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Clue Classic is a single-player, interactive video game based on Hasbro's Cluedo franchise. It was developed by Games Cafe and published by Reflexive Entertainment on June 3, 2008. Gameplay
Cluedo, known as Clue in North America, is a murder mystery-themed multimedia franchise started in 1949 with the manufacture of the Cluedo board game. The franchise has since expanded to film, television game shows, book series, computer games, board game spinoffs, a comic, a play, a musical, jigsaws, card games, and other media.
Clue "Vintage Edition" (2005, 2009), [39] also released as Cluedo "Vintage Edition", is a re-formatted nostalgia edition into a "vintage" bookshelf collection along with a series of other popular board games. In the Cluedo version, they continued to use the 1963 design and adapted it for the UK market for the first time with localised ...
A variantation on the classic Pac-Man maze formula. Galaga: Destination Earth: King of the Jungle: 2000: Windows, PlayStation: A remake of the classic Namco arcade game. Atari Arcade Hits Volume 2: Digital Eclipse: 2000: Windows: A compilation of 6 different Atari games. Nascar Heat: Monster Games Digital Illusions CE (PlayStation) 2000 ...
Clue (1992 video game) Clue (1998 video game) Clue (mobile games) Clue Chronicles: Fatal Illusion; Clue Classic; Clue: Master Detective; Cluedo (CD-i video game) Cognition: An Erica Reed Thriller; The Colonel's Bequest; Condemned 2: Bloodshot; Condemned: Criminal Origins; Conspiracies (video game) Contact Sam Cruise; Contradiction: Spot the Liar!
Clue (known as Cluedo outside of North America) is a 1998 video game based on the board game of the same name. It is also known as Clue: Murder at Boddy Mansion or Cluedo: Murder at Blackwell Grange, depending on whether the country of release used American or British English. [1] [2] [3] Clue runs on Microsoft Windows.
Each time the player chooses enter a room on the board they are transported into a virtual room as photographed at Arley Hall, the same location as the 1990 Cluedo British game show. [4] A red magnifying glass will reveal a clue, while a ticking clock is a hint that a video sequence can be accessed. [4]
The German magazine PC Player gave Clue Chronicles: Fatal Illusion a score of 62 out of 100, praising the reproduction of the "enjoyable short conversations" in the "excellent" German-language edition. According to the review, its puzzles were "varied" and relatively easy; if the player is not an "amateur detective", they could "reject this case".