The ABC Murders is an adventure and investigation game adapted from the classic Agatha Christie novel. The player embodies the famous Hercule Poirot in a 3rd person perspective adventure game packed with mystery. Once again, the private detective will find himself up against a mysterious opponent who goes by the name of 'ABC'.
In 1933, retired detective Hercule Poirot is targeted by a taunting killer who sends letters signed 'ABC', which Poirot must decode in order to discover the identity of the murderer.
ABC Murders as a Briliant book and shows how Agatha Christie wrote Brilliantly from such a simple Idea namely the Alphabet, she was excellent at using any little thing like The Labours of Hercules and Rhymes such as Mrs McGinty's Dead although she didn't use Hickory Dickory Dock, One Two Buckle My Shoe and Five Little Pigs Brilliantly and her use of Shakespeare, Omar Khyam and Tennyson, There.
The ABC Murders is an adventure and investigation game adapted from the classic Agatha Christie novel. The player embodies the famous Hercule Poirot in a 3rd person perspective adventure game packed with mysteries. Once again, the private detective will find himself up against a mysterious opponent who goes by the name of 'ABC'. Your intelligence will never have been so challenged!
You will have to explore many crime scenes in various cities set in beautiful surroundings across the United Kingdom. Leave no stone unturned when it comes to cross examinations and deadly puzzles!
Observe, question and explore everything possible in order to make the smartest deductions and understand the murderer’s plans!
KEY FEATURES
Examinations: The player can collect information by examining suspects and paying attention to what they say, how they say it and how they feel. Puzzles: The player will have to solve puzzles in order to obtain more clues. Deductions: Depending on the clues collected, the player will be able to make deductions and find out more about the murderer. Timeline: As the player draws conclusions and progresses through the story, he can use Poirot's Timeline. This means that Hercule Poirot can build a timeline with all the relevant events revealed during the investigation.
To celebrate the new adaptation of The ABC Murders, we’ve worked with Agatha Christie expert Chris Chan to explore facts about the story and its various iterations.
Agatha Christie - The Abc Murders Crack 2016
Agatha Christie Abc Murders Plot
A – The ABC Railway Guide is a recurring motif throughout the story. The original ABC alphabetical railway guide was published in 1853. It was an extensive guide to train timetables and ticket prices in the UK, which also detailed recommended routes as well as places to stay at your destination. B – Bexhill-on-Sea is the location of the second murder in the book. The seaside town (population: 43K), was used in the 2018 adaptation of The ABC Murders. C – Cards on the Table and Curtain, both Poirot novels published after The ABC Murders, have their plots foreshadowed in conversations Poirot has in The ABC Murders. D – David Suchet once stated that his adaption of The ABC Murders was his favourite episode of Agatha Christie's Poirot. E – Egotism is a key characteristic of the ABC killer – arrogance emanates from the letters they write to taunt Poirot. F – First- and third-person narration alternate in the novel, which reflects Christie's continuing experiments with narration styles and perspectives. G – Greenway House, Christie’s holiday home, is just down the road from the real-life village of Churston in Devon where murder number three happens. Greenway is now open to the public, and owned by the National Trust. H – Hastings narrates the 1936 novel. The character would only narrate two more Poirot novels after The ABC Murders: Dumb Witness (1937) and Curtain: Poirot's Last Case (1975). He would also make a one-line flash-forward cameo in Evil Under the Sun (1941). I – Inspector Crome is the policeman put in charge of the case of the ABC murderer. He is described as a ‘younger inspector’, and is played by Rupert Grint in the 2018 adaptation of the show. J – Japp was played by Philip Jackson in the Agatha Christie's Poirot TV adaptation and the BBC radio adaptation of The ABC Murders. K – Killers with multiple victims, such as A B C., are today known as 'serial killers,' but that term wasn't yet created when Christie published her book in 1936. L –Les Petits Meurtres d' Agatha Christie, the French series inspired by Christie's work, opened its regular series with an adaptation of The ABC Murders, not featuring Poirot. M – Margaret Rutherford makes a cameo appearance as Miss Marple in The Alphabet Murders, which is to date the only time Poirot and Marple appear on-screen together in a live-action adaptation of Christie's works. N – Notebooks discovered by John Curran show that Christie originally planned for the killer to be the intended fourth victim who 'escaped' an attack. The earliest notes also have no references to the alphabetical link to the crimes. O – Old age is creeping up on Poirot and his friends in this story. Poirot has taken to dyeing his hair and moustache. It is “suspiciously black” (See ‘R’). P – Psychology had recently become a subject of study, and the detectives and Poirot discuss complexes such as paranoia and the Oedipus complex in the novel, when considering the murderer. Crome is on the case because of his working knowledge of psychology. Q – 'Quelle idée!' is an exclamation often used by Poirot. In this story, he uses it when another character describes his obsession with method and order as a disease! R – Revivit is the brand of hair dye Poirot uses in the novel, an attempt to disguise his ageing visage. S – Scotland Yard plays a pivotal role in the novel. The impressive Bradford City Council building was used as the police station in the 2018 adaptation. T – Tony Randall played Poirot in the big-screen movie adaptation The Alphabet Murders. U – “Unutterable little jackanapes of a foreigner” shouts one character to Poirot, calling our attention to Poirot’s personal background. His Belgian refugee roots and the wider xenophobia in 1930s Britain are explored further in the 2018 adaptation. V – A video game of The ABC Murders was released on Nintendo DS in 2009. Players could either use the original ending or have a different murderer selected as a playing possibility. W – Whitehaven Mansions is Hercule Poirot’s London home. When one of the letters from ABC is sent to the wrong address, Poirot arrives too late to stop a murder. X – X is the name of Clive Morton's character in The Alphabet Murders, a mysterious figure connected to the crimes. Y – Yorkshire played a key role in filming the 2018 adaptation of The ABC Murders. Scenes were shot in Grosmont, Leeds, Pickering, Ripon, Skelton-on-Ure and Wakefield. Z – Robert Barnard, literary critic and mystery writer, referred to the book as 'A total success– but thank God she didn't try taking it through to Z' in his book A Talent to Deceive.