:Jake Hunter
{{Cleanup bare URLs|date=August 2022}}
{{Expand Japanese|探偵神宮寺三郎|topic=vg|date=February 2017}}
{{Infobox video game series
| title = Jake Hunter
| image = Jake Hunter wordmark.png
| caption =
| genre = Adventure game
| developer = {{unbulleted list|Data East|WorkJam|Marvelous Interactive|Arc System Works|Orange|Neilo}}
| publisher = {{unbulleted list|Data East|Media Rings|WorkJam|Expris|Arc System Works|Aksys Games}}
| creator =
| artist = {{unbulleted list|Katsuya Terada|JUNNY|Yoshio Sugiura}}
| writer = {{unbulleted list|Kazushige Nojima|Kazutaka Kodaka|Mitsue Kaneko}}
| composer = {{unbulleted list|Seiichi Hamada|Katsuhiko Nakamichi|Tomoyoshi Sato}}
| platforms = Family Computer Disk System, Nintendo Entertainment System, Sega Saturn, PlayStation, PlayStation 2, Game Boy Advance, Nintendo DS, PlayStation Portable, Virtual Console, Nintendo 3DS, PlayStation 4, Nintendo Switch, Windows, DMM GAMES
| first release version = Shinjuku Chūō Kōen Satsujin Jiken
| first release date = {{Start date|1987|4|24}}
| latest release version = Tantei Jingūji Saburō New Order
| latest release date = {{Start date|2019|07|31}}
| spinoffs =
}}
Jake Hunter, known in Japan as {{nihongo|Tantei Jingūji Saburō|探偵神宮寺三郎|extra="Detective Saburō Jingūji"}}, is a mystery adventure game series originally developed and published by Data East in 1987. The property would transfer to WorkJam after its seventh instalment, and later to Arc System Works.{{cite web|title=Arc System Works Picks Up The Jake Hunter And Theresia Series|url=http://www.siliconera.com/2017/02/06/arc-system-works-picks-jake-hunter-theresia-series/|website=Siliconera|date=6 February 2017|access-date=6 February 2017}}
The first associated game to receive an English language release was Tantei Jingūji Saburō DS: Inishie no Kioku, retitled and released in North America on June 11, 2008, by Aksys Games in truncated form as Jake Hunter: Detective Chronicles. The game was re-released on May 26, 2009, as Jake Hunter Detective Story: Memories of the Past, containing the originally localised three cases with new translations, plus three further cases, and a large number of unlockables including comics. No further releases would be announced until July 1, 2017, when Aksys Games revealed they would be bringing over Tantei Jingūji Saburō: Ghost of the Dusk in 2018.{{Cite news|url=http://gematsu.com/2017/07/jake-hunter-detective-story-ghost-dusk-coming-north-america-2018|title=Jake Hunter Detective Story: Ghost of the Dusk coming to North America in 2018 - Gematsu|date=2017-07-01|work=Gematsu|access-date=2017-07-07|language=en-US}} A prequel game, given the branding Alternate Jake Hunter internationally, was localised internally and released in 2019 with original character names and settings preserved.
History
According to Enterbrain's Famitsu, the Tantei Jingūji Saburō franchise had sold over 2,220,000 units at the time of its twentieth anniversary,https://www.famitsu.com/game/coming/2007/05/07/104,1178523760,71261,0,0.html making it one of the longest running and best-selling Japanese adventure game series in history.{{Citation needed|date=June 2019}} There are nineteen main series entries, complemented by a 25-game mobile sub-series and various examples of tie-in media. A recurrent series tradition takes titles from popular music as names for instalments, with frequent reference made to works of Kenji Sawada.
