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Criminal Case Wiki is a FANDOM Games Community. View Mobile Site JokeyPsych EndgameHonest GalaxyQuest. Penelope Grace Garcia is the BAU's former Technical Analyst and also the team's Media Liaison Officer since Jennifer Jareau's promotion to Supervisory Special Agent; the latter is a job that she formerly shared with Aaron Hotchner before his departure from the BAU and shared the position with Emily Prentiss prior to her own departure in the show's series finale 'And in the End.'
Criminal CasePretty Simple,ReleaseNovember 15, 2012August 28, 2014April 15, 2015Criminal Case is a detective-themed released on November 15, 2012 for. An version was released worldwide on August 28, 2014, followed by an version on April 15, 2015. In 2018, the Facebook version was converted from to. Developed and published by French indie studio Pretty Simple, Criminal Case has over ten million average monthly users.
On December 9, 2013, Criminal Case was crowned the Facebook Game of the Year 2013. Contents.History Pretty Simple was founded in 2010 by partners Bastien Cazenave and Corentin Raux and was backed by Idinvest Partners. Idenvest originally put up €300,000 in seed capital, which was followed by another €2.5 million after the game achieved a level of early modest success.
The murder investigation theme was chosen first by the developers, who decided to make the game in the Hidden Object genre due to it making both business and personal sense. Just two months after the games launch, it had 1 million Daily Active Users. As of mid-2013, Criminal Case attracted more than ten million monthly average users and became highly competitive with Candy Crush Saga, the most popular game on Facebook with over 46 million average monthly users. The developers explained in late 2013: 'To put out an investigation each week, there's almost 30 people working on it. We have writers and artists just really working hard to put out this content.' On December 4, 2013, the game achieved over 100 million users.
Five days later, Criminal Case won the Facebook Game of the Year 2013 award. By this time the episodes had been translated into nine languages, and they were making an 8-digit sum of revenue.
The game has a 40-percent share of Facebook users. Some reasons cited for the game's success include its graphic crime scenes and meaningful narratives. 2017 research by United Worldwide found that 80% of the active players are women aged between 30 and 55. Six additional titles, Criminal Case: Pacific Bay, Criminal Case: Save the World!, Criminal Case: Mysteries of the Past, Criminal Case: The Conspiracy, Criminal Case: Travel in Time and Criminal Case: Supernatural Investigations were launched. Critical reception Australian Council on Children and the Media gave the game an amber rating (parental guidance required) due to containing gambling elements. Similarly, SaferKid cautioned parents that the title included crude humor and profanity. Common Sense Media deemed it 'polished' and 'interesting'.
AdWeek praised the game's strong story and interesting gameplay. The Spectrum felt the game was 'oddly gruesome' and 'whimsical'. Funky Games thought it was one of the five best hidden object games for Android or iOS platforms. Kotaku described the game as dark and gritty, though felt that the pay-to-play element of gameplay held them back from progressing.
References. Tach, Dave (December 9, 2013).
Retrieved February 23, 2014. ^ Simple, Pretty. Retrieved April 22, 2018.
December 10, 2013. Retrieved April 22, 2018.
Retrieved April 22, 2018. Retrieved April 22, 2018. Ligman, Kris. Retrieved April 22, 2018. Glasser, AJ (December 9, 2013). Retrieved February 23, 2014. Retrieved April 22, 2018.
March 8, 2014. Archived from on March 8, 2014. Retrieved April 22, 2018. December 9, 2013. Retrieved April 22, 2018. LExpansion.com (in French). December 9, 2013.
Retrieved April 22, 2018. Rude Baguette. November 26, 2013.
Retrieved April 22, 2018. MacGuill, Dan (December 10, 2013).
Retrieved February 23, 2014. Archived from on August 28, 2013. Retrieved February 23, 2014. Jardine, Alexandra. Creativity Online.
