A game from a series that has not yet featured kicks off the Top 10.
Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney Trials and Tribulations
It's perfectly reasonable to wonder why the third entry in a series, one that changes very little between entries, is so much more revered than either of its predecessors or its successors. In the case of Ace Attorney: Trials and Tribulations (generally known as Phoenix Wright 3) there is little doubt that it is clearly the best game in the series.
The core mechanics of the Ace Attorney series have not changed in any of the titles of the main series, despite originally being released on the Game Boy Advance. However, even at the end of the fourth game there is still something exhilarating about the unrelenting hunt for truth by an attorney defending his client from the most series of charges, murder.
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Within the twisted reality of the Ace Attorney a sort of internal logic developed. The silly tone of the games, while still managing to be funny after three (and later four) games, became almost normal. This is in no small part reflected in the singular element of Trials and Tribulations that sets it apart from the other titles in the Ace Attorney arc: its superlative storytelling.
Each Ace Attorney game operates under its own internal logic. The cases are usually tied together in a way that isn't truly understood until the conclusion of the fourth case. Trials and Tribulations is more ambitious. Not content to simply resolve the final case within the confines of this title, it manages to weave the game's own narrative into the larger Ace Attorney story. The writers show impressive dexterity, even for a series known for its mysteries, creating links to story elements of games past without it feeling unnatural or clunky. Figures that existed within the margins of the previous titles were exposed; mysteries that had previously gone unexplored – in part due to the internal logic of the series – were resolved.
The connections that Trials and Tribulations creates completely transform the entire world of the Ace Attorney games in ways so that the fourth game and the Edgeworth spin-off are still impacted. It is the rare sequel where playing the previous titles enhances the experience. By completely altering the perception of the world its predecessors built, there is little doubt that Trials and Tribulations is apex of the Ace Attorney series and therefore one of the most important games in the Nintendo DS's rather extensive library.