Looking for some games where it feels like you're actually trying to solve something with the clues and secrets you uncover. For example, Disco Elysium actually made me feel like a detective despite how wacky and surreal it could be.
I haven't played LA Noire yet but that's on my list. Anything else I should check out? TIA!
I really liked it. The music was iconic too, everything about the game is so unique. Sometimes I just listen to the OST and wish I could play the game for the first time again haha.
Shadows of Doubt is probably the closest thing to a pure detective game. It's definitely a bit rough around the edges, but the core concept is really cool. I had a lot of fun playing it even in its current state, and look forward to coming back once it's further along in development.
This is what I came to recommend. I'm actually waiting for it to exit early access (or at least cook a bit longer), but it looks like a detective game wet dream.
I can't get it out of my mind, only reason I haven't bought it yet is because I don't want to experience an inferior version of it.
Yeah I def get what you mean. I have a lot of games in early access on my wishlist that I want to wait for the EA period to end.
But for this one, with each case being different and randomly generated, I felt like I could experience it now without diminishing any experience I'd have when it has a full release
A lot of detective games are mostly point and click adventure games, which generally are older games or more indie style. That said there are a few I can think of:
Chicken Police has a really neat interrogation mechanic and a fantastic noir setting. Its a bit silly all things considered, but the detective elements are fun. I've not beaten the game, but the time I've put into its fun. https://www.gog.com/en/game/chicken_police
In a similar vein, Backbone is a noir detective game set in an animal setting. The detective mechanics feel weaker, and the game seems to force you on to the critical path pretty hard, but its still been fun so far. https://www.gog.com/en/game/backbone
Finally, this is a horror game, but unraveling the mystery is fun and the game doesn't railroad you on the critical path too hard. Simulacra is a game about a guy who receives a mysterious cell phone and he is using all the tools available on the phone to uncover the identity of the owner. Short and engrossing. https://www.gog.com/en/game/simulacra
This might not fit what you're looking for, but the Phoenix Wright games are mostly about detective work, despite playing as a lawyer. If you like wacky and surreal, the series should be right up your alley!
And if you like the Phoenix Wright games but don't want to pay Phoenix Wright money, Avian Attorney is quite fun. And I'm now realizing I'm recommending a lot of animal based detective games.
The gaming industry is so consolidated and really needs to be broken up IMO. So many games that could of been but didn't happen because some large corporation bought the rights and just sit on it or fucked it up. Embracer owns a ton of smaller developers and publishing studios as well. Like the publisher for Valheim is owned by Embracer.
I haven't played either of these, but they sound very cool and have been on my wishlist for a while:
Metaphobia - a FREE game on Steam. It's a classic-style point-and-click adventure in the vein of Gabriel Knight.
Shadows of Doubt - An immersive sandbox detective stealth game set in a fully simulated sci-fi noir city of crime and corruption. The world is procedurally generated and you can explore and take on cases freely. Discover, meet and tail individual citizens, each with their own name, job, apartment and daily routine, in unique, procedurally-generated cities. Each case has different culprits, clues and experiences for you to test your investigative skills.
I wouldn't rate L.A. Noire too highly, as it's a weird hybrid between detective game and GTA.
What rubbed me the wrong way was the illusion of choice in side quests (roadside police work) where it seems like it's always the worst possible outcome. The story, especially the choices my character made (without me having a say in it), wasn't to my taste either.
Perhaps a point & click adventure would be a good fit? I’ve played and quite enjoyed The Blackwell Legacy and I’ve heard good things about other games by
Wadjet Eye.
Have you played The Wolf Among Us? It's a Telltale adventure game, so in terms of gameplay it's more like an interactive graphic novel, but the story is great, and the detective work and interrogations are really immersive.
I haven't played it myself but my brother has and I do remember a good amount of it. I should probably pick it up since they did announce a sequel if I'm not mistaken!
It's absolutely not a detective game per se, but if you'd like an experience where you're trying to solve something and piecing together clues and secrets, then I'd really recommend Outer Wilds. You don't play as a detective, but you do get a spaceship and there is a lot of detecting to do!
Return of the Obra Dinn is worth checking out like others have mentioned. I also really enjoyed The Case of the Golden Idol, which is somewhat similar.
I'm surprised no one has mention The Outer Wilds yet. The whole game makes you feel like part detective, part archeologist, and one of the best games I've ever played.
An older game that fits this, which I loved and that ended up not really getting anymore content sadly, was D4: Dark Dreams Dont Die. It's worth a play though.
It's played in episodes and only ever got one "season" of content, so there's a prologue and two episodes to play.
Murder by Numbers - it's picross + detective visual novel. While the core gameplay is nonogram puzzles, the visual novel parts involves finding clues and interrogations as an amateur detective. Probably not exactly what you're looking for, but it's a surprisingly fun game and I highly recommend it.
I play pretty much everything. Some of my friends rage quit stuff when Im still 100% calm.
When it comes to BRs specifically, they can be very frustrating. Your winrate is inevitably low, due to there only being "one" winner per match, but me and my friends enjoy both Apex and Hunt: Showdown.
In both cases we started having a lot more fun when we started taking the games much less seriously, and not caring about whether the game told us we won.
In Apex, instead of wins, we'd count squad wipes. We began playing much more aggressively, not caring as much about out gear, and going TOWARDS action instead of away from it. This led to less time "wasted" meaning if we died, we did so fast and early, and so wed get to the next game faster. If we won, we'd score gear off the players we just defeated.
Similarly, in Hunt we'd head towards the first firefight we could hear, and either get kills or get killed. Pretty much always playing free hunters with cheap loadouts we wouldn't care about losing.
And never, ever, even considered caring about or grinding rank.
I play to maximize fun, not progress. I min/max for enjoyment, not stats. It's one of the reasons I have chat entirely disabled in Overwatch, voice and text, because I don't wanna hear it if someone is screaming at me over my pick. I don't care. I here to have a good time.
Tales of the Neon Sea is a nice cyberpunk adventure based detective title. Gemini Rue is similar but more dark and in the tone of Blade Runner. Sherlock Holmes: The Devil's Daughter is another really great title, although its more of an overarching story told during/through the various cases. Call of Cthulhu is a detective story set in Lovecraftian horror. Really great endings. The Sinking City is an open world detective story set in Lovecraftian horror. Gameplay outside of the detective aspect is not great but does its job.
Observer System Redux with a performance from Rutger Hauer. I've just started it so I can't vouch for how good it is but it has positive reviews and has been pretty interesting so far.