Retrieved April 22, 2018. Retrieved April 22, 2018. Retrieved April 22, 2018. Retrieved April 22, 2018. Retrieved April 22, 2018. Retrieved April 22, 2018.
The Spectrum & Daily News. Retrieved April 22, 2018.
FunkyGames.de (in German). April 14, 2018. Retrieved April 22, 2018. Kotaku Australia. December 13, 2012.
Retrieved April 22, 2018.External links.
Criminal Case | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Pretty Simple |
Platform(s) | Facebook(HTML5), iOS, Android |
Release | Facebook November 15, 2012 iOS August 28, 2014 Android April 15, 2015 |
Genre(s) | Puzzle |
Criminal Case is a detective-themed hidden object game released on November 15, 2012 for Facebook. An iOS version was released worldwide on August 28, 2014, followed by an Android version on April 15, 2015. In 2018, the Facebook version was converted from Adobe Flash to HTML5. Developed and published by French indie studio Pretty Simple, Criminal Case has over ten million average monthly users. On December 9, 2013, Criminal Case was crowned the Facebook Game of the Year 2013.[1]
Pretty Simple was founded in 2010 by partners Bastien Cazenave and Corentin Raux and was backed by Idinvest Partners.[2] Idenvest originally put up €300,000 in seed capital, which was followed by another €2.5 million after the game achieved a level of early modest success.[3] The murder investigation theme was chosen first by the developers, who decided to make the game in the Hidden Object genre due to it making both business and personal sense.[4] Just two months after the games launch, it had 1 million Daily Active Users.[2] As of mid-2013, Criminal Case attracted more than ten million monthly average users and became highly competitive with Candy Crush Saga, the most popular game on Facebook with over 46 million average monthly users.[citation needed] The developers explained in late 2013: 'To put out an investigation each week, there's almost 30 people working on it. We have writers and artists just really working hard to put out this content.'[5] On December 4, 2013, the game achieved over 100 million users.[6] Five days later, Criminal Case won the Facebook Game of the Year 2013 award.[7][8][9][10] By this time the episodes had been translated into nine languages,[11] and they were making an 8-digit sum of revenue.[12] The game has a 40-percent share of Facebook users.[13] Some reasons cited for the game's success include its graphic crime scenes and meaningful narratives.[14] 2017 research by United Worldwide found that 80% of the active players are women aged between 30 and 55.[15] Six additional titles, Criminal Case: Pacific Bay, Criminal Case: Save the World!, Criminal Case: Mysteries of the Past, Criminal Case: The Conspiracy, Criminal Case: Travel in Time and Criminal Case: Supernatural Investigations were launched.[16]Blokus strategy tips.
Australian Council on Children and the Media gave the game an amber rating (parental guidance required) due to containing gambling elements.[17] Similarly, SaferKid cautioned parents that the title included crude humor and profanity.[18] Common Sense Media deemed it 'polished' and 'interesting'.[19] AdWeek praised the game's strong story and interesting gameplay.[20] The Spectrum felt the game was 'oddly gruesome' and 'whimsical'.[21] Funky Games thought it was one of the five best hidden object games for Android or iOS platforms.[22] Kotaku described the game as dark and gritty, though felt that the pay-to-play element of gameplay held them back from progressing.[23]
On December 9, 2013, Criminal Case was crowned the Facebook Game of the Year 2013. Contents.History Pretty Simple was founded in 2010 by partners Bastien Cazenave and Corentin Raux and was backed by Idinvest Partners. Idenvest originally put up €300,000 in seed capital, which was followed by another €2.5 million after the game achieved a level of early modest success.
The murder investigation theme was chosen first by the developers, who decided to make the game in the Hidden Object genre due to it making both business and personal sense. Just two months after the games launch, it had 1 million Daily Active Users. As of mid-2013, Criminal Case attracted more than ten million monthly average users and became highly competitive with Candy Crush Saga, the most popular game on Facebook with over 46 million average monthly users. The developers explained in late 2013: 'To put out an investigation each week, there's almost 30 people working on it. We have writers and artists just really working hard to put out this content.' On December 4, 2013, the game achieved over 100 million users.
