85
CRITIK
Indigo Prophecy is an action-adventure game that involves the player in making decisions to alter the narrative. The name change in North America was made to avoid confusion with Michael Moore's Fahrenheit 9/11 documentary film, which was released in 2004. Indigo Prophecy introduced elements like ethical ambiguity, romance, the inability to perish, and interactive storytelling that would endure in Quantic Dream later games.
Game analysis
Critik Scorecard
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Reviews
41 reviews found100
Gaming Age
Jan 1, 1970
Summary and quote unavailable.
100
Times Online
Jan 1, 1970
Summary and quote unavailable.
100
Just Adventure
Jan 1, 1970
Summary and quote unavailable.
93
GameZone
Jan 1, 1970
It's not a terribly big budget epic; it's like that smaller, incredibly well-done indie movie that raises the bar with a great core concept and striking attention to detail throughout.
93
IC-Games
Jan 1, 1970
Fahrenheit features a fascinating, ever evolving storyline that really does change in real time depending on your actions. For example during the first segments (we won’t spoil much we promise) you have the option of cleaning up the murder scene or to flee the scene.
92
Gamer 2.0
Jan 1, 1970
Summary and quote unavailable.
91
Gamezilla!
Jan 1, 1970
Summary and quote unavailable.
90
Computer Games Magazine
Jan 1, 1970
Summary and quote unavailable.
90
Computer Gaming World
Jan 1, 1970
Indigo Prophecy marks a tremendous rebirth for a very stagnant genre. Let's hope its mature style serves as an inspiration for other developers.
90
Total Video Games
Jan 1, 1970
Summary and quote unavailable.