=Family Computer=
The first game of the series, {{nihongo|Shinjuku Chūō Kōen Satsujin Jiken|新宿中央公園殺人事件|extra=Shinjuku Central Park Murder Mystery}}, was released in 1987 by Data East for the Family Computer Disk System. Following in the style of Yuji Horii's popular Famicom-ported adventure games, the "command selection" style games featured advanced graphics, sound effects, and distinct hardboiled scenarios to set themselves apart from contemporaries. The series employed a number of advanced game mechanics, developing techniques which would later find popularity in the industry at large. Time played an important role in the first game, with each command selected by the player causing a certain amount of in-game time to elapse; failure to solve the mystery during the allotted time period resulting in a bad ending. This time system would later be revived in the series' 7th installment. The scenario for the series' 3rd and 4th installments was written by a fledgling Kazushige Nojima, who added segments following the secondary lead which alternated on a predetermined basis.
=Fifth generation consoles=
Production was halted after the 4th installment, but would be revived internally when Data East took on series fan Tatsuya Saito. Saito would become scenario writer for the 5th game in the series, directed by Eiichi Nishiyama, imminent heir to the role of series producer, and released on the PlayStation and Sega Saturn in 1996. This fifth entry would see several developments on the original games made possible by the use of the CD-ROM: an overhaul of the series' graphics and sound, including an opening movie featuring an animated prelude and voice acting for the first time; a "zapping" system which allowed different branches of the story to be played by way of alternating characters; 3D-rendered mini games; and the inaugural installment of a sub-series known in Japan as the Mystery Casebook games (Jake Hunter Unleashed in English releases), featuring super-deformed caricatures of the main trio encountering small-scale mysteries demanding careful logic-puzzle gameplay, which would be included alongside mainline games.
Most of these features would become recurrent in the series, with the 6th installment, written by Hirotaka Inaba, replacing the previous game's stylised character design with a painted realist style rendered by original character designer Katsuya Terada, and adding a new "password" mechanic, involving hidden codes in the main game which could be used to unlock bonus content. Bearing the newly christened series subtitle "Detective Adventure Game", both this game and the next, released exclusively for PlayStation, would feature opening movies directed by Shimako Satō.
=Sixth generation consoles=
In 1999, a financially troubled Data East licensed out the series to WorkJam, to which Nishiyama's "Team Jingūji" would transfer when Data East went bankrupt in 2003. The transition between studios marked a shift in game design, story paths becoming once more linear and perspective shifts scripted, setting the formula for later games in the series. With WorkJam founder Yutaka Kaminaga finding previous scenario writers unavailable, writing credit for the series' eighth installment, released for PlayStation 2 in 2002, fell to Mitsue Kaneko. The resultant game featured a number of peripheral references to the contemporary Grasshopper Manufacture debut The Silver Case.
The series continued at WorkJam with a further game for the PS2 and reimaginings of the Famicom games released as the inauguration of a line of mobile phone applications. The final game of the generation, co-developed by Marvelous Interactive for the Game Boy Advance, marked the series debut on handheld platforms.
=Seventh generation consoles=
Beginning with a special 20th anniversary release for the Nintendo DS, WorkJam would work with Arc System Works in development of console games, now released exclusively on handheld platforms, predominantly in the form of the Tantei Jingūji Saburō Detective Story compilation line, with the addition of a PlayStation Portable release similar in form to earlier PlayStation installments. WorkJam licensed a series of PlayStation Game Archives releases of the original Data East games to Expris, and continued their mobile game line, featuring contributions from writers such as then-Flagship affiliate Kazutaka Kodaka, to a total of twenty-four releases before it was retired.
=Eighth-generation consoles=
In 2011,{{Citation needed|date=June 2019}} WorkJam began to wind down production, with full responsibilities for the ongoing development of a special 25th-anniversary game for the Nintendo 3DS falling to Arc System Works. Several WorkJam staff, including Nishiyama and Kaneko, would form a new studio, Orange, while rights to various company properties including the Tantei Jingūji Saburō series passed to Expris. For the next five years the series would remain largely dormant, aside from Game Archives rereleases of WorkJam's two PS2 games from Expris, and a cameo by the title character in Inuwashi Urabure Tantei to Ojou-sama Keiji no Ikebukuro Jiken Fairu, a mobile game developed by Orange and scored by longtime series composer Seiichi Hamada.
