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==Manga==
==Manga==
Manga intended for child audiences has been serialized since the February 2008 special edition of ''[[Bessatsu CoroCoro Comic]]''. The title of this manga is {{nihongo|''Professor Layton and the Cheerful Mystery''|レイトン教授とユカイな事件|Reiton-kyōju to yukai na jiken}}, covering many mysteries in the story. Whether or not the manga will be localized in other countries remains to be seen.
Manga intended for child audiences has been serialized since the February 2008 special edition of ''[[Bessatsu CoroCoro Comic]]''. The title of this manga is {{nihongo|''Professor Layton and the Cheerful Mystery''|レイトン教授とユカイな事件|Reiton-kyōju to yukai na jiken}}, covering many mysteries in the story. Whether or not the manga will be localized in other countries remains to be seen.

==Twitter Accounts==
Almost all of the Professor Layton characters appears to each have their own Twitter account. The real people behind the accounts remains unknown, but some of speculated that either Level 5 or Nintendo might be behind them.
*[http://twitter.com/TopHatProfessor Professor Layton]
*[http://twitter.com/ApprenticeLuke Luke Triton]
*[http://twitter.com/DonofScience Don Paolo]
*[http://twitter.com/SombreInspector Inspector Chemly]
*[http://twitter.com/CuriousHeiress Flora Reinhold]
*[http://twitter.com/RandomBridgeGuy Franco] (Inactive)
*[http://twitter.com/AssistantBarton Barton]
*[http://twitter.com/RemiAltava Remi Altava]
*[http://twitter.com/KatiaAnderson Katia Anderson]
*[http://twitter.com/DiabolicalVamp Anton Herzen]
*[http://twitter.com/JeanDescole Jean Descole]
*[http://twitter.com/InspectorGrosky Clamp Grosky]
*[http://twitter.com/DivaJenis Jenis Quatlane]
*[http://twitter.com/PhysicistClaire Claire Folly] (Inactive)
*[http://twitter.com/DoctorDimitri Alan Dimitri] (Inactive)
*[http://twitter.com/FutureLuke Future Luke] (Inactive)


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 01:03, 3 April 2010

Professor Layton
The logo of the Professor Layton series.
Genre(s)Puzzle, adventure, interactive novel
Developer(s)Level-5
Platform(s)Nintendo DS
First releaseProfessor Layton and the Curious Village
Latest releaseProfessor Layton and the Eternal Diva feature film

The Professor Layton series ("Reiton-kyōju series" (レイトン教授シリーズ) is a puzzle video game series for the Nintendo DS, currently consisting of four games and one film. At least two more games and at least one more film are due for 2010/2011. Level 5 has also discussed that a third trilogy is in the works. The first three games are about Professor Layton and Luke's adventures together and their eventual parting of ways. The next three games and the film are prequels and are about how Luke and Layton met and their "original" adventures. Although only two of the games are available outside of Japan, Level 5 has stated that eventually the other games and films will be localized. The games are developed by Nintendo and Level-5.

Each title is based in a series of puzzles and mysteries given by the citizens of towns that the main characters visit. It is not necessary to solve all the puzzles to progress, but some are mandatory and at certain points in the game a minimum number of puzzles must be solved before the story will continue.

History

Professor Layton was a direct result of Akihiro Hino's childhood love of Akira Tago's popular Mental Gymnastics series of puzzle books, which have sold more than 12 million copies to date in Japan.

The story in video games is that Professor Layton (a renowned archaeologist) is called to solve various mysteries in different places (a strange town, a mysterious train, a time machine, etc ...).

Professor Layton is always accompanied by his apprentice Luke, a cheerful child who brings a touch of humor to the story of Layton.

Games

  1. Professor Layton and the Curious Village (レイトン教授と不思議な町)[1]
  2. Professor Layton and the Diabolical Box (レイトン教授と悪魔の箱)[2]
  3. Professor Layton and the Last Time Travel (レイトン教授と最後の時間旅行)
  4. Professor Layton and the Spectre's Flute (レイトン教授と魔神の笛)
  5. Professor Layton and the Mask of Miracles (レイトン教授と奇跡の仮面)

There was also a "Friendly Version" for The Curious Village, from which all weekly puzzles are unlocked, as well as the game being slightly easier for those who were troubled previously. For Diabolical Box, the Japan-only "Level-5 Premium Silver/Gold" collections on Nintendo DS included an exclusive side-story, "Professor Layton and the London Holiday" (レイトン教授とロンドンの休日) in addition to the actual game and another Level-5 game, Inazuma Eleven. The Holiday in London includes ten puzzles, some of which are from the first game, and a short storyline, set in Professor Layton's London office, in which he reminisces about his previous adventures around the world.

A new mobile phone Professor Layton game is intended for release around the same time as the fifth game. However it is unknown when the game will be released in North America.

Gameplay

The game is essentially a collection of puzzles with exploration sections between them. The puzzles take the form of brain teasers and are only loosely tied to the plot, although the player must solve a certain number to progress. A hint system is included, which requires the use of "hint coins", found hidden in the landscape of the game and in limited quantity, to reveal each hint. The player is given ten hint coins at the start of the game.

All puzzles were created for this series by Akira Tago, who is famous for his best-selling Mental Gymnastics series. Curious Village contains 135 puzzles, and Diabolical Box contains 153 puzzles (Plus a special puzzle obtained via the use of codes found in Curious Village).

