Team Bondi pen a wildly elegant 40s detective tale with MotionScan that revolutionises interrogations. Vintage Los Angeles glows, investigation trumps action, and the noir writing remains one of the most memorable in modern gaming.
Your verdict
Category
Action Adventure1 player18+
Description
Investigation game by Team Bondi and Rockstar Games, July 2011. Detective Cole Phelps investigates 1947 Los Angeles crimes by interrogating suspects and analysing facial expressions using MotionScan technology. Observing micro-expressions to detect lies, crime scene evidence gathering and film noir narrative. Revolutionary investigation game for its facial realism.
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.
A dive into 1940s Los Angeles, the music distils a hushed noir jazz, blending melancholy brass, double bass and piano in the manner of a period crime film. Each investigation bathes in a twilight atmosphere of rare elegance. This sonic identity, perfectly in tune with the detective story, elevates the atmosphere of the City of Angels.
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.
A Rockstar police investigation set in 1940s Los Angeles, betting on a then-new facial-capture technology for interrogations, a singular narrative game of the generation. Printed widely, it stays accessible and lightly priced. Its collector interest lies in its status as an ambitious and atypical auteur experience in the Rockstar catalogue rather than manufacturing scarcity.
Is L.A. Noire still worth playing in 2026?
Released in 2011 on Xbox 360, Team Bondi and Rockstar's L.A. Noire offers a singular detective experience, carried by then revolutionary facial capture technology and a sumptuous recreation of 1947 Los Angeles. Scrutinising a suspect's expressions to untangle truth from lies during interrogations stays a fascinating, unique idea. The cases, rich and well written, captivate. The shooting and driving phases stay merely functional. But the atmosphere and the concept amply make up for it. For fans of narrative games, investigation and period mood, this singular title keeps a strong appeal today.