Tue, Apr 17, 2012 | 01:14 BST
Jane Jensen’s next project is Moebius
Pinkerton Road has announced its first project – Moebius, a metaphysical sci-fi thriller adventures expected in March 2013.

Moebius was chosen from among other pitches by Kickstarter backers of Jane Jensen’s new, crowd-funded studio, winning 61% of the vote. It’s a point and click adventure played from third-person perspective, and will sport Casual and True Adventure modes.
The game’s protagonist is one Malachi Rector, an antiquities dealer who travels the world finding and researching artifacts, using a knack for “sensing the soul” of an object. After disaster strikes, burning down his manhattan base of operations, Rector signs on with millionaire Amber Dexter to investigate a mysterious sequence of events.
“The first event is the death of a young woman in Venice, who was found hanging from a bridge. As Rector investigates her life, he soon realizes that this beautiful and talented young woman – and the interrupted path of her life – had great hidden significance. It appears that Amber Dexter and his associates are playing with the fabric of life in a way Rector never imagined possible. Even he, Rector himself, is part of a larger pattern,” the pitch informs us.
Pinkerton name dropped a couple of other Jensen projects to set the tone – her novel Dante’s Equation and best-known series, Gabriel Knight – as well as TV series Fringe.
Should Pinkerton Road reach $300,000 in funding it will endeavour to release Moebius in March 2013. Check out Jensen announcing the winner below, as well as a couple of concept art pieces.





5 comments
#1
LOLshock94
17/04/12, 1:30 am
2/10 would not bang
#2
Sini
17/04/12, 2:10 am
11/10 on the daughter though.
oh, and Gabriel Knight is worth more than 2 points.
#3
LOLshock94
17/04/12, 2:23 am
am on about the one on the vid lol
#4
Kabby
17/04/12, 3:17 am
Games for Widows™
#5
Mike
17/04/12, 7:03 am
Interesting to see if Jane Jensen protagonist fits the sexist criteria just as it did in Gray Matter. Someone should to her and let her know that as a woman, she shouldn’t be creating impossibly curvy females in videogames.
Or something.