Pros: Well-crafted time management game. Many levels, upgrades and characters.
Cons: Money doesn't carry forward. Only one game mode. Graphics are so-so.
Game Review
By Marc Saltzman
Move over, Paris Hilton - in Jane's Hotel: Family Hero, you're an heiress who actually works hard at her family business! Jane vows to stop the foreclosure of four hotels by borrowing money from the bank and then working at each one until enough cash is collected to help pull her family through. Through this ambitious venture you'll work at a beachfront resort in the Canary Islands, a castle in England, a fancy French inn and a traditional Japanese hotel.
While not perfect, this enjoyable sequel improves nicely on the original time management game. If you're ready to check into your room, dear reader, here's what you need to know about Jane's Hotel: Family Hero.
Beginning in the Canary Islands, hotel patrons arrive at the hotel and greet you at the main desk. After you give them keys to the room they settle into one of the four rooms and begin to ask for some amenities such as fancy drinks, souvenirs, telephone use or a newspaper. As the manager, you will first click on the appropriate amenity, such as an espresso maker, and then on correct door that pops up with the request - as indicated by a pop-up speech bubble of sorts. There are a wide variety of guests, each with its own animation and voice, but they don't seem to act any different from one another (such as the teenager with headphones being more impatient than the cane-using senior).
Unlike the original game, Jane now has two handy assistants who will help fulfill a guest's needs. For example, you will likely see a picture of a small vacuum cleaner in the speech bubble, meaning the guest would like their room cleaned. By clicking on the maid button and the room she needs to tidy up, off she goes until the task is completed; you can chain more than one room together for bonus points, therefore you simply need to click on multiple rooms (with vacuum cleaner icons) in succession and the maid will go from one to the next.
The maid helps with other jobs as you begin to advance through the hotels, such as watering plants, bringing clean sheets to a room, dry cleaning services, and more. The other assistant is a porter who is great for odd jobs such as fixing broken-down machines, such as the espresso machine that always seems to go on the fritz. As with the maid, the porter will pick up other duties the more you advance throughout the game's 50 levels.
After you make your daily cash quota and move onto the next day, dozens of upgrades can be purchased to increase the skills of the three workers (manager, maid and porter) such as faster shoes for Jane, a better vacuum cleaner (the "Turbo 4000") for the maid or a digital camera for the porter. Furniture that's relevant to the hotel can also be purchased to spice up the place, including nice paintings for the French hotel, a medieval knight statue for the English castle or floral trimmings for the resort in the Canary Islands. You can also buy places for guests to lounge in the lobby, which increases the number of guests you can handle at once, and therefore making you more cash at the end of each day.
One issue, however, is you can't save your cash for a more expensive luxury because your money doesn't carry over between levels. For instance, say there's a $400 crystal chandelier you want but you only have $200 left after paying for staff upgrades (which are arguably more important). Problem is, that $200 doesn't carry over because you start each day with $0. Other minor niggles include graphics that are average compared to today's casual games and only one game mode to play.
Shortcomings aside, Jane's Hotel: Family Hero is an enjoyable hotel management game that is sure to provide many hours of increasingly challenging fun. Multi-taskers especially will relish in the furious mouse-clicking required to juggle all the guests' requests at once. We enjoyed our stay here, and we hope you will too!
this game is very good alot better than the first game. i really love to play this game.
Posted by: thanh at March 29, 2008 11:09 PM
oi adoro este jogo e acho que podia haver um empregado de mesa,empregada,técnico,levador de malas,fotografo...Adorava que este sonho se realizaçe
Posted by: Teresa at March 30, 2008 07:40 AM
hello I am familiar to all janes hotel game exep for this one it looks fun en with plenty of chalenge dont have ane problem entering the other games of janes hotel but I have troble with this game its says internet explorer dos not whant to download this page so I went to chek my internet en tels me that there is no problem with it en there is nothing working wile I download the game I have window xp have 56go lesft so were is my problem wy can I not download your game thank you for your help
Posted by: suzanne morin at March 31, 2008 11:17 AM
I have trouble sometimes loading my game. It seems to have a bug in the demo version so i doubt I'll be purchasing this one.
Posted by: Stacy at April 3, 2008 11:24 AM
In the version I got there is a bug where the game freezes at the first level for each new hotel because a "file not found" error message pops up. However, you can get around that in Windows by using alt-tab to go to the error message, then just press enter, and the game will continue OK.
However, once you get to the side to side scrolling in the 4th hotel, this game literally made me nauseous. I only got through 3 days of the 4th hotel and then I had to give up. It's a graphic concept that just doesn't work for me at all.
Robin
Posted by: Robin at April 4, 2008 09:44 PM
I enjoyed this game alot.
One thing I found, is that you DO get to keep the money. You start the level at 0 to pass the level, no matter how much money was left over....but shopping adds up - whatever you don't spend will be there after the next level available for shopping....
Hope that makes sense....
Posted by: blulapis at April 6, 2008 01:41 AM
I am a veteran of the first Jane's Hotel game, which I had to abandon close to the end because I couldn't handle the SCROLLING! (Game developers, hear this: Click-happy casual gamers need the whole field of play in front of them AT ONCE!)
The new game is much improved on that score; I'm on the third hotel and there's no scrolling in sight.
I've always found the graphics on the Jane's Hotel games rather unclear, but the upgrades are complex and interesting - some bring in extra customers, others add cash value - and that keeps you playing.
Posted by: Donna at April 9, 2008 09:14 PM
ooh boy. This was interesting, if simple. It was actually easier than the original. Until I got to the (*#$ scrolling.
I have a cast iron stomach. I love roller coasters. I don't get seasick, airsick or carsick. But I apparently get Jane'sHotelsick. I had to quit both times because the scrolling made me severely nauseous and gave me a killer headache to boot. Please, please, please no more scrolling.
My other question. Was the 15 day limit actually enforced? It took me under the limit every time because clicking was easy. Did they actually repossess if you could not finish in 15 days.
Off for tylenol for my headache and to settle my stomach. I'm still nauseous even several minutes after quitting and taking breaks while playing.
Posted by: cat at April 13, 2008 11:35 PM
Update to my last post: AAAAAAAARRRRRRGGGGGGHHHH! The annoying scrolling which marred the original game IS present in the latter levels of this sequel.
DEVELOPERS: WILL YOU E V E R LEARN?
Posted by: Donna at April 15, 2008 08:00 AM
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