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Layton's Mystery Journey: Katrielle and the Millionaire's Conspiracy

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Layton's Mystery Journey: Katrielle and the Millionaire's Conspiracy

Jul 20, 2017

Main game

2.88 average rating based on 139 ratings

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Join Katrielle Layton, our new hero, as she becomes embroiled in a casual, quizzical quest, which has its roots in our hero’s search for her missing father, Professor Hershel Layton. You'll be whisked around London's famous landmarks, from the Houses of Parliament to Tower Bridge, following Kat, solving case after unlikely case, until she unwittingly uncovers the Millionaires' Conspiracy. The story begins with Katrielle setting up the Layton Detective Agency, determined to prove her worth and hoping the exposure will uncover clues about the missing professor's whereabouts. Help Kat discover clues, solve mysteries and original puzzles! Fashion-conscious players can also … More
Join Katrielle Layton, our new hero, as she becomes embroiled in a casual, quizzical quest, which has its roots in our hero’s search for her missing father, Professor Hershel Layton. You'll be whisked around London's famous landmarks, from the Houses of Parliament to Tower Bridge, following Kat, solving case after unlikely case, until she unwittingly uncovers the Millionaires' Conspiracy. The story begins with Katrielle setting up the Layton Detective Agency, determined to prove her worth and hoping the exposure will uncover clues about the missing professor's whereabouts. Help Kat discover clues, solve mysteries and original puzzles! Fashion-conscious players can also redecorate the agency and dress Katrielle in various outfits to suit the case at hand. With the most puzzles ever included in a Layton game, a colorful new cast, and an intriguing storyline that includes seven millionaires and one whopper of a conspiracy, will she ever be able to find her missing father? Less
Release Dates
Jul 20, 2017 (Worldwide)
Android, iOS
Oct 06, 2017 (Worldwide)
Nintendo 3DS
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User Stats
442
In Collection
160
Wish Listed
44
Playing
170
Backlogged
How Long Is Layton's Mystery Journey: Katrielle and the Millionaire's Conspiracy?
Main story: 20.5 hours
Main + extras: 32.2 hours
100% completion: 38.5 hours
Total completions: 12
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richoo
richoo gave May 9, 2021
richoo gave May 9, 2021
The Weakest Entry in the Franchise
This review is for the Nintendo 3DS version

I'm a huge fan of the Layton series, having played both the previous trilogies so I have to say I'm pretty disappointed with this game. I got it back when it was released in 2019 and ended up not completing it because I just didn't find it that fun. 2 years later and I decided to pick it up again. This time around, I managed to complete the main story and the majority of the puzzles but I can definitely now say that this is the weakest entry in the franchise.

As many people have mentioned, this game has, by far, the weakest puzzle library in the series. Many of the puzzles feel like trick questions or the answers are too simple for their Picarat difficulty. Additionally, the game breaks tradition and doesn't follow a single narrative. Instead, it tells 12 short stories, which are really predictable (outside of maybe the last two) and just aren't very entertaining. I thought the game was going to be centred around Katrielle's relationship with Layton but it's barely mentioned throughout the 20+ hour campaign (you'll have to look into the anime for more information). Katrielle's character also falls flat, feeling more like a …

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I'm a huge fan of the Layton series, having played both the previous trilogies so I have to say I'm pretty disappointed with this game. I got it back when it was released in 2019 and ended up not completing it because I just didn't find it that fun. 2 years later and I decided to pick it up again. This time around, I managed to complete the main story and the majority of the puzzles but I can definitely now say that this is the weakest entry in the franchise.

As many people have mentioned, this game has, by far, the weakest puzzle library in the series. Many of the puzzles feel like trick questions or the answers are too simple for their Picarat difficulty. Additionally, the game breaks tradition and doesn't follow a single narrative. Instead, it tells 12 short stories, which are really predictable (outside of maybe the last two) and just aren't very entertaining. I thought the game was going to be centred around Katrielle's relationship with Layton but it's barely mentioned throughout the 20+ hour campaign (you'll have to look into the anime for more information). Katrielle's character also falls flat, feeling more like a know-it-all who just stumbles through the cases (but to be fair, she's a kid).

Overall, it definitely pales in comparison to the rest of the series but it's not a bad game for new (and probably younger) players who want to get acquainted with the series.

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Taffer
Taffer gave Jul 15, 2024
Taffer gave Jul 15, 2024
Taffer's review of Layton's Mystery Journey: Katrielle and the Millionaire's Conspiracy
This review is for the Nintendo 3DS version

It's been a good long while since I played any of the actual Layton games, but even with that memory being rather faint I can confidently say that this one left me underwhelmed.

