L.A. Noire is a unique work by Rockstar and Team Bondi with Cole Phelps as detective in 1940s Los Angeles. Revolutionary MotionScan technology for facial expressions, immersive investigations. A memorable and unique game.
Your verdict
Category
Adventure1 player18+
Description
Rockstar noir developed by Team Bondi recreating 1940s Los Angeles to follow an inspector in a criminal investigation. Published by Rockstar, released in Europe in May 2011. Revolutionary MotionScan technology for faces, 21 criminal investigations to solve, open and faithful Los Angeles, interrogation-focused gameplay, and Mad Men actor cast.
L.A. Noire review
MAX
Art direction
★★★★★
"Iconic"
MAX
Music
★★★★★
"Legendary"
MAX
Story
★★★★★
"Masterful"
1940s-50s America recreated with a nostalgic elegance, golden light and gleaming automobiles: the city breathes the golden age of the gangster film. The care of the reconstruction and the stylistic coherence compose a credible theatre. This art direction, polished and atmospheric, elevates a classy mob story.
Plunged into 1940s Los Angeles, the music blends hushed jazz, noir brass and period songs in an homage to film noir. Each investigation bathes in a twilit, elegant atmosphere, perfectly in tune with the story. This sonic identity, refined and atmospheric, is the whole charm of the game.
In the Los Angeles of 1947, an ambitious detective climbs the ranks by solving ever murkier cases. An old-school noir, the tale probes corruption, guilt and the cracks of a hero back from the war. Its interrogation of faces and its period atmosphere make it a singular object.
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Fun
"Pleasant"
Addictiveness
"Captivating"
Difficulty
"Easy"
Lifespan
"Massive"
Twenty-one cases to crack lead the player through every police desk, from traffic to homicide, each with its crime scenes to inspect and interrogations to run. The open, faithful 1940s Los Angeles is rife with rare vehicles and hidden film reels to track down. A methodical descent best savoured one clue at a time, where patience is its own reward.
A Team Bondi and Rockstar noir set in 1947 Los Angeles, praised for its groundbreaking facial capture that put suspect interrogation at the heart of the game. Widely distributed in the West, its collector interest stays measured and rests mainly on this technical feat and its singular noir atmosphere rather than scarcity. An affordable, original piece for fans of detective work.
Is L.A. Noire still worth playing in 2026?
L.A. Noire remains a work unique in its kind, born of the meeting between Rockstar and Team Bondi. Playing detective Cole Phelps in 1940s Los Angeles, conducting interrogations where reading facial expressions becomes a genuine gameplay tool, has had little equivalent since. Its MotionScan technology, which captured the actors' performances with a realism striking for the time, keeps a definite power of immersion. The measured investigation pace and the incidental urban driving make it a particular experience. For anyone who loves crime fiction and methodical inquiry more than action, this memorable title still deserves the visit.