copy of the first Ace Attorney's fourth case being a large point of contention), if you have a few hours to spare and looking for something new, give Aviary Attorney a shot.

this game was so bad I actually forgot to log it until I opened my steam and remembered I had played it, clearly I was trying to repress that, but alas...

Story completed, including all three end-game branches. An enjoyable visual novel in a Revolutionary France-style setting, Aviary Attorney sees the player guiding its two protagonists through some light puzzle-solving and courtroom-drama scenarios, alongside furtherance of an interesting story through narrative choices. Each scene is illustrated with beautiful hand-drawn art and, while the use of anthropomorphic animals (mostly, but not all, being birds) does nothing much for me, this quirkiness doesn't detract from the game and does at least make it more memorable!

5 stars for art
4 stars for story

Very charming art style and the writing is pretty good too.
Also Funeral March of a Marionette by Charles Gounod shows up multiple times.

Less good ace attorney with a cool art style but much less cool gameplay

An engaging, if poorly-paced, Ace Attorney-inspired narrative game. While this game does have multiple endings and actual stakes, as the protagonist is capable of losing pretty much any trial and continue playing the story, this game fails to land its ending as it abruptly rushes and stops before the finish line.

This review contains spoilers

a delightful little brazen ace attorney knockoff. the (actual) jokes hit 9/10 times and the story itself is actually really convincing. you play as a bird lawyer in 19th century france right before a revolution begins. the game starts like how you would expect ace attorney but with art from a political cartoonist from the 1800s would, but as soon as you finish the first case and learn the real truth, the games colors start to show, despite the black and white visuals. the second case does a decent job at showing the upcoming conflicts in the next 2 cases, while being a fun case at the same time. the third case isnt really a case, as much as it is an investigation with an optional trial at the end, with the entire 4th case's story riding off the results of the trial. if you choose not to partake, you get a horrible ending where your main character goes awol and you have to play as his assistant and prosecute (instead of defend) the leader of the rebellion. the second ending is a lot nicer, albeit a lot longer as well. in this ending, you are instead trying to put on a trial for the king, and due to his overwhelming incompetence, it goes poorly. he is sentenced to exile, but is implied to be killed. the third ending, which APPARENTLY WASNT EVEN IN THE FUCKING GAME AT LAUNCH, has you join forces with the rebels, though at gunpoint. you try to defend the innocent and have a bloodless revolution, which isnt allowed. the main villains want to be the top caste of society so bad, one of them is willing to kill himself in order to start a bloody revolution.
overall i think that when the writing got serious, the game truly shone, but i also believe the endings were sort of lackluster, given that they were all non-endings.
unlike ace attorney, i cant really rank these by case due to all of them being so completely different.
8/10

The concept of this game is funnier than actually playing it. Still, funny birb man solve crime haha.

I'm a huge fan of Ace Attorney, so if this game was just Ace Attorney with birds (and so many taxonomy puns to sate a nerd like me), that would be good enough for me. Fortunately, by the end of the first case, this game pretty clearly tells you that it is not just Ace Attorney with birds, and it's going to put its own spin on things. Unlike Ace Attorney, there's no game over. The game works with your failures, and your decisions have real consequences. If this feature wasn't present, the game's time mechanic where it is entirely possible to get to the trial without getting all the evidence you need would be extremely frustrating, but it doesn't bother me very much seeing as the game will continue in some form no matter what.

I thought going in that the decision to set the game in 19th century France was just another gimmick to go with the bird one, but no, the entire plot of the game hinges on it. I enjoyed this very much. DGS had some historical context in it, but this game takes it to another level.

One thing that disappoints me, however, is the art. It looks lovely, but it's just public domain art by J.J. Grandville. I really wish they went with using his works as inspiration for original artwork. That would make the instances where they do have to use original artwork stick out less, they wouldn't have to contend with as many awkward poses, and there could potentially be room for more expression. However, the soundtrack of public domain classical music was the perfect fit for this game. It was lovely and sorted the game nicely.

I'd recommend this game to Ace Attorney fans, but bear in mind you're getting a different experience. The trials are very easy, but the freedom you have to fuck up during investigations and see the consequences of it makes this quite distinct. Get the game on sale though.

"Are you ready for your catchphrase lessons?"

Conan Doyle gulps

Terry Pratchett breathes heavily

Mercedes Lackey nods nervously

Eoin Colfer sighs

They all say in unison: "Yes Darya Noghani, author of the iconic line 'You are bourgeois of the worst kind' "

very cute, the drawings are charming and the humor mostly hits. the "timed" structured can be a bit annoying though, it's specially annoying when you decide to visit a place, there's nothing/nobody there and then a whole day passes, or when you miss a very important proof because of bad timing

i understand the time mechanic can lead to a lot of frustration, it frustrated me, but the game does deal with your failures, and it's not just an automatic game over. i think if it's worked on with a bit more time and budget it's a template for a very yood system, and something ace attorney could even implement to combat the staleness i feel the franchise is going through



Fairly pleasant detective game. It plays a bit like ace attorney in the way that you have to gather evidence then present it during the trial. The game is filled with humour and the art style is quite unique. The caracters are also enjoyable so an overall great game for people enjoying detective or puzzle games

A solid Ace Attorney-like with the interesting (though slightly off-putting) twist of a ticking timer and clues that can be missed, and a story that adjusts to how each case turns out.

The story is too short imo, another nitpick is lack of keyboard controls and having to click through dialogue killed a little bit of enjoyment for me

The first game where cross examining the parrot isn't weird

I'm not a big fan of this style of evidence gathering and court arguing, but oh boy does this game make up for it through its pure charm. The characters, the humor, the theme and the paintings just exude playfulness, and it's worth playing just for this.

This game knows you've played Ace Attorney and isn't afraid to use your expectations against you. It has more interesting ideas than the main series has had in years, though it doesn't quite have enough meat on its bones to truly gobsmack me.

Someone looked at Ace Attorney and said, "This needs to be more French." They were right.

Um jogo estilo Ace Attorney que me decepcionou um pouco, talvez porque eu esperava demais.

Jogo BEM mal otimizado para computador, os lugares que o jogo simplesmente trava ou buga são... vários

História ok, poderia ser menos edgy em algumas partes, mas não é ruim
Personagens e OSTs legais, definitivamente a melhor parte do jogo
Tem um minigame de 21, esse é legal também


Loved the art style, dialogues were really entertaining, it's pretty clear how this game was inspired by Ace Attorney...but kinda falls short at the end. I wish it had a little bit more...something. Maybe more cases, more difficult trials. Still liked it, though.

There's not a whole lot of puzzle/problem solving to be done since the contradictions are pretty easy to spot and you could argue the trials are a bit of trial and error with the questioning. The dialogue is hilarious though and you'll certainly remember the visuals.

I thought this was going to be insufferable, but it's actually pretty funny, and the mysteries are decent enough. Give it a shot!