The chapters-with-self-contained-plots format that the story has felt like it stretched things too thin and could've been executed much better; even the final chapter which felt like it was the only one with any real significance felt pretty unremarkable in comparison to the Layton "lengthy engaging mystery which turns out to have a totally ridiculous and unbelievable explanation but still manages to feel heartfelt and genuine" standard. You also never get a resolution for two pretty major plot points which get introduced at the beginning of the story, namely why Professor Layton is missing and what the deal is with Sherl; while writing this review I have learned that apparently an anime series was made in place of a second game, so I guess I'll have to check that out to see whether and how well that's addressed.

The puzzles were generally a disappointment, as very few of them have any actual direct relevance to whatever is going on in the story when they come up (something …

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It's been a good long while since I played any of the actual Layton games, but even with that memory being rather faint I can confidently say that this one left me underwhelmed.

The chapters-with-self-contained-plots format that the story has felt like it stretched things too thin and could've been executed much better; even the final chapter which felt like it was the only one with any real significance felt pretty unremarkable in comparison to the Layton "lengthy engaging mystery which turns out to have a totally ridiculous and unbelievable explanation but still manages to feel heartfelt and genuine" standard. You also never get a resolution for two pretty major plot points which get introduced at the beginning of the story, namely why Professor Layton is missing and what the deal is with Sherl; while writing this review I have learned that apparently an anime series was made in place of a second game, so I guess I'll have to check that out to see whether and how well that's addressed.

The puzzles were generally a disappointment, as very few of them have any actual direct relevance to whatever is going on in the story when they come up (something the regular Layton games handled far better), and at least half of them forgo the process of actually letting you come up with any sort of clever and fun solution and are instead pretty egregious "figure out the 'gotcha' trick" lateral thinking puzzles whose logic gets very tiring very quickly. The ending of the game has a dedication to Akira Tago, who previously served as "puzzle master" for the series but died the year before this game's release, which is probably the most straightforward explanation for this dip in quality. The side minigame puzzles that unlock more levels as you progress through the game also waffle about quite a bit; Passers Buy was easily my favorite, Hound in the Pound was fairly enjoyable but the logic in it got ridiculous to the point that I gave up when I was about half done, Ideal Meal felt like a mess since you have no idea whether you've actually unlocked everything you need for each order when it's first made available and the clues to actually figure out the best choices are extremely vague.

The music is fine, but nothing really stood out to me outside of a new remix of "More London Streets" from Unwound Future and a couple of tracks that I heard during the game's ending and staff roll, even if the former felt drowned out by the dialogue going on at that point. The theme for the office screen that you hang out in between cases was nice too but ended up feeling recognizable just from the familiarity factor, being one of those "have you played the game" things that you're going to end up getting used to one way or another, like the NLA theme from Xenoblade X.

In the end, I was curious enough about this game before playing it that I at least feel some satisfaction in having done so, even if it did turn out to be more of a disappointment than anything.

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oulfis
oulfis gave Jan 27, 2023
oulfis gave Jan 27, 2023
oulfis's review of Layton's Mystery Journey: Katrielle and the Millionaire's Conspiracy
This review is for the Nintendo Switch version

I love a Layton game, and this one delivered, with a nice range of puzzles, lightly nonsensical plots, and a completely baffling twist ending.

SuperEffective
SuperEffective gave Nov 9, 2017
SuperEffective gave Nov 9, 2017
SuperEffective's review of Layton's Mystery Journey: Katrielle and the Millionaire's Conspiracy

This game felt like a huge letdown and really played on the fact that the main character is a female (which is rather annoying - changing her outfit or the furniture does not really entice me). There are a couple major questions introduced in the beginning of the game that don't get answered, because it is implied that there will be more Katrielle games. The characters were mostly boring or lacked substance, and I am not sure if I really care for Katrielle's personality.

The game is set up that you solve individual cases. Each case is presented with an introduction, then you proceed to explore the scenes, find puzzles and hint coins, and find six major clues to solve the case. However, it is frustrating to realize that when you solve a case, more puzzle will appear in that case - forcing you to resolve the case all over again. You spend a lot of time clicking quickly through scenes just to move on to the next case.

The puzzles vary, but there is a luster lost by this game (considering it is the 7th Layton game, not including mobile and spin-offs). If you solve all the extras, there …

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This game felt like a huge letdown and really played on the fact that the main character is a female (which is rather annoying - changing her outfit or the furniture does not really entice me). There are a couple major questions introduced in the beginning of the game that don't get answered, because it is implied that there will be more Katrielle games. The characters were mostly boring or lacked substance, and I am not sure if I really care for Katrielle's personality.

The game is set up that you solve individual cases. Each case is presented with an introduction, then you proceed to explore the scenes, find puzzles and hint coins, and find six major clues to solve the case. However, it is frustrating to realize that when you solve a case, more puzzle will appear in that case - forcing you to resolve the case all over again. You spend a lot of time clicking quickly through scenes just to move on to the next case.

