Version 1.2 12/4/12 ?????? ???????? ??? ??? ??? ??? ??? ??? ??? ??? ??? ??? ??? ??? Beauty Lawyer Victoria A Walkthrough by Michael Gray AKA The Lost Gamer ([email protected]) Copyright 2012 For a list of all my various guides, check http://the_lost_gamer.tripod.com/guides.html Table of Contents: 001. General information 002. Characters 003. Walkthrough 004. Quick Walkthrough 005. Credits 001-General Information ----------------------------------------------------------- This is a walkthrough for the iOS game called "Beauty Lawyer Victoria". It is a game in which you play a defense attorney who wants to defend her client from a false murder charge. If you want to contact me about this guide, use my email address [email protected]. 002-Characters ----------------------------------------------------------- Victoria: The main character of the game. Victoria is a defense attorney (or beauty lawyer, if you will), and she's about to take her first case. Can she prove her client's innocence? Jessica: The victim. Jessica was Miss USA. She was staying at a hotel when someone choked her to death, then threw her body out the window. Dennis: The defendant. Dennis is under suspicion, because he was the victim's boyfriend. Victoria wants to prove he is innocent. Robert: The judge, who can be rather stern about courtroom procedure. Charles: The public prosecutor. His job is to prove Dennis guilty. David: A friend of Dennis and the main witness for the defense. He gives a brief testimony about the relationship between the defendant and the victim. Jack: The hotel manager and the main witness for the prosecution. He gives multiple testimonies about the night of the murder. 003-Walkthrough ----------------------------------------------------------- The game begins with Victoria meeting her client, Dennis. He has been accused of murdering his girlfriend, Miss USA. You have the choice to accept or refuse the case. Accept the case. Victoria will go over everything in her head. You then have three choices. You can go to the court records and read up on the case. The court record says that the victim died on October 25, around 11 PM. She was staying at Room 803 of the BOSTON hotel. She was suffocated with something like a rope, before she fell through the hotel window. Her corpse was discovered by Jack, the hotel manager. Go to the hotel room to pick up various pieces of evidence. There are eight pieces of evidence in this room. 1. Fingerprints on the phone prove that only the victim touched the phone. 2. 8th Floor sales records show that this is the only room occupied on the night of the murder. 3. Dinner receipt shows the victim had dinner at 6:00 PM. 4. Belt/rope. This is the murder weapon. 5. Defendant's shirt, which is still wrapped. Perhaps the victim bought it for her boyfriend. 6. Watch. Stopped at 8 PM; you must manually wind the watch to keep it going. Does this let us know what time the murder was? 7. Record of blackout. The hotel had a blackout, but the elevator was still working. 8. Victim's cell phone, which is still open. If she called for help, this might let us know when the murder was. You can carry five pieces of evidence. The four that you need to pick up are the first four on the list. They are the sales records (by the bed pillows), the dinner receipt (on the floor by the bed), the belt / rope (on the bed) and the phone (on the nightstand to the left). Leave the crime scene and exit the investigation. Court then begins. The public prosecutor makes his case. He believes that the victim and the defendant broke up, after she became Miss USA. The defendant became angry at this, then killed her. Victoria has to choose whether her client should confess to this scenario, or not. Pick the second option, to keep fighting. If he confesses, he is automatically found guilty. Victoria then comes up with a witness, who confirms that the victim was still dating the defendant, at the time of her death. This disproves the prosecution's theory, but the prosecutor maintains he has more proof. The judge then quizzes Victoria on the case. You might want to check the court record (in the court menu), if you've forgotten the details of the case. The death took place at...A HOTEL. The victim's name is...JESSICA. The cause of death is...SUFFOCATION. The prosecution calls Jack, the hotel manager, to the stand. Jack gives testimony. Using the court menu, you can question his testimony or present evidence to poke holes in his testimony. For example, question his statement "I was delivering a room service". This causes Jack to give some additional testimony; he will clarify that a woman from 803 ordered room service for dinner. He does not say this, unless you question that statement. When Jack says that a woman "ordered a room service. For her dinner.", present the dinner receipt as evidence. The victim did NOT order room service for dinner at 7:00 PM, because she ate dinner that night at 6:00 PM! Jack will now change his testimony, saying that he was delivering food to Room 804, not 803. Question him at the statement "Yes. I passed Room 803". He will confirm that Room 804 was his intended destination. Present the 8th floor sales record at the statement "I remember now that I was delivering to Room 804". According to the sales record, the entire 8th floor was empty, except for Room 803. Jack changes his testimony again. This time, he says he was supposed to deliver food to Room 408. He mistakenly thought it was 804, not 408, so he went to the wrong floor. Question the statement "It was a mistake" in order to get new testimony. Jack says he looked in the room, after the defendant left it. He immediately realized something was wrong. He saw the victim's dead body and tried to call the police. Question the statement "But the phone must have been broken." Jack confirms he tried to use the phone at this point in time. Present the fingerprints on the phone at "Yes, I am sure it was broken. I tried to push the button,". If Jack is telling the truth, why are his fingerprints not on the phone? Jack says that he was wearing white gloves at the time, which is why there were no fingerprints. He begins more testimony about the room and seeing the victim's dead body on the ground. He seems to have left out the part where her dead body travelled from inside the room, to the ground below, but no one seems to notice this fact. Question the statement "A woman was lying on the ground and she was wounded around her neck." How did Jack know the victim's gender and wound? He was allegedly eight stories about her body. Jack will say that he knows about the wound, due to the belt in the room. Question either "No, no. I mean...A belt was in the hotel room..." or "You know...there was a belt." Victoria will point out that, as far as everyone knows, there was no belt at the scene. The victim was killed with a rope. Jack insists the murder weapon was a belt. Present the belt at "No! What do you know? That was a belt!" or "That was a belt! You are a novice that can't even investigate correctly". Victoria concludes that Jack has incriminated himself, by revealing that the murder weapon (a rope) is really a belt. Jack will swear, and the judge asks the lawyers to make their closing arguments. The judge will agree with Victoria, and he declares the defendant not guilty. Hooray! 004-Quick Walkthrough ----------------------------------------------------------- This section describes how to get through the game, with little extra detail. 1. Accept the case 2. Go to the crime scene. Pick up the sales records, dinner receipt, belt and phone. 3. Leave the crime scene and exit the investigation. 4. Tell your client to keep fighting. 5. Answer "a hotel". 6. Answer "Jessica" 7. Answer "suffocation". 8. Question the statement "I was delivering a room service" 9. Present the dinner receipt at the statement "ordered a room service. For her dinner." 10. Question "Yes. I passed Room 803..." 11. Present 8th floor sales records at "I remember now that I was delivering to Room 804". 12. Question "It was a mistake." 13. Question "But the phone must have been broken." 14. Present the fingerprints on the phone at "Yes, I am sure it was broken. I tried to push the button," 15. Question "A woman was lying on the ground and she was wounded around her neck." 16. Question "No, no. I mean...A belt was in the hotel room..." or "You know...there was a belt." 17. Present the belt at "No! What do you know? That was a belt!" or "That was a belt! You are a novice that can't even investigate correctly". 005-Credits ----------------------------------------------------------- This FAQ is copyright of The Lost Gamer, 2012. If you want to use any part of this FAQ, ask me first (instructions under general information).