I don't consider the jurist system to be the right way to go about things,
not because I think like kristoph, that all evience has to absolute, but
because the opinion of the audience is not the problem. the best way to
improve the justice system, is to take ispiration from the scales costantly
above the judges head. do not attempt to balance evidence, cause thats
folly, but make it so defense and prosecution have equall powers, the
detectives the only ones allowed to investigate and finally....
....the statements or the evidence to their needs. there is one final thing
that needs to be changed, it should be the duty of the judge to pass down
the final verdict, as his whole job is the understanding of law, and at
what point a person should be considered guilty. however the judgement
should be passed to the person who has the most NON-CONTRADICTORY evidence
against them. this eliminates the hiding of one or two pieces of evidence
to turn the blame on someone else, as attempting to...
.....the judge the one to pass the final verdict, UNLESS there is a
unanimous vote against the judges decision from the audiance inside the
court. Now the detectives can focus on finding the truth without pressure
from the prosecutors eager for a guilty verdict, the evidence and witnesses
can be heard and viewed by both defense and prosecution, so they can't
attempt to trap eachother before they reach a conlusive fact or statement,
and less chance of either attorney attempting to twist.....
PLEASE REED BOTTOM COMMENT TO TOP, and sorry for the essay, just felt it
had to be said. .....change the whole crime scene would not only take too
long, but usually only produce more evidence agangst them. it also means if
a defense attorney has amost all the evidence supporting the client as
innocent, it can't all snap back to a guilty sentence for the defendent if
one minor piece of evidence is missing or another piece manipulated, as
that is the major threat in all the games tus far.
Fun part is where they show the entire court and everybody looks at the
camera XDDD but also the
WRRRIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIGGGGGGGGHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHTTTTTTTTT!!!!!!! moment is
just epic....Phoenix!,we love ya Trolling! XD
Apollo Justice: Ace Attorney - Episode 4 - Day 1: Investigation
Episode 4 Turnabout Succession start! In the final episode of Apollo Justice: Ace Attorney, Phoenix Wright comes by to tell us he is in charge of setting up a ...
+Flazar In my honest opinion, since the game is basically a interactive story book, commentary would ruin the game. I wouldn't have much to add to it even if I did either.
Let's Play Apollo Justice: Ace Attorney - Part 75: Common Sense
In the end, perhaps evidence won't cover it all. Some logical thinking is also needed, thus that is why we have the Jurist System.
I find one weakness in this otherwise amazing, epic story of Phoenix
Wright's downfall and Kristoph's evil. Kristoph's motivation is that he
lost a card game and Phoenix didn't? Really? He needs better motivation
than that.
It's true that Kristoph is crazy and frankly a little too paranoid when it comes to hiding his schemes with them leading from one to the next to keep people quiet, but I don't think that's the reason for the black Psyche-Locks. Largely because so far they've only appeared on one other person who doesn't fit that description at all. In that instance the locks represent a type of secret the character keeps subconsciously to the point where they are more than likely not even aware they're doing so. In the case of the other character in question they stemmed from a certain traumatic event in their past, so I'd imagine Kristoph had some other history with Zak Gramarye that he hasn't divulged yet (and with a crowd as messed up as his got that wouldn't be surprising in the least). Losing his case to Phoenix in a card game of all things isn't something I can initially see as a motive for murder (the Judge even says it in the first case of the game: "People are not murdered over simple games, Justice."), especially considering Kristoph was supposedly a friend of Phoenix at some point.
+Chaos Controller What is this other reason you feel is implied? They never give any other motivation (just saying someone is crazy isn't really a motivation).
+enjolraslechimiste To be fair, in trying to sabotage Phoenix with the forged evidence, he had to make sure he wasn't caught in acquiring the forged evidence. I always viewed Kristoph's actions of being a really complex plan to prevent any way of his career, reputation, and pride from being ruined. While his motives are not as simple as being centered around a game of cards, it still is pretty underwhelming in light of the trouble he caused.
It's implied that he has other reasons (noted by the black Psyche-Locks that appear when Phoenix asks him why he killed Zak Gramarye). I do see some weaknesses with this game apart from that, but nothing was really enough to keep me from loving it anyway XD
Apollo Justice: Ace Attorney (Turnabout Succession - Investigation 1)
Episode 23 - A Forged Defendant What's this about a Jurist System, and MASON? Ah well, it'll probaly come into play later. For now, Phoenix Wright assigns ...