Spoiler : SoC (whatever that means) :
Such srz business. I never like it when things get too serious.
Instinctively going back to the old form of address. Good going, Apollo.
Mr. Gavin has good in him...? Nope! Ragequitting!
I wanted to act all cool and mysterious!
I wonder if that was the first time I saw Edgeworth being called out by the Judge.
Updated autopsy reporttttt
Really bad at testimonies with a lot of statements.
Ah, the judge is competitive. Great.
Ah, she's going out of her way to let Edgeworth be embarrassed, this is great.
Of course Wright acted for the lulz. Why wouldn't he.
Gavin laughing is so funny. I'm laughing out loud like crazy.
That broken/writer's notes penalty is phenomenal. I know the pain of having billions of penalties to write.
The way the judge smiles is amazing.
The way he just replies that he's fine every time the judge bullies him is fantastic. It's instinct.
The glorious DD act. Yes...
Must be a really good brand of grape juice.
Let's use the mastermind music. Why not.
"I don't know what he's doing... But that, too, is part of my plan." Grape Juice is truly amazing.
Haha. A twist. A twist I really didn't expect. How do people come up with this stuff? How do they work around the cannon cases? My brand of trial-making is making stuff up when something stops making sense until it makes sense again.
And now you're going back to the past and talking about Gavin and Phoenix's disbarment. Bloody hell.
Drunkards.
Instinctively going back to the old form of address. Good going, Apollo.
Mr. Gavin has good in him...? Nope! Ragequitting!
I wanted to act all cool and mysterious!
I wonder if that was the first time I saw Edgeworth being called out by the Judge.
Updated autopsy reporttttt
Really bad at testimonies with a lot of statements.
Ah, the judge is competitive. Great.
Ah, she's going out of her way to let Edgeworth be embarrassed, this is great.
Of course Wright acted for the lulz. Why wouldn't he.
Gavin laughing is so funny. I'm laughing out loud like crazy.
That broken/writer's notes penalty is phenomenal. I know the pain of having billions of penalties to write.
The way the judge smiles is amazing.
The way he just replies that he's fine every time the judge bullies him is fantastic. It's instinct.
The glorious DD act. Yes...
Must be a really good brand of grape juice.
Let's use the mastermind music. Why not.
"I don't know what he's doing... But that, too, is part of my plan." Grape Juice is truly amazing.
Haha. A twist. A twist I really didn't expect. How do people come up with this stuff? How do they work around the cannon cases? My brand of trial-making is making stuff up when something stops making sense until it makes sense again.
And now you're going back to the past and talking about Gavin and Phoenix's disbarment. Bloody hell.
Drunkards.
Spoiler : Thoughts :
I always think trials made by other people are amazing. They have mysteries, and oftentimes they work around established canon. The retrial cases look really hard to make.
I can't solve half the puzzles on my own (even if puzzles aren't the reason I play these games).
This is all a bit darker than I'm used to, and a lot of characters were acting all evil and stuff. It fits this case, but I don't like seeing them like that. Sometimes. Sometimes I do like seeing characters such a Trucy or Phoenix act like masterminds.
Edgeworth... I see Edgeworth as a man who would not cooperate in hiding the truth. Along with Apollo, perhaps the only two lawyers I see as being incorruptible (I don't remember if Edgeworth actually committed any crimes in canon, despite the implications). This isn't the role he played in this case so much, but that's fine.
The judge is really good. It was only recently I found I have a much easier and more enjoyable time writing judges when I don't use the default one. I'm just not good at his brand of comedy besides the occasional hearing, eyesight, or irresponsibility joke. But this judge has a great character.
Kristoph was a criminal version of himself, though those moments at the end where you tried to tie up the plotpoints were great as well. What a dream. Every time he laughed was also hilarious, though.
I can't solve half the puzzles on my own (even if puzzles aren't the reason I play these games).
This is all a bit darker than I'm used to, and a lot of characters were acting all evil and stuff. It fits this case, but I don't like seeing them like that. Sometimes. Sometimes I do like seeing characters such a Trucy or Phoenix act like masterminds.
Edgeworth... I see Edgeworth as a man who would not cooperate in hiding the truth. Along with Apollo, perhaps the only two lawyers I see as being incorruptible (I don't remember if Edgeworth actually committed any crimes in canon, despite the implications). This isn't the role he played in this case so much, but that's fine.
The judge is really good. It was only recently I found I have a much easier and more enjoyable time writing judges when I don't use the default one. I'm just not good at his brand of comedy besides the occasional hearing, eyesight, or irresponsibility joke. But this judge has a great character.
Kristoph was a criminal version of himself, though those moments at the end where you tried to tie up the plotpoints were great as well. What a dream. Every time he laughed was also hilarious, though.