CSI: Miami Heat Wave has dead bodies galore. It’s a game about mad people doing mad things, and it’ll keep you playing for a while thanks to its surprisingly balanced free & premium mechanics.
You play through CSI: Miami Heat Wave as a rookie investigator under the tutelage of Horatio “Internet Meme” Caine. Miami is a seedy place that’s rife with seedy deeds, and you need to get to the bottom of several murder cases.
Searching in the tiles will consume energy that refills one every three minutes, and the maximum energy will also grow as you level up. In the first two or three crime scenes, there is no problem to find evidence with a couple of tiles searched and the energy available is enough to find the evidence.
However, If you reach level 5 or higher, the situation will change. You will have to click on every tile to get the evidence collected. This could easily cause you to run out of energy. Since the higher your level is, the more grid tiles you will investigate in a single case. Perhaps this mechanic is not good to free players. On a positive note, The game comes up with rewards such as experience points and funding even if you were unlucky to search empty fields.
You begin each case cold. It’s up to you to gather evidence, question suspects, and lock ‘em up. Each crime scene is peppered with grids, and you move from square-to-square in hopes of finding evidence. From there, you need to process what you find in your lab (which requires materials that are generated on a timed basis). Once you have your evidence, you need to swoop in for the kill. Not literally, of course.
CSI: Miami Heat Wave is not an especially deep game, nor do the cases take a lot of time to solve (barring the time it takes to sit through the usual free-to-play game countdowns, like evidence processing and material collecting). You can also usually smell your suspects from ten miles away— but surprisingly, that doesn’t make the cases any less fun to follow. When you’re dealing with poisoned circus clowns, you just have to see things through to the end.
What’s really nice is that Ubisoft has balanced CSI: Miami Heat Wave so that the game is genuinely free-to-play for significant chunks of time. For instance, searching each square on an evidence grid costs energy—but you can utilize “flashlight” power-ups that let you search a certain number of squares without having to expend personal energy. You can also “find a trace” when you’re searching for evidence, which gives you an arrow to follow. This saves you from spending time and energy searching on empty squares.
The plot in each case is the most appealing part of all. Your agent will question suspects after processing evidence in the lab and during interrogation you can choose to ask How, why, what, and the like. If the question you are asking exactly matches the evidence, your agent will have a conversation with the suspect involved. And finally the suspect will end up being arrested and the case is closed.
However, even those “Empty squares” might reveal something useful for the game’s “Empathy Quests.” Said quests are optional, though they yield Reputation boosts that eventually become necessary to carry on the main story. The events in CSI: Miami Heat Wave are connected in a way that ensures you’re not twiddling your thumbs and waiting for energy to refill. It also helps that you level up quickly, which grants you an automatic fill-up.
The game does offer some premium services such as exclusive premium shop items and CSI Elite agent membership that makes you recharge the energy faster and use more gadgets every day and even unlock more awesome shop items.
Speaking of the social options, CSI: Miami Heat Wave provides you with friend visiting and gift sending between friends. When you visit your friend’s lab, you can collect some supplies there and get Energy. But the number of items you could get from a player is very limited, so if you want to get more items, you need to send more invitations to your friends who may help activate the game and send the gifts to you.
In conclusion, CSI: Miami Heat Wave plays the way very similar to CSI: Crime City, and it feels like an expansion of the Crime City’s story line with new cases and locations added.
If you like to play this game then Check out Our Complete Guide About CSI: Miami Heat Wave Here And you Can also like our Guide about Tips & Trick Of CSI: Miami Heat Wave Here..
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