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Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney: Justice For All

Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney − Justice for All
Justice for All cover art.png
North American cover art featuring (from left to right) Edgeworth, Franziska, Phoenix, and Pearl
Developer(s) Capcom
Publisher(s) Capcom
  • AU: Nintendo Australia
Director(s) Shu Takumi
Producer(s) Atsushi Inaba
Artist(s) Tatsuro Iwamoto
Writer(s) Shu Takumi
Composer(s) Naoto Tanaka
Series Ace Attorney
Platform(s) Game Boy Advance, Microsoft Windows, Nintendo DS, Wii, iOS, Android, Nintendo 3DS
Release date(s)
Genre(s) Adventure, visual novel
Mode(s) Single-player
Aggregate score
Aggregator Score
Metacritic 76/100 (51 reviews)
Review scores
Publication Score
Eurogamer 8/10
Famitsu 35/40
Game Informer 8/10
GameSpot 7.7/10
GameSpy 3.5/5 stars
GamesRadar 4/5 stars
IGN 7.8/10
ONM 72%

Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney − Justice for All, known in Japan as Gyakuten Saiban 2 (Japanese: 逆転裁判2?, "Turnabout Trial 2"), is a visual novel adventure video game developed and published by Capcom. It was originally released for the Game Boy Advance in 2002 in Japan, and has since been released on multiple platforms. The Nintendo DS version, initially released in 2006 in Japan, was released in English in the West in 2007. The game is the second entry in the Ace Attorney series, following Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney.

The story follows Phoenix Wright, a defense attorney who defends his clients in four episodes. Among other characters are his partner Maya Fey, her cousin Pearl, and the rival prosecutor Franziska von Karma. The game is divided into two types of sections: courtroom sessions, where the player cross-examines witnesses and tries to uncover contradictions in their testimonies, and investigations, where the player gathers evidence and talks to witnesses.

The game was directed and written by Shu Takumi, as the second entry in a planned Ace Attorney trilogy. It was originally intended to feature the first game's prosecutor, Miles Edgeworth, in all episodes; Franziska was created when the development team learned that Edgeworth had become popular among players, and Takumi wanted to use the character more carefully and sparingly. They only introduced one new gameplay mechanic in the game; Takumi wanted to keep the game focused on the core concept of finding lies, and to keep it simple enough for his mother to play. The game was positively received by critics, who generally liked the writing, but criticized the game's short length and the lack of the Nintendo DS-exclusive gameplay mechanics that appeared in the previous game.


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