The game has a cool film noir feel to it. The narration is voiced, and you have the option to skip the lewd scenes if you wish to retain the story’s momentum (the scenes can be viewed in the gallery, so you won’t miss out on them) for your playthrough. The spicy scenes are animated yet vanilla, so this game’s appeal lies in the actual investigation, pleasant (yet repetitive) jazz BGM, and the fictional urban setting during the prohibition era.
During one of the point & click scenes, I thought the game had frozen because I wasn’t getting any feedback anywhere, but it was simply an issue of finding the precise point in the scene. Another such scene involved looking through a file cabinet to locate a file, and to succeed, I had to listen to what the narrator was saying carefully before I attempted the search. It was so easy to set the game on auto-advance and not pay close attention to the narration, but I liked that the game seemed to test me at some times.
There are “bad” endings when you fail to solve the case, but saving once when prompted to identify the murderer got me the successful ending. The game is not difficult, and it entertained me for a couple of hours.