

Suki's extra tricks (which Bess can give you after giving you the shut off command) are "totte koi" (in which she chases her tail), "shizukani" (in which she puts her paws over her eyes and plays peek-a-boo), and "oyatsu" (in which she grows extra arms, an ornament comes out of her head, music plays and she dances like an Indian god). The extra avatar items are green skin, rainbow hair (the ribbons for which are red), golden cat eyes, a white t-shirt with a red rim at the bottom, red arms, a red collar and the Her Interactive logo on it, and purple shorts with a skirt over it on the right (the left side of the body) that starts off purple but fades to yellow (it can be seen in the minigame on Her Interactive's website). The extra award is for playing the phone games a lot.


Secrets Can Kill: Remastered did not have a Special Edition. They could be shipped or downloaded, and the boxes had a "SPECIAL EDITION" stamp as part of the cover artwork, and the disks also said "Special Edition" on them (or Bonus Edition). The fleur de lis on top of the detective badge in the credits will turn red to indicate the thirteenth award being obtained (or blue in The Captive Curse). Starting with The Shattered Medallion, there were no longer extra outtakes as there were no outtakes at all. When certain games were preordered (ordered before the release), they were Special Edition games with extra features and bonus content, including a thirteenth award and extra outtakes in all the games. Bonus Editions were started by Her Interactive in 2010, but they were called Special Editions (for Trail of the Twister, Shadow at the Water's Edge and The Captive Curse) until Alibi in Ashes, when they started being called Bonus Editions, as that box already said "Special 25th Edition" on it.
