They all echo each other, and Ghost Files: The Face of Guilt does its fair share of echoing. It doesn’t leave much room for Ghost Files to find its own little space, but these hidden object games rarely feel original anyway. The result is a bit of a mix between the supernatural sleuthing of the Demon Hunter series and the procedural crime stuff in Family Mysteries. But there’s a supernatural edge, as all your Prime Suspecting is threatened by the odd ghost. If you’re trying to remember what the hallmarks of the Ghost Files series are, it’s a more real-world setting, where you use your forensic kit to match fingerprints, compare blood samples and look at striations on bullet casings. Ghost Files: The Faces of Guilt is only the second in the Ghost Files series, which – for Artifex Mundi – means it has barely started forming its identity.
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