In 2017, Arc System Works announced that plans for a 30th-anniversary revival had led to its obtaining of exclusive rights to Expris' WorkJam-inherited properties at the end of the previous year. Following this, the company worked with Orange and Neilo to publish several titles for handheld and home consoles, while exploring new avenues for PC delivery and reviving the mobile line for smart devices.
Characters
The main character of the series is Jake Hunter (known in Japan as {{nihongo|Saburō Jingūji|神宮寺三郎|Jingūji Saburō}}), a thirty-something (29 for the first five installments) private investigator who operates a detective agency in the Tripudio district of the fictional American city of Aspicio (Kabukichō, Shinjuku in the Japanese original). He was born the third son of a wealthy business enterprise owner, but chose to travel to New York City during his youth to work as an assistant detective. He is a heavy smoker, and often assembles his thoughts with the help of a Marlboro cigarette. According to his in-game profile, his favorite alcoholic beverage is cognac, and he drives a green Mini Cooper.
Hunter is persistently accompanied in his investigations by Yulia Marks (known in Japan as {{nihongo|Yōko Misono|御苑洋子|Misono Yōko}}), his polyglot assistant, and often collaborates with his old friend Scott "King" Kingsley (known in Japan as {{nihongo|Sanzō "Kuma-san" Kumano|熊野参造|Kumano Sanzō}}), a middle-aged inspector with the city police.
=Voice acting=
Voice acting was first used in certain game scenes in the 5th installment, and has been implemented in most subsequent releases, excluding those released for mobile, GBA and DS. Jingūji has been voiced by Yukimasa Kishino, Akio Ōtsuka, Jūrōta Kosugi, and Kaoru Katō; Yōko by Tsumugi Ōsawa, Yōko Saitō, Fumiko Orikasa, Kazue Nakamoto, Seiko Yoshida, and Mamiko Noto; and Sanzō by Fumihiko Tachiki, Kōji Ishii, Masaaki Tsukada, and Naomi Otome.
List of media
class = wikitable |
align = center
!# !Title !Release date !Developer !Platform !Synopsis |
.
|1 |Shinjuku Chūō Kōen Satsujin Jiken |{{vgrelease|JP|April 24, 1987}} |align=center rowspan="9" |Data East |align=center|Disk System |width=35%|The strangled corpse of a popular hostess is discovered at the Shinjuku Central Park. A doctor, a homeless man and someone else may know something. |
2
|Yokohama-kō Renzoku Satsujin Jiken |{{vgrelease|JP|February 26, 1988}} |align=center|Family Computer |align=left|The search for a missing girlfriend results in the discovery of hidden firearms, and the police begin to suspect a link with an underground trafficking organization. |
rowspan="2" |3
|Kiken na Futari Zenpen |{{vgrelease|JP|December 9, 1988}} |align=center rowspan="2"|Disk System |rowspan="2"|Jingūji visits a race circuit at the invitation of one of Yōko's friends. A motorcycle racer crashes at the circuit, but a different racer's body is recovered from the crash site. |
Kiken na Futari Kōhen 危険な二人 後編 Dangerous Duo Latter Part |{{vgrelease|JP|February 10, 1989}} |
4
|Toki no Sugiyuku Mama ni... |{{vgrelease|JP|September 28, 1990}} |align=center|Family Computer |Jingūji investigates a burglary at a mansion, while Yōko searches for the home of a young boy. Both cases appear simple, until they become one. |
5
|Mikan no Rupo |{{vgrelease|JP|November 29, 1996}} |align=center rowspan="2"|PlayStation |An overseas package sent by a journalist acquaintance of Jingūji's arrives at the agency, containing a small key. Collaborating with a new ally, he sets out in search of a way to uncover its meaning. |
6
|Yume no Owari ni |{{vgrelease|JP|April 23, 1998}} |Jingūji is tormented by hideous dreams of his past. The mystery begins as Yōko unwittingly decides to investigate a requested case. |
N/A
|Tantei Jingūji Saburō Early Collection |{{vgrelease|JP|August 5, 1999}} |align=center rowspan="2"|PlayStation |A compilation of the early games released for the Family Computer and Family Computer Disk System |
7
|Tomoshibi ga Kienu Ma ni |{{vgrelease|JP|November 25, 1999}} |An injured young man suddenly takes refuge from yakuza at the agency, complicating the investigation of two cases, as each of the separate events are gradually woven together. |