The puzzles vary, but there is a luster lost by this game (considering it is the 7th Layton game, not including mobile and spin-offs). If you solve all the extras, there is 180 games total to solve. In addition, there is a real-life puzzle solving quest found here that you can continue being part of the promotional campaign. This probably appeals to hardcore puzzle solvers/completionists mostly.

I probably will continue getting the next game(s) mostly because I hate unanswered questions and MAYBE old favorite characters will come back? Who knows...

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Gobelin_Powa
Gobelin_Powa gave Feb 26, 2024
Gobelin_Powa gave Feb 26, 2024
Gobelin_Powa's review of Layton's Mystery Journey: Katrielle and the Millionaire's Conspiracy

7/10 Le moins bien des Layton, mais ca fait toujours plaisir d'y jouer !!! Ma 98 <3

burpy
burpy gave Sep 17, 2020
burpy gave Sep 17, 2020
Disapointing
This review is for the Nintendo Switch version

Tooooooooooooo much talking and very few different puzzles (color swapping or same puzzle with much difficulty). So boring games... Good point, nice twist at the end

Hellvetica
Hellvetica updated their status Aug 24, 2024
Hellvetica updated their status Aug 24, 2024

2 ez bro I did this blind and while ppaying mario for my crippling seafood addiction 👌🫵💅✨‼️🧚🏻 GEE GEE I DO NOT CARE

KSMaster
KSMaster updated their status May 14, 2024
KSMaster updated their status May 14, 2024

Definitely one of the weaker Layton games I've played. Major questions posted at the start of the game never get answered nor did they play any part in any of the short stories you play through. The puzzles also seem significantly easier.

The "mysteries" you solve throughout the game also don't carry any significance or impact the game and the characters. As a result, none of the characters develop in anyway as the game progresses nor do any major questions get answered. Each story also tends to conclude weakly, opting to always paint a "no ones the bad guy" picture. Some of Katrielle's deductions also seem to suffer from logic leaps because the player doesn't get all the information Katrielle gets, denying the player the opportunity to piece everything together themselves (e.g. the last story).

The game also wants you to go back to each story after you conclude it to find new hidden puzzles and hint coins that can only be found after you conclude that story. I find this to be a puzzling design choice as revisiting the areas offer no new dialogue and the game treats it as if you have yet to solve the mystery. They …

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Definitely one of the weaker Layton games I've played. Major questions posted at the start of the game never get answered nor did they play any part in any of the short stories you play through. The puzzles also seem significantly easier.

The "mysteries" you solve throughout the game also don't carry any significance or impact the game and the characters. As a result, none of the characters develop in anyway as the game progresses nor do any major questions get answered. Each story also tends to conclude weakly, opting to always paint a "no ones the bad guy" picture. Some of Katrielle's deductions also seem to suffer from logic leaps because the player doesn't get all the information Katrielle gets, denying the player the opportunity to piece everything together themselves (e.g. the last story).

The game also wants you to go back to each story after you conclude it to find new hidden puzzles and hint coins that can only be found after you conclude that story. I find this to be a puzzling design choice as revisiting the areas offer no new dialogue and the game treats it as if you have yet to solve the mystery. They should have instead integrated the case codas (mini stories about what happened after the mystery was solved) into the dialogue you get as you revisit mysteries, instead of separating them.

The puzzles were much easier relative to the other Layton entries. The Picarat difficulty also felt inflated. Some puzzles were so easy you could solve them at a glance but for some reason, were given a higher Picarat score. Many of the puzzles also felt like trick questions and some could have been worded clearer.

Ultimately, it was clear that the game decided to focus more on its puzzles rather than the story but both sadly, fell short. Still, its functions well enough as a portable time burner, so long as you don't give its storyline too much thought.

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BMO
BMO updated their status Sep 26, 2021
BMO updated their status Sep 26, 2021

Get out of town, this is in Apple Arcade. I don’t expect that especially given it used to be a paid app on iOS, and the rest of the Layton games are all paid apps.

Gothd011
Gothd011 updated their status Sep 23, 2018
Gothd011 updated their status Sep 23, 2018

This game was nothing layton related other than it puzzles. Half the time when she/we/her was putting a puzzle together. Your brain creates a puzzle too. Thoughts like: what does that have to do with xyz.......did she see something I didnt see? Talk about a cat she has a Epiphany. Talk about popcorn she has a Epiphany......that no one else can really know. I mean ok for the sake of the game I understand. The people around her should be confuse. In the game. But not the player. It got to a point I was skipping the long long dialogues. Meh I dont know, it was just disappointing and I payed too much for this.