It’s fun putting a puzzle together, and The Orient Express differentiates much better between the pieces than either Bavarian Castle or Victorian Mansion did. If you’ve never played either of the previous two editions of the series, you’ll want to pick this one up. If only the gameplay redeemed The Orient Express. The voice-acting and physical acting isn’t even passable, but very few games do live acting well anyway. The music in this game is pretty tuneless, with the same little bit playing as you walk around in the various cars. The graphics here are quite poor, with the FMV a little sharper than the actual “look-around” graphics, which are blurry and nondescript. After you complete a puzzle of a particular difficulty, you get to “walk around” on the Orient Express, watching more bad FMV and finding puzzle pieces for various puzzles. This is well rendered, and the interface itself looks cleaner than it did in the previous editions. The first, and by far the best, is the Puzzle mode where you scroll around on a table and put puzzle pieces together. There are two main play modes in Puzz 3D: The Orient Express. For those of you that haven’t, it’s easy to break down. It’s got the same menu setup (with the exception of a pop-up when you first boot the game), the same puzzle-building environment, the same lame FMV. If you’ve played any of the previous Puzz 3D editions, you’ll recognize The Orient Express immediately.
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