Nelson Tethers: Puzzle Agent

Nelson Tethers: Puzzle Agent is an adventure/puzzle game by Telltale Games, in collaboration with Graham Annable. It is the first game to come out of Telltale's pilot project and is based on Graham's Grickle series of short Flash cartoons. It was released on June 30, 2010.

Agent Nelson Tethers (voiced by Doug Boyd) is the only employee in the FBI's ignored Puzzle Research Division. At the start of the game, he is given his first field assignment in years: The factory that produces the erasers used by the White House has mysteriously stopped production and any attempt to contact them have been replied with puzzles. Tethers is sent to the small town of Scoggins, Minnesota, the location of the factory, to investigate what happened. When he arrives, he finds that the townsfolk are quite obsessed with puzzles. He also discovers that the factory is sealed with a strange lock and that there was some sort of "accident" involving an explosion in the factory. The factory's foreman, Isaac Davner, has also disappeared after the accident. During the course of the investigation, Tethers encounters strange red gnome-like creatures who hinder his progress. Who or what are these strange creatures? Why are they doing all this? And why are some of the townsfolk acting so suspicious?

A sequel, Puzzle Agent 2, was released exactly one year later on June 30, 2011. Though the case is officially closed with the eraser factory back up and running, Isaac Davner is still missing and there are still a lot of unanswered questions. Nelson decides to take some vacation time and head back to Scoggins to get to the bottom of things, only to find that the mysteries go much deeper than anyone had thought...

""I like my office. It's warm in my office. It's quiet in my office. There are no or  in my office!""
 * Alliterative Name: About half of the puzzle titles are alliterative.
 * Almost-Dead Guy:
 * Badass Bookworm: Nelson does some surprisingly athletic stuff for a guy who spends most of his time in an office, chewing gum and solving crosswords.
 * Beware the Nice Ones:
 * Bullet Catch:
 * Cat Scare
 * Conspiracy Theorist: Nelson becomes one over the course of the second game. His ally Korka dismisses his talk of the Hidden People and astronauts as crazy
 * Corrupt Hick:
 * The Cuckoolander Was Right:.
 * Deconstructive Parody: This game is basically Professor Layton, but with the main character noticing the stupid amount of puzzles in-game and a much more serious reason why:
 * Defective Detective: Although Nelson is shown to be a good detective, you can see that he'd rather be back in his basement office. This may be because he hasn't had a field mission in -- as he states -- "quite some time" (which mean he probably hasn't been on the field for a couple of YEARS) -- and that his specialty is puzzle solving. Not to mention all the creepy stuff going on in Scoggins.
 * Deconstructive Parody: This game is basically Professor Layton, but with the main character noticing the stupid amount of puzzles in-game and a much more serious reason why:
 * Defective Detective: Although Nelson is shown to be a good detective, you can see that he'd rather be back in his basement office. This may be because he hasn't had a field mission in -- as he states -- "quite some time" (which mean he probably hasn't been on the field for a couple of YEARS) -- and that his specialty is puzzle solving. Not to mention all the creepy stuff going on in Scoggins.

"Sherrif Bahg: Oh, and Tethers? Put my furniture back and fix my door on your way out."
 * Did Not Do the Research: There is a sign reading "Brorskap av skogen", apparently intended to be Norwegian for "Brotherhood of the forest". The correct phrase would be "Skogens brorskap".
 * Does This Remind You of Anything?: Nelson likes chewing gum. It helps him think. And when he learns that there's no way he'll be able to buy any in Scoggins, he almost has a panic attack until he starts collecting used pieces of gum that have been left on the walls, floors, and furnishings of Scoggins.
 * This is probably also a reference to Sherlock Holmes.
 * There's some Real Life evidence that chewing gum does help you concentrate, although none of the researchers have yet to comment on chewing used gum.
 * Downer Ending:
 * Dreaming of Things to Come: Nelson somehow gets dreams about meeting up with an astronaut in both games.
 * Supposedly, it's the.
 * Exact Words: In the sequel, "Issac Davner Does Not Exist."
 * Follow the Leader: It really is very similar to Professor Layton....
 * Getting Crap Past the Radar: Martha Garrett's exclamation about never meeting a man who's resisted 'Hot Dish'....
 * Go Look At the Distraction: A bad guy about to shoot you? Throw a crossword puzzle to the side, and he instantly jumps towards it.
 * Go Mad from the Revelation:
 * Interface Screw:
 * Is This Thing Still On?: Tethers records all his observations into a dictaphone he carries with him. That's ALL his observations.
 * Lampshade Hanging:
 * Is This Thing Still On?: Tethers records all his observations into a dictaphone he carries with him. That's ALL his observations.
 * Lampshade Hanging:
 * Lampshade Hanging:


