Hotel Dusk: Room 215

Hotel Dusk: Room 215

Developer(s) Cing
Publisher(s) Nintendo
Designer(s) Taisuke Kanasaki
Composer(s) Satoshi Okubo
Platform(s) Nintendo DS
Release date(s) NA January 22, 2007
JP January 25, 2007
AUS February 22, 2007
EU April 13, 2007
Genre(s) Point-and-click adventure
Mode(s) Single-player
Distribution Nintendo Game Card

Hotel Dusk: Room 215, released in Japan as Wish Room: Angel's Memory (ウィッシュルーム 天使の記憶 Wisshu Rūmu Tenshi no Kioku), is a point-and-click adventure game for the Nintendo DS. Originally announced on October 5, 2005 as Wish Room,[1] the game made its first public appearance on May 9, 2006 at that year's E3 convention.[2] It was released in North America on January 22, 2007, before being released subsequently in other regions. The game supports the Nintendo DS Rumble Pak accessory. The game was later republished in 2008 as part of the Touch! Generations line of DS games. The game was developed by the now-defunct Cing.

Gameplay

Screenshot of gameplay showing both DS screens in their vertical format.

The player, as Kyle Hyde, moves around and interacts with the environment using the DS's touch screen and must solve a variety of puzzles using the handheld's various features including the touch screen, microphone, and closeable cover. The DS is held rotated 90 degrees from normal, like a book, with an option in the game to allow the player to switch which side the touchpad is on depending on which hand is dominant.

Throughout the game, the player must speak with the various hotel patrons and employees in order to uncover vital information. The player can show the characters items that Kyle has collected, or ask questions that have been brought to Kyle's attention. By asking the right questions, Kyle will uncover the information he needs. If he asks the wrong question, makes a wrong assumption, or shows the wrong item, he may confuse or anger the person. This is usually indicated by a darkening of the character in question. This can result in Kyle being forced to retreat to his room or, later in the game, getting kicked out of the hotel, leaving him unable to solve the mystery.

The game is filled with adventure-style puzzles, most of which involve using the touch screen to perform a simple task. Movement is made by leading an iconic representation of Kyle around a map of the hotel on the touch screen or d-pad while a first-person three-dimensional view is shown on the other screen.

There is also a journal to write in, which is used by several other characters as well, though all critical in-game story notes are copied automatically. It gives three pages to write in, with a simple pencil/eraser system.

Characters

Red Crown staff

Kyle Hyde

A former NYPD officer who resigned after shooting his partner, Brian Bradley. He is currently working as a travelling salesman for Red Crown.

Ed Vincent

A former police officer and a friend of Hyde's father. He is the owner of Red Crown and often has Hyde track down lost objects for clients.

Rachel

Ed's secretary.

Hotel staff

Dunning Smith

The owner of Hotel Dusk.

Rosa Fox

The maid and cook of Hotel Dusk.

Louis DeNonno

A former pickpocket who left New York 3 years ago and is now working at the Hotel Dusk. He and Hyde know each other.

Hotel guests

Helen Parker

An old woman with an eyepatch.

Melissa Woodward

A 10-year-old girl who is with her father.

Kevin Woodward

Melissa's father and a surgeon.

Martin Summers

A bestselling mystery author.

Iris

A young woman.

Mila

A mysterious and silent young woman who has the same name as Bradley's younger sister.

Jeff Angel

A young man who brought Mila to the Hotel Dusk after encountering her on the freeway.

Brian Bradley

A NYPD officer who was involved in an undercover operation. His shooting and subsequent disappearance prompt Hyde to leave the force.

Synopsis

The game takes place at Hotel Dusk, a fictional, rundown motel near Los Angeles, California in 1979. Kyle Hyde, a former New York City detective and now working as a salesman for Red Crown, has arrived at the hotel in his search for his former partner, Brian Bradley, and is given Room 215, a room rumored to be able to grant wishes. Kyle finds that the hotel has many mysteries as well as connections to his past, and begins to look into these further. The order of the discovery of these elements within the game will depend on choices players make, and as such, the summary below is the chronological order of the larger story.

In the past, Robert Evans and Dunning Smith were friends at college, but went their separate ways. Evans inherited his family's art gallery, while Dunning wanted to become a professional painter. Both married and each had a daughter: Mila and Jenny, respectively. In 1960, they reunited in an airport, after both of their wives died in a tragic plane crash. A year later, Evans came up with the idea of creating "Osterzone", a dead painter whose works would be highly valued. Evans deeply admired Dunning’s skill at painting, and offered him to paint works to be credited as Osterzone’s, to which he agreed. While Dunning painted, Evans displayed the works in his art gallery and created the mytho of Osterzone. The scam was successful, the paintings sold for fortunes, including one called "Angel Opening a Door", and Evans and Dunning became rich.

Their activities attracted the attention of a crime syndicate called Nile that Evans worked with. Evans bought Hotel Dusk in 1969 to use as a front for his illicit meetings and to provide a secret workshop for Dunning to paint, despite Dunning's wishes to get out of the scam. During one meeting with Nile, Dunning refused to continue painting, forcing one of the Nile agents to kidnap Jenny; during the skirmish, Mila, who was playing with Jenny, was knocked into a coma. Evans threatened Dunning to continue to paint as Osterzone to be able to see Jenny again. Evans later got into too much trouble with Nile, and was forced to sell his art gallery and gave Hotel Dusk to Dunning before keeping himself secluded. Dunning lost hope of seeing Jenny again after three years, and quit painting, but Evans convinced him to wait at the hotel and Jenny would be returned in time. Dunning became the hotel's owner and renovated it to hide the evidence of Nile and Osterzone while creating the mythos of Room 215 as to attract customers.

