Devil's Attorney is a mobile turn-based strategy game developed by Swedish studio 1337 Game Design and originally released on October 11, 2012 for iOS. It was later released for the Android platform on November 11, 2013, and for BlackBerry 10 in the same year. Set in the 1980s, players take control of Max MacMann, an amoral defense attorney who's only interested in money and …
This is the bad ending/'it didn't happened'!!!Don't watch it if you haven't finished the game yet!!!Get it from the App Store : http://bit.ly/QhxCEdFollow me...
Oct 15, 2012 · It's Max's final case in the game and he has to defend himself against his very own father!Max McMann Sr has a very annoying, but easily manipulated, ability...
Devil's Attorney is a turn-based strategy game set in the 80's where you play as Max McMann, a defense attorney that's high on charm but low on moral fiber. Your objective is to free all of your clients and use the money you earn to buy accessories and new furniture for your apartment; boosting your ego and unlocking new courtroom skills in the process.
Evidence - Items that cause damage to your case. Some skills may only target evidence. These skills are somewhat unique because while skills that damage people can affect all the enemy types other than evidence, evidence skills are limited to evidence only. These enemies must be eliminated in order to win a case.
Roger Mansel is another of the most common prosecutors. His special skill is restoring the credibility of witnesses each round. This skills adds credibility regardless of the original crediblity score of the witness. If ignored for too long, this could add enough health to a witness to become a considerable problem. He does not deal any damage on his own, and will be eliminated if all witnesses are taken care of.
The basic format of the game revolves around the player's day in court. Some brief banter between Max and the opposing prosecutor sets up some inconsequential details of the case, or simply gives the two attorneys a chance to trade barbs. Once this is finished, the player's turn begins.
Mike Spencer is the third prosecutor that is faced on a regular basis. His special ability is adding damage to witnesses. While he does not directly deal damage, he can significantly boost the strength of other damage dealers. He can be removed by taking care of the witnesses directly and ignoring him however. Depending on the credibility of the witnesses in the case, and Mike's credibility, it varies on whether taking him out quickly to reduce the witness damage values is the more beneficial move.
Each skill in the game is given a specific color. Purple skills deal with doing damage to the credibility or health of a piece of evidence, or a person. These skills are under the materialism category. Orange skills deal with temporarily reducing the damage of a piece of evidence, or a person. These skills are under the decadence category. Blue skills are special skills that can only be used once per case. These skills are under the vanity category. These skills do a variety of functions such as adding extra damage to attacks, restoring case strength or adding action points.
Margaret Jones is the fourth and final prosecutor that is commonly faced. Her special ability is that her damage dealt is always equal to her life total. This creates one situation where using the Reverse Psychology skill (deals damage to a person based on their life total) will always eliminate this prosecutor. Another viable strategy to dealing with this prosecutor is to deal enough damage to either bring her damage to a withstand-able level, or couple that with some temporary damage mitigation.
Jack Bourbon is one of the common prosecutors players face in court. His special skill is dealing damage directly to your case strength. After each round, the damage he deals increases by a set amount. Typically the damage he deals can be easily taken during the first round, but it begins to ramp up significantly.
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