 * Lock and Key Puzzle: Unique variation. Most of the first game is spent acquiring three gears that you need to open the factory's puzzle lock. They break apart to form one large jigsaw-puzzle gear that you must snap into place.
 * Lunacy: Involved in the second game's plot.
 * Moon Logic Puzzle: Sorry, the joke just had to be made.
 * Nice Job Breaking It, Hero: Hooray! You've made it to the factory and found the foreman!
 * It's actually subverted.
 * In the sequel, Nelson's tapes that he keeps sending to FBI to be filed (even though he's on "vacation") result in . Apparently, holding on to the tapes and sending them all later doesn't occur to Nelson at all.
 * No Sense of Direction: Nelson can't find the hotel at which he's supposed to stay in Scoggins. After solving a puzzle to lead Nelson to the hotel, he ends up where he was before he started the puzzle. Turns out he was there the whole time.
 * Apparently, his sense of direction is improved in the sequel, where he can easily retrace his steps after solving a puzzle, despite running away the last time he was there.
 * Offscreen Teleportation: Somehow, two hulking can appear behind Nelson without him noticing them walk in the snow. Repeated by  and  (although the latter can be justified by Nelson being delirious at the time, oblivious to his surroundings).
 * Only Sane Man: Nelson Tethers in the first game. Less so in the sequel.
 * In the first game, Tethers sees Martha Garrett as one of the more rational people in town, but she does have a few puzzles that need solved.
 * In the second game, Korka seems pretty well adjusted too..
 * Ooh, Me Accent's Slipping: Korka's accent is mostly Russian, but her voice actor slips up every now and then.
 * Which is kind of strange, considering her voice actor actually IS Russian, so it's likely due to a limited knowledge of English.
 * Our Gnomes Are Weirder: The Hidden People. Especially since they're creepy as hell and
 * Point of No Return: In the first game, when you assemble the third gear. However, any optional puzzles you missed may be performed after the credits.
 * Power-Up Food: Chewing gum is used to give Nelson hints on puzzles. Apparently he gains hypercognitive insight from chewing gum.
 * Reassigned to Antarctica:.
 * Scare Chord:
 * Screams Like a Little Girl: Nelson.
 * Sequel Hook:
 * Shout-Out: One of the puzzles in the sequel is named Cross the Streams.
 * Somebody Else's Problem: In the first game.
 * Seven Minute Lull: Played with: When Nelson is explaining his findings to Officer Jensen -- who is drinking the milkshakes and therefore cannot hear most of what Nelson is saying--Nelson eventually screams, "THE ASTRONAUTS IN THE FOREST ARE MURDERING PEOPLE!" everything had gone silent.
 * Theme Twin Naming: Spoofed: There are twin brothers named Daryl and Darrel: Nelson's job is to find Darrel in the sequel.
 * The Un-Reveal: Every time there's the dream with the astronaut, it cuts to Nelson waking up and the players never seeing behind the visor.
 * Video Game Cruelty Potential: Somewhat. If you mess up in puzzles, you'll cost U.S. taxpayers more and more money for each subsequent failure. Mess up a lot and you can make a single puzzle cost more than a million dollars!
 * What Do You Mean It's Not Awesome?: The reason why Nelson is in Scoggins in the first place. He needs to solve this town's problem or the president won't have his erasers!
 * Lampshaded at the end when a senior agent notes that the Prez probably wasn't even aware there was a problem.
 * What Happened to the Mouse?: Nelson never actually finds any of the missing people in the second game and forgets about them after finding . Perhaps his statement that is actually true.
 * He does find the items belonging to a skier he sees several times in Scoggins.
 * X Meets Y: The game is pretty much Professor Layton meets Fargo and Twin Peaks.
 * You Have to Believe Me: Nelson, several times in the sequel.