Testseek.com have collected 15 expert reviews of the Agatha Christie: And Then There Were None and the average rating is 51%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Agatha Christie: And Then There Were None.
(51%)
15 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Abstract: If there is anything in the gaming world that has a worse reputation than games based on movies (or, for that matter, movies based on games) it has to be games based on novels. "And Then There Were None" is a murder mystery written by the venerable Aga...
Abstract: Get ready to point-and-click until everyones dead, even you. The exploitive and expansive history of the classic Agatha Christie novel (the original title was much different) is not served well by this three-year-old PC port. With the exception of so...
Abstract: del.icio.us | Digg This | Glink It If ever there was a medium for the return of the point-and-click adventure, it’s Wii. And while the critically acclaimed Zack & Wiki: Quest for Barbaros’ Treasure recently proved the genre can still be an o...
Abstract: Agatha Christie: And Then There Were None is a point-and-click videogame adventure based on a 1939 novel whose original name is so politically incorrect that we wont dare to publish it on this site. Youre connected to the Internet – look it up...
Abstract: The works of the late Agatha Christie are widely regarded as being among the most popular murder mysteries of all time, and it's great to see her expert tales of suspense working their way to new audiences through an interactive medium the author very ...
Abstract: There was a time – around 1993 – when gamers couldn’t get enough of the point & click mystery adventure game. Myst was the biggest-selling game around on the PC. The 7th Guest and the Tex Murphy franchise were similar games in the genre. Bu...
Abstract: The PC point and click adventure has been having something of a resurrection recently. With Sam and Max proving that episodic content can work, and the Wiis controller being perfectly suited to mouse-based interfaces, the genre has not seen this much ...