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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.
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 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
The original game is marketed as the "Classic Detective Game", and the various spinoffs are all distinguished by different slogans. In 2008, Cluedo: Discover the Secrets was created (with changes to the board, gameplay, and characters) as a modern spin-off, but was criticised in the media and by fans of the original game.
There is a Clue Classic PC game that is different than Murder at Boddy mansion. Instead of creating pages for each and every one, would it not make more sense to have a Clue page, that describes the board game with sections for each version. Then this page should be renamed to Clue: Murder at Boddy Mansion rather than Clue.
The source code has also been released; the game is still being sold on CD, but the open source version contains the full game content. Boppin' 1994 2005 [29] Puzzle Amiga, DOS Apogee Software: Castle Infinity: 1996 2000 MMOG: Windows: Starwave: Castle of the Winds: 1989 1998 [30] Role-playing video game: Windows 3.x: Epic MegaGames: Caves of ...
Clue Chronicles: Fatal Illusion is a first-person, 3D-perspective, point-and-click adventure game [13] with gameplay typical of the genre, totaling about 20 hours. It "plays like a traditional CD-ROM adventure game with a mystery theme". [12]
[5] [11] CD Interactief thought the game proved that the transition from board game to screen could be made successfully, [12] and deemed it a "successful conversion". [13] The Video Game Critic wrote that like many CD-i titles, the game had great production values but poor gameplay. [14] CDi Reviews wrote it had a lot of replay value. [15]