While exploring your new home you discover a strange machine. The manual claims it is a mind reading device, created in 1925 by an A. J. Penburry. After several weeks' work and numerous replacement parts it is now ready for action! It's time to put the machine to good use, and earn enough money to renovate your new home. Use the Memory Machine to help the residents of Berryside Mews find their lost items in Memorabilia – Mia’s Mysterious Memory Machine, a fun Hidden Object game.
REVIEW
Have you ever moved into a new place, only to find that the previous occupant left something behind? In the hidden object game Memorabilia: Mia's Mysterious Memory Machine, the item in question isn't a lamp or a coffee maker of dubious distinction, but a machine that allows you to read people's minds.
You could use such a wonder to fight crime or farm secrets, but instead you decide to help your neighbors find the treasures they can't quite seem to find. Each neighbor has misplaced something dear to them, like a book of recipes or ribbon, and also has an item of which they're particularly fond. You'll get a brief dossier on your client telling you what to look for before they hop into the gizmo and let you prowl through their grey matter. Their memories come up as a hazy collection of transparent objects stacked haphazardly over each other, and you'll have to sort through the clutter to uncover the memory that will tell you where the loot is.
Some of the items on the list of objects you'll need to find are marked with a star – find those and you'll uncover a piece of memory that, when assembled like a jigsaw puzzle, reveal the location of your client's missing goodie. You could just go for starred items first and blaze through the level in seconds, but for the best bonuses, make sure you find everything on the list. Keeping your client happy is also important and delivers yet another bonus; to keep them smiling, perform well by finding items quickly, finding their favorite kind of object, or not clicking incorrectly.
Occasionally, you'll have to sort through your customer's daydreams before you can get to their memories. Daydreams are more like scenes than just jumbles of junk, but other than that they play out pretty much the same as your basic memory level. Clear out the cobwebs and you can get down to the real business of sorting through your client's skull. Read more...
You could use such a wonder to fight crime or farm secrets, but instead you decide to help your neighbors find the treasures they can't quite seem to find. Each neighbor has misplaced something dear to them, like a book of recipes or ribbon, and also has an item of which they're particularly fond. You'll get a brief dossier on your client telling you what to look for before they hop into the gizmo and let you prowl through their grey matter. Their memories come up as a hazy collection of transparent objects stacked haphazardly over each other, and you'll have to sort through the clutter to uncover the memory that will tell you where the loot is.
Some of the items on the list of objects you'll need to find are marked with a star – find those and you'll uncover a piece of memory that, when assembled like a jigsaw puzzle, reveal the location of your client's missing goodie. You could just go for starred items first and blaze through the level in seconds, but for the best bonuses, make sure you find everything on the list. Keeping your client happy is also important and delivers yet another bonus; to keep them smiling, perform well by finding items quickly, finding their favorite kind of object, or not clicking incorrectly.
Occasionally, you'll have to sort through your customer's daydreams before you can get to their memories. Daydreams are more like scenes than just jumbles of junk, but other than that they play out pretty much the same as your basic memory level. Clear out the cobwebs and you can get down to the real business of sorting through your client's skull. Read more...