Jenny Leclue

Use this guide if you want to achieve every Jenny Leclue routes in the end game section. There will be spoilers, obviously.

Jenny LeClue – Detectivu is a complete game experience, like a season of a TV show. Yes, there is a cliffhanger at the end, as it is a mystery story, but there are also conclusions to be made. In addition, we will take the player choices into account and they will influence the way we as the developer create the 2nd game. Jenny LeClue - Detectivu - Nintendo Switch Announcement Trailer. Jenny LeClue Official PAX East 2018 Gameplay Trailer.

Endings Guide

Within this guide, I will go through the different endings. There will obviously be spoilers, so you might want to go through the game yourself first.

The spoilers will be about the chapters coming after Jenny “knows everything” (she will tell you). And one particular story choice that comes earlier.

Achieving the good ending

The first ending you will be able to achieve come a bit early and will be available at scene 25.

The writer will have a decisive decision to take about the story, and this is your opportunity to take good ending. You will have to choose between the Graveyard and the Good ending.

It lasts less than a minute and you’re redirected to the Graveyard shortly after, and this ending feels wrong anyway. But hey, the story is far from finished so that’s okay.

Going through the true ending

This is about the final scenes here. You are warned.

The final story scenes are the 41, 42 and 43. You will have three different kind of choices to make, let’s dive into those!

Determine your own conclusion

Like all good detectives, you should be the one who find the truth.

The confrontation taking place during chapter 41 and 43 allows you to explain everything that happened and why. You will have to choose between photos of scenes happening during the game, picking two of those and let Jenny make the good conclusion.

There is actually no bad choice here. Every picture has a purpose, and everyone will lead to solve a part of the mystery. Sometimes it can enlighten some story point, but there is no possible mistake. Jenny will still talk about the topic the picture is about.

A sacrifice has to be made

This might be the most important choice of the game…

As the writer, you need a character to die if you want the book to be released. And if you want to continue the game.

You will have a choice between killing Jenny, her mother, or the Dean. Seems important, what happens if you choose the main character??

Pretty much nothing. The last scene will be the group of three… with the one you chose disappearing. You can’t even see the reaction of the ones remaining.

But hey, there is an achievement for each.

Choose your own demise

Last choice you will take!

When the sudden earth shake comes in, the camera will move deep underground and you will be in a laboratory where you have to choose between three levers with different colors.

Did you notice the pipes when the camera was going down?

It doesn’t matter because the levers don’t mean anything. You will choose a lever that most certainly leads to a specific thing… But you won’t know, the cliffhanger is the same in any case.

But hey… achievements?

If I wasn’t exhaustive and there is more to the story endings, do not hesitate to tell me.

Personal opinion on the endings

The guide is over, the following is just me chit chatting with myself.

After finding the game pretty entertaining, I’ve been disappointed with this ending. This obviously hints to a possible sequel (didn’t read much about it online but I think it is planned), but there are… different ways to create a cliffhanger.

This is far from the first game to build a cliffhanger at the end to prepare the next one’s venue. We can think about Telltale’s games (don’t forget to pay your respects) Walking Dead, which hold very important decisions at the end of the second game.

The narrative branching was one of the main appeal to Telltale’s games, and yet reality catches back with it. Creating those story branches mean multiplying the amount of content, and most players will only see one of the branches you created. Telltale quickly rejoined those branching to merge every story possibilities into a main one that will always be the only possible one, thus creating the illusion of choice. Those decisions weren’t very useful, and even put aside.

The marketing Jenny Leclues’s ending does is more than fragile. I suppose they want the players to buy the next one to know the truth?

But Jenny Leclue never created such a complex branching system in its storytelling, it always was at a scale of a discussion, or only some minor details. So why should we think they will successfully do such an ambitious thing for their sequel? Chances are, if sequel there is, those branching will mean next to nothing.

I read some talking about mass effect reference. Well, this is nice, and the game features enough humor to do this kind of thing. But at some point it has to live on its own, and a bad ending referencing a bad ending is still a bad ending; be more than just a mass effect critic.

Also, I would have liked to see a more conclusive ending, not knowing the game was kind of an “episode 1”. And the cliffhanger is rarely a criteria to buy a sequel to me.

Jenny

Of course, all of it is mostly subjective, and if some point of view differs I would be interested to talk about it.

Jenny LeClue: Detectivú
Developer(s)Mografi
Publisher(s)Mografi
EngineUnity
Platform(s)iOS, Microsoft Windows, macOS, Linux, PlayStation 4, Nintendo Switch
Release
  • iOS, PC, macOS, Linux
  • September 19, 2019
  • Nintendo Switch
  • August 25, 2020
  • PlayStation 4
  • TBA
Genre(s)Adventure

Jenny LeClue: Detectivú is an adventure game developed and published by Mografi. It was released for iOS (as a launch title for Apple Arcade), Microsoft Windows, macOS, and Linux in September 2019, and will be released for PlayStation 4 at a later date.[1] The Spoken Secrets Edition added full voice acting as a free update on July 24, 2020.[2] The game was released for Nintendo Switch on August 25, 2020.[3]

Gameplay[edit]

The choices that players make throughout the game have an impact. The game contains point-and-click elements, and features a hand-drawn art style.[4] Players are able to interact with most items in the game. During dialogue sections, players can observe the person talking to spot clues as to whether they are lying. Locations that players explore include mines, graveyards, mountains, police stations, and libraries.[5]

Plot[edit]

Author Arthur K. Finklestein is the creator of the Jenny LeClue series of books, a classic children's sleuth series whose sales are dwindling as readers begin to find the stories trite and boring. His publisher demands a darker, grittier Jenny LeClue book or else the series will be canceled, so Finklestein reluctantly responds by giving Jenny her biggest case yet: the murder of the beloved dean of local Gumboldt College, with her forensic science professor mother as the prime suspect. Within the narrative, Jenny must clear her mom's name and repair her fractured relationship with the dean's son, while Finklestein struggles to commit to putting his beloved Jenny and her town of Arthurton through the wringer in order to keep the series alive.

Development[edit]

The game had a successful crowdfunding campaign. With a goal of $65,000, it reached $105,797 by August 2014.[5] It was released for iOS, Microsoft Windows, macOS, and Linux on September 19, 2019, it was released for Nintendo Switch on August 25, 2020 and will be released for PlayStation 4 later in 2020. For the iOS version, it was released on the Apple Arcade service.[6]

References[edit]

  1. ^'Jenny LeClue: Detectivu launches for PC and Apple Arcade on September 19'. Gematsu. Retrieved 18 September 2019.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
  2. ^'Jenny LeClue: Spoken Secrets Edition'. twitter. Retrieved 26 October 2020.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
  3. ^'Jenny LeClue - Detectivu'. Nintendo America. Retrieved August 25, 2020.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
  4. ^Wallace, Kimberly (March 6, 2015). 'The Very Best Indie Games Of GDC 2015'. Game Informer. GameStop. p. 6. Retrieved March 29, 2015.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
  5. ^ ab'Jenny LeClue - A Handmade Adventure Game'. Kickstarter. Retrieved March 29, 2015.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
  6. ^Romano, Sal. 'Jenny LeClue: Detectivu launches for PC and Apple Arcade on September 19, PS4 and Switch later in 2019'. Gematsu. Retrieved 18 September 2019.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)

Jenny Leclue Pc

External links[edit]

Jenny Leclue

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