Tough Justice ‘84 is a strategy-puzzle title for the Nintendo Swap. It entails hiring brokers and fixing circumstances in a fictional, crime-ridden metropolis set within the Eighties. With neon lighting, voice performing, and a synth-based ‘80s soundtrack, it has so much going for it. Sadly, there are cracks beneath the floor of this Swap model that mar the expertise.
The story revolves round Jim, an ex-cop who was despatched to the slammer for a criminal offense he didn’t commit. Upon launch, he’s given a second likelihood to wash the streets through a brand new crime-fighting company. The premise of the sport entails taking over caseloads from purchasers and hiring particular brokers to do the precise work.
The circumstances differ sufficient to maintain issues attention-grabbing, requiring your employed weapons to do the whole lot from monitoring down a lacking particular person to discovering a stolen car. Instances are solved through a couple of means. Most depend on a dice-based sport requiring you to roll sure numbers. For instance, you may want a 4, 5, or six in an effort to full the mission. Others use time-based puzzles, providing you the prospect to hotwire vehicles or open a door by connecting wires.
The brokers themselves come geared up with stats based mostly on power, intelligence, empathy, and notion. In different phrases, you’re higher off utilizing an agent with sturdy notion to unravel circumstances requiring that talent. Brokers additionally come geared up with motion factors. As soon as spent, the agent might want to take a break, sending you again to the recruitment pool to rent your subsequent contracter.
On paper, this all sounds nice. And it’s, by way of the idea. Sadly, Tough Justice ‘84 suffers from an issue we see recurrently on the Swap; it’s not ported effectively in any respect.
Many of the points stem from poor controls. It’s straightforward to inform that this title was meant to be performed on a PC with a mouse. Transferring across the map to pick out circumstances with the management stick is a cumbersome expertise, particularly when closing dates are at play. One other downside is the inconsistent mapping of the buttons. Generally the A button is used to pick out one thing, at different occasions, the Y button. After which, generally, you’ll even want to make use of the B button. It’s messy, and it will get even worse. Let me undergo my expertise.
Choosing a case requires you to maneuver your cursor over the icon inside the metropolis. Press A. Now you’re given a spiel in regards to the case. Then it’s a must to press ZL to pick out your agent. Then A to…choose your agent. Then Y to just accept the case. Now your agent strikes to the situation on the map in a irritating gradual manner. Oh, urgent X allows you to velocity it up, nevertheless it takes your cursor away from the map. There’s no technique to know that, after all, so when your agent arrives, they sit idle for about 15 seconds whilst you strive in useless to get again to the case. The agent actually provides up and the case is routinely failed. You lose cash, XP, and status factors. The phrase “irritating” springs to thoughts.
There are different points. The introduction is so overladen with directions as to be overwhelming and complicated. The soundtrack is definitely nice by way of the synthy background music, however the audio itself is terrible—some voiceovers are tremendous loud for some purpose. It feels very poorly put collectively.
I used to be additionally caught in a loop at one level close to the start once I was advised to take a look at the store for the primary time to buy gear for my agent. After I tried to purchase one thing, I used to be advised that my present agent (who was instructed to me for the primary mission) had no spare gear slots. Why, then, am I within the store? And the way do I exit? I attempted each button to exit solely to search out myself frustratingly caught in a loop of “purchase one thing; no you may’t purchase something; purchase one thing.” I’m nonetheless unsure how I finally escaped. For sure, I used to be reluctant to return to the store once more.
General, Tough Justice ‘84 presents a novel idea that’s executed poorly on the Swap. It’s onerous to advocate this one in any respect. The soundtrack is a spotlight, for certain, and the thought of fixing circumstances is a enjoyable idea. Sadly, the controls and poor consumer interface makes this one to keep away from.