Five days later, Criminal Case won the Facebook Game of the Year 2013 award. By this time the episodes had been translated into nine languages, and they were making an 8-digit sum of revenue.
The game has a 40-percent share of Facebook users. Some reasons cited for the game's success include its graphic crime scenes and meaningful narratives. 2017 research by United Worldwide found that 80% of the active players are women aged between 30 and 55. Six additional titles, Criminal Case: Pacific Bay, Criminal Case: Save the World!, Criminal Case: Mysteries of the Past, Criminal Case: The Conspiracy, Criminal Case: Travel in Time and Criminal Case: Supernatural Investigations were launched. Critical reception Australian Council on Children and the Media gave the game an amber rating (parental guidance required) due to containing gambling elements. Similarly, SaferKid cautioned parents that the title included crude humor and profanity. Common Sense Media deemed it 'polished' and 'interesting'.
AdWeek praised the game's strong story and interesting gameplay. The Spectrum felt the game was 'oddly gruesome' and 'whimsical'. Funky Games thought it was one of the five best hidden object games for Android or iOS platforms. Kotaku described the game as dark and gritty, though felt that the pay-to-play element of gameplay held them back from progressing.
References. Tach, Dave (December 9, 2013).
Retrieved February 23, 2014. ^ Simple, Pretty. Retrieved April 22, 2018.
December 10, 2013. Retrieved April 22, 2018.
Retrieved April 22, 2018. Retrieved April 22, 2018. Ligman, Kris. Retrieved April 22, 2018. Glasser, AJ (December 9, 2013). Retrieved February 23, 2014. Retrieved April 22, 2018.
March 8, 2014. Archived from on March 8, 2014. Retrieved April 22, 2018. December 9, 2013. Retrieved April 22, 2018. LExpansion.com (in French). December 9, 2013.
Retrieved April 22, 2018. Rude Baguette. November 26, 2013.
Retrieved April 22, 2018. MacGuill, Dan (December 10, 2013).
Retrieved February 23, 2014. Archived from on August 28, 2013. Retrieved February 23, 2014. Jardine, Alexandra. Creativity Online.
Retrieved April 22, 2018. Retrieved April 22, 2018. Retrieved April 22, 2018. Retrieved April 22, 2018. Retrieved April 22, 2018. Retrieved April 22, 2018.
The Spectrum & Daily News. Retrieved April 22, 2018.
FunkyGames.de (in German). April 14, 2018. Retrieved April 22, 2018. Kotaku Australia. December 13, 2012.
Retrieved April 22, 2018.External links.
Criminal Case | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Pretty Simple |
Platform(s) | Facebook(HTML5), iOS, Android |
Release | Facebook November 15, 2012 iOS August 28, 2014 Android April 15, 2015 |
Genre(s) | Puzzle |
Criminal Case is a detective-themed hidden object game released on November 15, 2012 for Facebook. An iOS version was released worldwide on August 28, 2014, followed by an Android version on April 15, 2015. In 2018, the Facebook version was converted from Adobe Flash to HTML5. Developed and published by French indie studio Pretty Simple, Criminal Case has over ten million average monthly users. On December 9, 2013, Criminal Case was crowned the Facebook Game of the Year 2013.[1]
Pretty Simple was founded in 2010 by partners Bastien Cazenave and Corentin Raux and was backed by Idinvest Partners.[2] Idenvest originally put up €300,000 in seed capital, which was followed by another €2.5 million after the game achieved a level of early modest success.[3] The murder investigation theme was chosen first by the developers, who decided to make the game in the Hidden Object genre due to it making both business and personal sense.[4] Just two months after the games launch, it had 1 million Daily Active Users.[2] As of mid-2013, Criminal Case attracted more than ten million monthly average users and became highly competitive with Candy Crush Saga, the most popular game on Facebook with over 46 million average monthly users.[citation needed] The developers explained in late 2013: 'To put out an investigation each week, there's almost 30 people working on it. We have writers and artists just really working hard to put out this content.'[5] On December 4, 2013, the game achieved over 100 million users.[6] Five days later, Criminal Case won the Facebook Game of the Year 2013 award.[7][8][9][10] By this time the episodes had been translated into nine languages,[11] and they were making an 8-digit sum of revenue.[12] The game has a 40-percent share of Facebook users.[13] Some reasons cited for the game's success include its graphic crime scenes and meaningful narratives.[14] 2017 research by United Worldwide found that 80% of the active players are women aged between 30 and 55.[15] Six additional titles, Criminal Case: Pacific Bay, Criminal Case: Save the World!, Criminal Case: Mysteries of the Past, Criminal Case: The Conspiracy, Criminal Case: Travel in Time and Criminal Case: Supernatural Investigations were launched.[16]Blokus strategy tips.