Three years prior to the game's present, Hyde and Bradley were investigating Nile's activities in New York City, and came across Evans. Evans claimed that Nile was holding Bradley's sister Mila as hostage as to force Bradley to leak confidential information; though this, Bradley learned of Dunning and Osterzone, and later stole "Angel Opening a Door" from Nile in anticipation of returning it to Dunning. However, Bradley later found Mila killed by Evans, and Hyde is anonymously warned of Bradley's treachery. Hyde confronted Bradley on a Hudson River and was forced to fire on him, wounding him. Bradley fell into the river and disappeared; Hyde, feeling remorse over his actions, quit the force and took up the salesman job to search for Bradley.

Six months prior to the present, Bradley had made his way to Hotel Dusk and spoke to Dunning about what he knew of Nile and Osterzone. Despite Dunning's distrust, Bradley turned over "Angel Opening a Door" to him, and while staying at the hotel, signed in under Kyle's name and left several clues for Kyle to find, knowing that Kyle would likely follow him. Bradley left the hotel and visited Evan's daughter Mila, who bore a resemblance to his sister, and gave her his sister's bracelet; shortly after this visit, Mila woke from her coma though unable to speak, and after waiting several months for Evans to appear, decided to leave, following the only clue she had, a pamphlet to Hotel Dusk that Bradley left behind. Mila arrives at the hotel at the same time that Kyle has. In the present, Kyle is able to piece together all the clues to the hotel's past, including the identity of Dunning and Mila. After helping to reconcile the two, with Dunning promising to look after Mila, Kyle continues on his way, knowing that Bradley is still ahead of him.

Development

Production took about a year and a half with 20 staff members involved. In an interview with Qj.net, Director Taisuke Kanasaki explained that they wanted Hotel Dusk to have "an unprecedented visual expression not found in any other game."[3]

The game uses rotoscoping to animate its characters while a brushwork style illustrates the game's environments with half-finished backgrounds with 3-D objects strewn about. While not a first in gaming, rotoscoping is still rare in most games (with only a handful, namely the original Prince of Persia using the animation style).

Sequel

A sequel, titled Last Window: The Secret of Cape West, was released on January 14, 2010 in Japan, and on September 17, 2010 in Europe.[4] It takes place in Los Angeles, California during 1980, a year after the events of Hotel Dusk. Due to developer Cing's bankruptcy, Last Window was never released in North America.

Reception

Reception
Aggregate scores
AggregatorScore
GameRankings79.36%[5]
Metacritic78/100[6]
Review scores
PublicationScore
1UP.comB+[7]
Famitsu33/40[8]
GamePro4/5[9]
GameSpot8.2/10[10]
GameSpy[11]
GamesRadar9/10[12]
Onion AV ClubD+[13]

Hotel Dusk: Room 215 has garnered a review score ratio of 79.36% at Game Rankings,[5] and a 78/100 on Metacritic.[6] Most major review sources gave it high marks, including 1UP.com (B+),[7] Famitsu (33/40),[8] GamePro (4/5),[9] GameSpot (8.2/10)[10] and GameSpy ().[11]

The positive critical reception commonly references the game's storyline and well-written character dialogue. Carolyn Gudmundson of Games Radar notes that the "...game is so well-written, and the dialogue is so natural, that it feels more like interacting with real people at times than following prompts in a game."[12]

The game was also selected as one of Gaming Target's "52 Games We'll Still Be Playing From 2007".[14] It was the 76th best-selling game in Japan in 2007, with 213,208 copies sold.[15]

The reception was not universally positive, though. The Onion AV Club gave the game a D+ and pointed out that "while a mystery should keep you alert for clues and misstatements, Hotel Dusk slaps you in the forehead with every new piece of evidence, then patronizes you with reading-comprehension quizzes after every chapter".[13]

See also

References

  1. Anoop Gantayat (2005). "Nintendo Announces New DS Games". IGN. Retrieved 2007-01-26.
  2. Guy Cocker (2006). "E3 06: Nintendo tips handheld hand". GameSpot. Retrieved 2007-01-26.
  3. "Cing talks about Hotel Dusk...". qj.net. Retrieved 2008-10-30.
  4. "Last Window UK release date confirmed".
  5. 5.0 5.1 "Hotel Dusk: Room 215". GameRankings. Retrieved 2011-06-23.
  6. 6.0 6.1 "Hotel Dusk: Room 215". Metacritic. Retrieved 2011-06-23.
  7. 7.0 7.1 "Hotel Dusk: Room 215 Review from 1UP.com". 1up.com. Retrieved 2008-10-30.
  8. 8.0 8.1 RawmeatCowboy (January 17, 2007). "A couple of Famitsu reviews". GoNintendo.com. Retrieved 2009-07-15.
  9. 9.0 9.1 "Review : Hotel Dusk: Room 215 [DS] - from GamePro.com". gamepro.com. Archived from the original on 2008-10-12. Retrieved 2008-10-30.
  10. 10.0 10.1 "Hotel Dusk: Room 215 for DS Review - DS Hotel Dusk: Room 215 Review". gamespot.com. Retrieved 2008-10-30.
  11. 11.0 11.1 "GameSpy: Hotel Dusk: Room 215 Review". gamespy.com. Retrieved 2008-10-30.
  12. 12.0 12.1 Carolyne Gudmundson (2007). "The mystery of Hotel Dusk is rich and many layered". Games Radar. Retrieved 2007-01-27.
  13. 13.0 13.1 "Hotel Dusk: Room 215". Avclub.com. January 29, 2007. Retrieved 2011-01-10.
  14. "52 Games We'll Still Be Playing From 2007". Gaming Target.
  15. "Top 500 Japanese Games Of 2007". Gemaga.com. April 14, 2008. Retrieved 2009-07-15.

External links