Hidden Mysteries: Titanic – Secrets of the Fateful Voyage
Friday, 05. March 2010. 10:12
- Puzzle-solving challenges compel you to watch your inventory and use your mind!
- Your character’s interaction with other people aboard the ship enables you to gather information and key items
- 15 chapters in the story each with multiple scenes and mini-games
- Waterline progression gives each scene a different look as time passes
- Dialog choices give you options to follow different paths within the game and multiple endings are created based upon those choices
Product Description
Titanic: Mysteries of the Deep places you on board the Titanic as a passenger during its fateful voyage. Your character is torn between their past and present life in a struggle to find out what they truly want in their heart…. More >>
Hidden Mysteries: Titanic – Secrets of the Fateful Voyage
![ToolWindows [dot] COM is upfront](http://upfront.thefind.com/images/badges/templates/r_badge.png)

March 5th, 2010 at 1:09 pm
My computer has a 64 bit card and will not play this game which is for a 32 bit.
Rating: 5 / 5
March 5th, 2010 at 2:40 pm
Enjoyed this game because they give you the ability to move on if your are stumped by a puzzle. I play games for enjoyment and relaxation and don’t like getting frustrated. So making options available is always a good thing in my opinion.
Rating: 5 / 5
March 5th, 2010 at 2:51 pm
Sadly unimpressive: you can beat it in about 2 hours, it’s historically inaccurate, and a poor adventure game. Kids would probably really like it though.
Visually, the game is static and non-animated. There are a handful of cutscenes, but they last only seconds. You cannot explore environments, only click on objects, so it’s not 3D. It’s a point-and-click game, with variety puzzles similar to the Women’s Murder Club series. All the puzzles were very easy, and are usually a variation on hidden object puzzles. You can always skip past a puzzle if it’s too difficult though, or get a hint. You choices throughout the game have different results, so it has some re-playability. The Titanic aspect has relatively little to do with it, with a few exceptions: the background of the puzzles is usually a room, Captain Smith is milling about, and the boat sinks. Some moments are directly ripped-off from James Cameron’s movie, so I felt kinda cheated that the storyline was very unoriginal at times. After you beat the game you can play a bonus mini-game, where you are at the Titanic wreck site and learn a bit about the factors that shaped the tragedy.
If you were looking for a short easy game to play, I’d recommend this. If you are looking for a good hidden object game, they’re out there. If you’re looking for a good historic Titanic game, check out Titanic: Adventure Out of Time. Hope this helps!
Rating: 2 / 5