Attorney Codex: Ace

Ace Attorney Codex bills itself as a fresh take on the beloved courtroom drama series, introducing a new protagonist, attorney Themis Codex, alongside a digital evidence management system called the “Codex Log.” Set in a near-future Neo-Los Angeles, the game blends classic turnabout logic with cyberpunk flair—think holographic evidence and AI-assisted cross-examinations.

Fans of Ace Attorney , Danganronpa , or investigative visual novels. Skip if: You want lighthearted, wacky anime courtroom antics above all else. ace attorney codex

The writing is sharp. The first case, “The Byte-Sized Turnabout,” hooks you immediately with a murder at a VR start-up. New characters—like rival prosecutor Selene Cross, who files objections as “legal exceptions” mid-trial—bring energy and wit. The Codex Log is a clever mechanic: you tag, compare, and zoom into evidence layers, making deductions feel more interactive than ever. The final case’s twist genuinely surprised me, something the series hasn’t done since Trials and Tribulations . Ace Attorney Codex bills itself as a fresh

Pacing lags in Case 3 (“Turnabout Recall”), where a memory-editing gimmick drags on. Some classic Ace Attorney charm (e.g., over-the-top witness breakdowns) feels toned down in favor of a darker, more procedural tone. Veterans may miss Phoenix, Maya, or Edgeworth—cameos are brief post-credits scenes. The writing is sharp

Occasional technical hiccups: the Switch version has minor frame drops during zoom-ins. Also, the “Auto-Object” feature (a hint system) is too generous, spoiling puzzles if left on.