Australian Council on Children and the Media gave the game an amber rating (parental guidance required) due to containing gambling elements.[17] Similarly, SaferKid cautioned parents that the title included crude humor and profanity.[18] Common Sense Media deemed it 'polished' and 'interesting'.[19] AdWeek praised the game's strong story and interesting gameplay.[20] The Spectrum felt the game was 'oddly gruesome' and 'whimsical'.[21] Funky Games thought it was one of the five best hidden object games for Android or iOS platforms.[22] Kotaku described the game as dark and gritty, though felt that the pay-to-play element of gameplay held them back from progressing.[23]
On December 9, 2013, Criminal Case was crowned the Facebook Game of the Year 2013. Contents.History Pretty Simple was founded in 2010 by partners Bastien Cazenave and Corentin Raux and was backed by Idinvest Partners. Idenvest originally put up €300,000 in seed capital, which was followed by another €2.5 million after the game achieved a level of early modest success.
The murder investigation theme was chosen first by the developers, who decided to make the game in the Hidden Object genre due to it making both business and personal sense. Just two months after the games launch, it had 1 million Daily Active Users. As of mid-2013, Criminal Case attracted more than ten million monthly average users and became highly competitive with Candy Crush Saga, the most popular game on Facebook with over 46 million average monthly users. The developers explained in late 2013: 'To put out an investigation each week, there's almost 30 people working on it. We have writers and artists just really working hard to put out this content.' On December 4, 2013, the game achieved over 100 million users.
Five days later, Criminal Case won the Facebook Game of the Year 2013 award. By this time the episodes had been translated into nine languages, and they were making an 8-digit sum of revenue.
The game has a 40-percent share of Facebook users. Some reasons cited for the game's success include its graphic crime scenes and meaningful narratives. 2017 research by United Worldwide found that 80% of the active players are women aged between 30 and 55. Six additional titles, Criminal Case: Pacific Bay, Criminal Case: Save the World!, Criminal Case: Mysteries of the Past, Criminal Case: The Conspiracy, Criminal Case: Travel in Time and Criminal Case: Supernatural Investigations were launched. Critical reception Australian Council on Children and the Media gave the game an amber rating (parental guidance required) due to containing gambling elements. Similarly, SaferKid cautioned parents that the title included crude humor and profanity. Common Sense Media deemed it 'polished' and 'interesting'.
AdWeek praised the game's strong story and interesting gameplay. The Spectrum felt the game was 'oddly gruesome' and 'whimsical'. Funky Games thought it was one of the five best hidden object games for Android or iOS platforms. Kotaku described the game as dark and gritty, though felt that the pay-to-play element of gameplay held them back from progressing.
References. Tach, Dave (December 9, 2013).
Retrieved February 23, 2014. ^ Simple, Pretty. Retrieved April 22, 2018.
December 10, 2013. Retrieved April 22, 2018.
