![]() ![]() On the iPhone, you use your finger to pick out areas of interest. You learn how to zero in on specific parts of a scene and then comb for potential evidence. Inspecting the crime scene is your tutorial. The case begins with a dead woman washing up on the beach. Sure, you can turn off the sound, but that's not really the point, is it? If you can get around the dreadful voice acting - and man, does it drone one - the game itself is still solid. I didn't expect the actual actors to deliver their lines as that would likely be prohibitively expensive, but the stand-ins sound nothing like their counterparts and they read their lines with all the gusto of a winter draft. ![]() It's so bad that it detracts from the overall experience. (The entire download is a massive 243MB.) But the voice work is absolutely awful. The extra video goodies aren't necessarily a bad thing as they are to certainly be appreciated by diehard fans, but they take up a lot of space on your device's drive. The iPhone edition, on the other hand, is bloated with speech and video content. The lean mobile version captured the essence of the TV hit with clipped dialogue, the appearance of show regulars, and a streamlined forensics sim. CSI: Miami for the iPhone actually makes an argument in favor of less storage space.
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