8
|Innocent Black |{{vgrelease|JP|October 4, 2002}} |align=center rowspan="2"|WorkJam |align=center rowspan="2"|PlayStation 2 |Jingūji is asked to search for the missing daughter of the director of a hospital where he had received treatment. This small case gradually expands to revive a deep and complex mystery. |
9
|KIND OF BLUE |{{vgrelease|JP|April 22, 2004}} |Lonely and bored after several months without any cases, Jingūji gladly returns to work when the Kantō Meiji group requests the investigation of a certain individual. |
10
|Shiroi Kage no Shōjo |{{vgrelease|JP|January 27, 2005}} |align=center|WorkJam |align=center|Game Boy Advance |When Jingūji attends his friend's funeral, his friend's mother asks him to investigate a missing person, while Kumano asks him to investigate the urban myth of "Yū-chan". |
11
|Inishie no Kioku |{{vgrelease|JP|July 19, 2007}} |align=center rowspan="6"|WorkJam |align=center rowspan="3"|Nintendo DS |Jake is arrested by the police for a crime he did not commit; a young man named Ken seems the only person who might prove his innocence. |
12
|Kienai Kokoro |{{vgrelease|JP|April 24, 2008}} |Jingūji is asked to investigate the suicide of an elementary school girl from 20 years ago. When he visits her school, he meets the school principal who demands the investigation of another new case... |
13
|Fuserareta Shinjitsu |{{vgrelease|JP|March 29, 2009}} |After finding himself momentarily caught in the limelight, Jingūji returns to his craft when a kidnapper specifically requests the involvement of "Detective J". |
14
|Hai to Daiyamondo |{{vgrelease|JP|September 17, 2009}} |align=center|PlayStation Portable |Looking into an inheritance dispute, Jingūji ends up investigating five seemingly unconnected cases and discovers a conspiracy. |
15
|Akai Chō |{{vgrelease|JP|September 30, 2010}} |align=center|Nintendo DS |Following a fresh wave of violence, Jingūji sets out on the trail of a terrorist known as "Red Butterfly" who was responsible for a series of bombings twenty years ago. |
16
|Fukushū no Rondo |{{vgrelease|JP|June 28, 2012}} |align=center|Nintendo 3DS |Pursued by both sides of the law, Jingūji finds himself juggling his own survival and his search for the truth. |
N/A
|Tantei Jingūji Saburō Oldies |{{vgrelease|JP|June 26, 2017}} |align=center rowspan="3"|Arc System Works |App collecting remasters of games in the original mobile series (No.2-No.20){{Cite web | url=https://www.arcsystemworks.jp/jinguji-oldies/ | title=探偵 神宮寺三郎 Oldies}} |
17
|GHOST OF THE DUSK |{{vgrelease|JP|August 31, 2017}} |align=center|Nintendo 3DS |The discovery of a dead vagrant in a run-down mansion rapidly spirals into a decades-old investigation. |
18
|Prism of Eyes |{{vgrelease|JP|August 9, 2018}} |align=center|PlayStation 4 |A trio of standalone stories starring each of the three series regulars, alongside remakes of ten games from the original mobile series (No.4, 6, 7, 8, 11, 12, 14, 16, 18, 19){{Cite web | url=http://www.arcsystemworks.jp/jinguji/poe/story03/ |title = ストーリー〈リメイク〉 | 探偵 神宮寺三郎 プリズム・オブ・アイズ}} |
SP
|Daedalus: The Awakening of Golden Jazz |{{vgrelease|JP|December 13, 2018}} |align=center|Arc System Works |align=center|PlayStation 4 |A young Saburō Jingūji heads to New York prior to joining the Tokyo Metropolitan Police after the death of his grandfather. |
N/A
|Tantei Jingūji Saburō New Order |{{vgrelease|JP|July 31, 2019}} |align=center|Arc System Works |align=center|iOS |App for distribution of games in a new mobile series{{Cite web | url=https://dengekionline.com/articles/6407/ |title = アプリ『探偵 神宮寺三郎 New Order』で『疑惑のエース』が7月31日配信| date=18 July 2019 }} |
=Mobile series=
The mobile games began development under WorkJam for flip phones in 2003. The first four games were remakes of the original Famicom games, featuring (often significant) reworking of their stories. Following Arc System Works' acquisition of the series in 2017, the original games were collected in a smartphone app, and the line relaunched with a new series beginning in 2019.