Wi-Fi compatibility

All games in this series are compatible with Nintendo Wi-Fi Connection, allowing players to connect to the internet and unlock new puzzles every Thursday at noon (UTC-9). In the unlockable puzzles, the player cannot earn any additional picarats, and rather than use the hint coin system, a new hint is provided weekly.

With the use of an appropriate cheat device the extra puzzles can be unlocked early without connecting to Nintendo Wi-Fi.

Plot

Template:Professor Layton chronology

The Curious Village

The Diabolical Box

The main story revolves around Professor Layton and his young apprentice Luke travelling to meet Layton's mentor, who has sent them a letter about a mysterious box. Layton's mentor writes that he wishes to have Layton take care of his information if anything were to happen to him. Professor Layton and Luke rush to the mentor's home to find him dead under mysterious circumstances. From there the pair travel to discover the secrets of the "Diabolical box". Their only clue is a train ticket with no destination. The game contains 138 puzzles in the main story. However, there are a complete total of 153 puzzles to be unlocked.

The Last Time Travel

The Specter's Flute

Announced on March 11, 2009 by Famitsu, it appears to be the first installment in a new trilogy of prequels, set when Luke first became Layton's apprentice. The story starts when the Professor stumbles upon a mysterious fog-enshrouded town, home of the legend of a great giant who menaces the countryside whenever the Specter's Flute is played. The young Luke plays a key role in this legend, and so does Remi Altava—a female colleague of Layton's and a new main character introduced in the game. The game's release in Japan was set to be in fall 2009.

The Mask of Miracles

Announced on November 25, 2009 by Level-5, this will be the fifth game in the Professor Layton series but take place after The Specter's Flute. Professor Layton and Luke follow Jean De Scoll to the mysterious Casino City in search of the mask he wears. Casino City was created by the powers of the Mask of Miracles. Layton and Luke must uncover the truth about the Mask of Miracles. The Truth is hidden deep within the Mask.

Untitled Sixth Game

It has been confirmed that after Mask of Miracles is realesed, a sixth game will be realesd concluding the second trilogy. An official title and exact plot details have yet to be announced.

Feature film

An animation film, called Professor Layton and the Eternal Diva, is going to be produced by Masakazu Kubo, who is mainly known for producing the Pokémon films. It will be an original story, separate from the game series.[2] It takes place after the events of The Specter's Flute.[3]

On March 2, 2009, Level-5 opened the official Professor Layton and the Eternal Diva website. It contains four commercials about Layton and Luke, in the form of puzzles.

Reception

The Professor Layton series has been generally successful in the US, the UK, and Japan. Professor Layton and the Curious Village sold over 700,000 units in Japan in 2007. [1] The game was also the top selling game for the Nintendo DS in the United States in the first three weeks after its release. After it was restocked in the UK, sales of Professor Layton increased 54%, moving it from 10th place to fourth place.

Curious Village received generally positive reviews from critics. On the review aggregator Game Rankings, the game had an average score of 86% based on 48 reviews. On Metacritic, the game had an average score of 85/100, based on 57 reviews. The combination of the adventure game and "brain training" genres received mixed appreciation. Some reviewers praised the game for the successful combination with 1UP commenting on how the game's approach is much better than games where the puzzles were integrated into the environment. Other reviewers felt that these two genres do not merge well within the game; Game Informer noted that while the player is given numerous small puzzles to solve, the mysteries of the main plot are basically solved for the player. The game was noted to have little replay value; once all the puzzles were solved, there was no point in playing through them again. The presentation of the game, including both the general European animation style and cutscene animations, was appreciated by reviewers. Hyper's Darren Wells commends the game for its "clever concept, with plenty to solve and unlock as well as its fantastic presentation". However, he criticises "some puzzles feeling tacked on and the music can get annoying".

Professor Layton and the Diabolical Box was considered to be a major improvement from the original. In Japan, the game has sold 815,369 copies in Japan, according to Famitsu, as of July 9, 2008. [www.japan-gamecharts.com/ds.php] The UK's Official Nintendo Magazine awarded the game a score of 92% (and consequently their Gold Award medal), praising the increased number of puzzles, animated scenes and voice acting, but complained that it could be slightly repetitive at times. IGN gave the game a score of 8.5.

Although Professor Layton and the Last Time Travel has not yet been released outside of Japan, the game was the 15th best-selling game in 2008.

The series was popular enough to have a movie called Professor Layton and the Eternal Diva made. So far it has only been released in Japan and Singapore, but it has received positive reviews in both countries.

Manga

Manga intended for child audiences has been serialized since the February 2008 special edition of Bessatsu CoroCoro Comic. The title of this manga is Professor Layton and the Cheerful Mystery (レイトン教授とユカイな事件, Reiton-kyōju to yukai na jiken), covering many mysteries in the story. Whether or not the manga will be localized in other countries remains to be seen.

References

  1. ^ "Level 5's new game's genre is unknown? New style game to train your brain" (in Japanese). Famitsu. Retrieved 2008-01-02.
  2. ^ a b "Layton Kyoju and the Devil's Box becomes a movie quality" (in Japanese). Famitsu. Retrieved 2008-01-02.
  3. ^ "レイトン教授映画公式サイト『レイトン教授と永遠の歌姫』" (in Japanese). Retrieved 2008-08-31.