Retrieved April 22, 2018. Retrieved April 22, 2018. Ligman, Kris. Retrieved April 22, 2018. Glasser, AJ (December 9, 2013). Retrieved February 23, 2014. Retrieved April 22, 2018.
March 8, 2014. Archived from on March 8, 2014. Retrieved April 22, 2018. December 9, 2013. Retrieved April 22, 2018. LExpansion.com (in French). December 9, 2013.
Retrieved April 22, 2018. Rude Baguette. November 26, 2013.
Retrieved April 22, 2018. MacGuill, Dan (December 10, 2013).
Retrieved February 23, 2014. Archived from on August 28, 2013. Retrieved February 23, 2014. Jardine, Alexandra. Creativity Online.
Retrieved April 22, 2018. Retrieved April 22, 2018. Retrieved April 22, 2018. Retrieved April 22, 2018. Retrieved April 22, 2018. Retrieved April 22, 2018.
The Spectrum & Daily News. Retrieved April 22, 2018.
FunkyGames.de (in German). April 14, 2018. Retrieved April 22, 2018. Kotaku Australia. December 13, 2012.
Retrieved April 22, 2018.External links.
Criminal Case | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Pretty Simple |
Platform(s) | Facebook(HTML5), iOS, Android |
Release | Facebook November 15, 2012 iOS August 28, 2014 Android April 15, 2015 |
Genre(s) | Puzzle |
Criminal Case is a detective-themed hidden object game released on November 15, 2012 for Facebook. An iOS version was released worldwide on August 28, 2014, followed by an Android version on April 15, 2015. In 2018, the Facebook version was converted from Adobe Flash to HTML5. Developed and published by French indie studio Pretty Simple, Criminal Case has over ten million average monthly users. On December 9, 2013, Criminal Case was crowned the Facebook Game of the Year 2013.[1]
Pretty Simple was founded in 2010 by partners Bastien Cazenave and Corentin Raux and was backed by Idinvest Partners.[2] Idenvest originally put up €300,000 in seed capital, which was followed by another €2.5 million after the game achieved a level of early modest success.[3] The murder investigation theme was chosen first by the developers, who decided to make the game in the Hidden Object genre due to it making both business and personal sense.[4] Just two months after the games launch, it had 1 million Daily Active Users.[2] As of mid-2013, Criminal Case attracted more than ten million monthly average users and became highly competitive with Candy Crush Saga, the most popular game on Facebook with over 46 million average monthly users.[citation needed] The developers explained in late 2013: 'To put out an investigation each week, there's almost 30 people working on it. We have writers and artists just really working hard to put out this content.'[5] On December 4, 2013, the game achieved over 100 million users.[6] Five days later, Criminal Case won the Facebook Game of the Year 2013 award.[7][8][9][10] By this time the episodes had been translated into nine languages,[11] and they were making an 8-digit sum of revenue.[12] The game has a 40-percent share of Facebook users.[13] Some reasons cited for the game's success include its graphic crime scenes and meaningful narratives.[14] 2017 research by United Worldwide found that 80% of the active players are women aged between 30 and 55.[15] Six additional titles, Criminal Case: Pacific Bay, Criminal Case: Save the World!, Criminal Case: Mysteries of the Past, Criminal Case: The Conspiracy, Criminal Case: Travel in Time and Criminal Case: Supernatural Investigations were launched.[16]Blokus strategy tips.
Australian Council on Children and the Media gave the game an amber rating (parental guidance required) due to containing gambling elements.[17] Similarly, SaferKid cautioned parents that the title included crude humor and profanity.[18] Common Sense Media deemed it 'polished' and 'interesting'.[19] AdWeek praised the game's strong story and interesting gameplay.[20] The Spectrum felt the game was 'oddly gruesome' and 'whimsical'.[21] Funky Games thought it was one of the five best hidden object games for Android or iOS platforms.[22] Kotaku described the game as dark and gritty, though felt that the pay-to-play element of gameplay held them back from progressing.[23]