class=wikitable border="4" |
align=center
!# !Japanese title !English title |
01
|Shinjuku Chūō Kōen Satsujin Jiken |The Petty Murder of a Fragile Heart (on DS) |
02
|Yokohama-kō Renzoku Satsujin Jiken |Seaside City Conspiracy (on DS) |
03
|Kiken na Futari |Crash and Burn (on DS) |
04
|Toki no Sugiyuku Mama Ni... |As Time Goes By (on DS) |
05
|Akai Me no Tora |The Red-Eyed Tiger (on DS) |
06
|Rokumai no Hankō | — |
07
|Bōen wo Sagase! | — |
08
|Aoi Me no Ryū | — |
09
|Kito no Yoru | — |
10
|Shikaku no Wana | — |
11
|Inu to Yobareta Otoko | — |
12
|Futairo no Shōjo | — |
13
|Inochi Tatsu Kokugen | — |
14
|Takusareta Yubiwa | — |
15
|Shingi no Hazama | — |
16
|Tsubaki no Yukue | — |
17
|Akenai Yoru ni | — |
18
|Kadan no Itte | — |
19
|Rensasuru Noroi | — |
20
|Naki Ko no Shōzō | — |
21
|Onihimeden |Legend of the Demon Princess (on 3DS) |
22
|Ai Yue ni |For Love (on 3DS) |
23
|Wasurenagusa no Omoi |Forget-me-not (on 3DS) |
24
|Yurameku Hitotose |Four Seasons (on 3DS) |
25
|Giwaku no Ace | — |
=Other media=
The series has been accompanied by a plethora of tie-in books, the first of which, a choose-your-own-adventure style gamebook for young adults, was released in 1988. After the series revival at Data East, Tatsuya Saito would pen a prequel novel documenting the first meeting between Jingūji and Kumano. A further novel would be published in 2000, followed by a novelisation of the eighth game. Another prequel, telling a story set during Jingūji's schooldays, was published by Dengeki Bunko in 2004, followed by a brief sequence of releases at Sesame Books, ending in 2007.
Manga adaptations of the third and sixth games were previously made available online, and several game guides were published prior to the series' shift toward handheld platforms.
Several soundtrack CDs have also been released, featuring a range of music from across the series composed by series stalwart Seiichi Hamada and others. A Drama CD featuring three short vignettes was included with early copies of the sixth game.
The first four games in the series were released on the Wii's Virtual Console in Japan.
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- WorkJam
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20090918223201/http://www.workjam.co.jp/product/jinguji/index.htm Innocent Black]
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20091003002443/http://www.workjam.co.jp/product/jinguji9/ KIND OF BLUE]
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20111006170541/http://www.workjam.co.jp/mobile/jinguji/jinguji01.html Mobile series]
- Marvelous Entertainment
- [http://www.marv.jp/special/game/gba/jinguji10/ Shiroi Kage no Shōjo]
- Arc System Works
- [http://arcsystemworks.jp/jinguji/ Kienai Kokoro]
- Orange
- [http://orange-app.jp/game/jinguji_new_order/ New Order]
{{Arc System Works}}
{{Data East}}
Category:Arc System Works franchises
Category:Data East video games
Category:Detective video games
Category:Famicom Disk System games
Category:Game Boy Advance games
Category:Japan-exclusive video games
Category:Nintendo Entertainment System games
Category:Nintendo Switch games
Category:PlayStation (console) games
Category:PlayStation Portable games
Category:Video game franchises