how many trials are in ace attorney

by Hank Boyer V 7 min read

The player controls Phoenix through two sets of sections: investigations and courtroom trials. During investigations they gather information and evidence. During trials they cross-examine witnesses, and answer questions from the judge, the prosecutor, and the witnesses. The story is split into five cases.

five cases

Full Answer

How many Ace Attorney games are there?

67 rows · in: Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney, Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney - Justice for All, Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney - Trials and Tribulations, and 8 more. Apollo Justice: Ace Attorney. Ace Attorney Investigations: Miles Edgeworth. Gyakuten Kenji 2.

How long does a trial last in Ace Attorney?

Feb 23, 2022 · For the equivalent gameplay mode in Ace Attorney Investigations: Miles Edgeworth and Gyakuten Kenji 2, see Argument. For Professor Layton vs. Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney, see Witch trial. The gameplay articles on this wiki describe game controls in universal terms. This means that some of the controls may not be relevant to the medium through which you are …

What is the name of the Ace Attorney trilogy?

Mar 19, 2021 · How many cases are in Ace Attorney Investigations? five cases. When did Ace Attorney dual destinies come out? July 25, 2013. Did Phoenix Wright ever lose a case? Mr. Phoenix Wright! The daughter of legendary prosecutor Manfred von Karma. Born and raised in Germany, she became a prosecutor at the age of 13, and hasn’t lost a case since.

What is Ace Attorney 5 limited edition comes with?

Oct 23, 2007 · How many cases are in Trials and Tribulations? I just got Trials and Tribulations and I'm replying the first two before I begin but I would like to know if its 5 cases like in the first game or 4 like in the second game so I don't get all exited at the end of the 4th case waiting for a fifth. Thanks. GoldenLink - 12 years ago - report

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How many cases does the Great Ace Attorney have?

For one, you can play the 10 cases in any order, as if you were picking episodes to play on Netflix. But there's also a new “story” mode that essentially plays the game for you. It'll run through dialogue automatically and even choose the right piece of evidence, without you having to touch a single button.Jul 28, 2021

How long are Ace Attorney Trials?

Updated:Single-PlayerPolledAverageMain Story14521h 09mMain + Extras2924h 57mCompletionists10324h 30mAll PlayStyles27722h 48m

What is the longest case in Ace Attorney?

Rise from the AshesTrial data Episode 5: Turnabout Revolution is the fifth and final episode of the main story of Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney - Spirit of Justice. Taking around 12 hours to complete, it is one of the longest episodes in the Ace Attorney series rivalling Rise from the Ashes in terms of length.

How many hours is Phoenix Wright Ace Attorney?

PHOENIX WRIGHT: ACE ATTORNEY TRILOGY is a compilation that collects the first three adventures of Capcom's clever, sharply dressed lawyer into a single game that offers 15 cases spanning nearly 50 hours of playtime.Feb 22, 2020

Overview

Games

The Ace Attorney series launched in Japan with the Game Boy Advance game Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney in 2001, and has been published in the West since the release of a Nintendo DS port in 2005. The series currently consists of six main series games and five spin-offs. Additionally, two titles that collect the first three main series games have been released: Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney TrilogyHD, which was released for iOS and Android in 2012 in Japan and for iOS in 201…

Common elements

The Ace Attorney games are visual novel adventure games in which the player controls defense attorneysand defends their clients in several different episodes. The gameplay is split into two types of sections: investigations and courtroom trials. During the investigations, the player searches the environments, gathering information and evidence, and talks to characters such as their client, witnesses, and the police. Once enough evidence has been collected, the game mov…

Development

The series was created by Shu Takumi, who wrote and directed the first three games. The first game was conceived in 2000 when Takumi's boss at the time, Shinji Mikami, gave him six months to create any type of game he wanted to; Takumi had originally joined Capcom wanting to make mystery and adventure games, and felt that this was a big chance for him to make a mark as a creator…

Localization

The localization of the first game was outsourced to Bowne Global, and was handled by the writer Alexander O. Smithand the editor Steve Anderson. While the Japanese version takes place in Japan, the localized version is set in the United States: because one of the episodes involves time zones, they had to specify where the game takes place, and chose the United States without thinking a lot about it. The Japanese justice system of the original still remained intact in the loc…

Reception

The Ace Attorney series has been well received by critics, and has performed well commercially: in December 2009, it was Capcom's 9th-best-selling series of all time, and in October 2010, they called it one of their "strongest intellectual properties", with more than 3.9 million units sold worldwide. By December 2013, the series had sold over 5 million units. In the United States, the first game became surprisingly successful, forcing Capcom to prepare at least three additional r…

Related media and other appearances

The Takarazuka Revue, an all-female theater troupe, has adapted the series into stage musicals: 2009's Ace Attorney: Truth Resurrected, which is based on the last episode of the first game; 2010's Ace Attorney 2: Truth Resurrected Again, whose first act is an original story, and whose second is based on the final episode of the second game; and 2013's Ace Attorney 3: Prosecutor Miles Edg…

Legacy

In 2015, GamesRadar+ named the Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney as the 55th-best video game of all time. In 2016, Famitsu readers voted Gyakuten Saiban as the second-most memorable Game Boy Advance title (behind only Pokémon Ruby and Sapphire) and Gyakuten Saiban 123 as the tenth-best Nintendo 3DS game. In 2017, Famitsu readers voted Gyakuten Saiban the third-best adventure gameof …

Overview

Ace Attorney, known in Japan as Gyakuten Saiban: Sono "Shinjitsu", Igiari! (Japanese: 逆転裁判 ~その「真実」、異議あり!~, lit. "Turnabout Trial: I Object to That 'Truth'!"), is an anime series produced by A-1 Pictures, based on Capcom's video game series of the same name. It is directed by Ayumu Watanabe and written by Atsuhiro Tomioka, with Ace Attorney creator Shu Tak…

Premise

Based on the first three video games in the series, Ace Attorney takes place in an alternate world where the court system has been changed to the point where trials held in first instance and courts must reach a verdict within three days. Phoenix Wright is a rookie defense lawyer who works under his mentor, Mia Fey. When Mia is murdered, Phoenix befriends her younger sister Maya, a spirit medium-in-training who can channel the spirits of the dead. Joined by Maya, Pho…

Production and release

Ace Attorney's anime adaptation was first announced during a presentation at the 2015 Tokyo Game Show. Production of the series was handled by A-1 Pictures, who had previously produced the animated cutscenes in the sixth main Ace Attorney game, Spirit of Justice, and was directed by Ayumu Watanabe with series composition by Atsuhiro Tomioka and character design by Keiko Ōta and Koji Watanabe. The first season adapts the first two video games in the franchise, Phoe…

Reception

Jacob Chapman of Anime News Networksaid that popular reception was "subdued at best and outraged at worst, in ways usually reserved for radically altered adaptations". Chapman was critical of the animation quality, calling it "constantly off-model and slideshow-minimal but still watchable at least", whilst being more receptive to the adaptation's faithful recreation of the game's events and removal of "extraneous gags and details". He added that while the adaptatio…

External links

• Official website (in Japanese)
• Ace Attorney (anime) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia