Compara los precios de Quantum Conundrum en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Airtight Games. Publicado por Square Enix. Lanzado el 21/6/2012. Disponible en PC. Géneros: Casual, Strategy. Puntuación Metacritic: 77/100.

A first-person puzzle game where you flip between parallel dimensions to manipulate physics and rescue your kidnapped uncle from his own ridiculous mansion.

Quantum Conundrum is a first-person physics puzzler developed by Airtight Games and published by Square Enix. You play as a kid dropped off at your eccentric uncle's massive mansion, only to find him missing and the place locked down. Your only tool is the Interdimensional Flux Shifter, a glove that lets you toggle between four alternate dimensions on the fly: Fluffy (objects become light), Heavy (objects become dense and crush things), Slow Motion, and Reverse Gravity. Each dimension changes how every object in a room behaves, and most puzzles require chaining multiple shifts together in sequence to move platforms, redirect laser beams, or fling safes across gaps. From a mechanics standpoint, this is a tight, well-scoped puzzle game. The dimensional shifting is the single core system, and the designers squeeze a lot of variety out of it without bloating the runtime. A typical puzzle asks you to make a couch light enough to carry, switch to Heavy mid-throw so it smashes a button, then pop into Slow Motion to sprint across before a door closes. That loop stays satisfying for most of the roughly five-to-six hour campaign. The difficulty curve is mostly fair, though a handful of late-game sections lean into precise timing in ways that feel more like a platformer than a puzzler, which will frustrate players who came for logic over reflexes. Where Quantum Conundrum stumbles is in the execution of its personality. The uncle's voice-over narration is clearly angling for the same comedic warmth Portal achieved with GLaDOS, but the writing lands inconsistently. Some jokes earn a smile; others repeat themselves or overstay their welcome. The mansion aesthetic is charming in screenshots but gets visually repetitive across its three main wings. There is no mod support to speak of, no replay hooks, and no difficulty settings, so the experience is largely linear and self-contained. For a strategy-minded player, that means you get one clean run through the design, absorb what the developers intended, and you are done. That said, the core design philosophy here is genuinely smart. Each room is essentially a small constraint-satisfaction problem: you have four tools, a fixed set of objects, and one correct order of operations. If you enjoy breaking a system down to its variables and solving for the optimal sequence, there is real satisfaction in Quantum Conundrum even if it never reaches the depth that a longer puzzle game might offer. It is not a grand-strategy experience by any means, but the same analytical instinct that helps you optimize a build order will make these puzzles click quickly. New players to the genre will find the early rooms function as a solid, respectful tutorial that introduces one mechanic at a time before combining them. Bottom line: this is a well-built, compact puzzle experience with a clever central mechanic that the developers use responsibly. It is not a long game, it has no community ecosystem around it, and the humor misses as often as it lands. But if you want a few evenings of clean, physics-based puzzle solving with a low barrier to entry, Quantum Conundrum delivers exactly what it promises and not much more. Diego, Scout Team

Quantum Conundrum

Quantum Conundrum

21 jun 2012Airtight GamesSquare Enix
GamerScout opina

A first-person puzzle game where you flip between parallel dimensions to manipulate physics and rescue your kidnapped uncle from his own ridiculous mansion.

PC
Steam Deck PlayableProtonDB Gold
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Mínimo histórico: €0.62

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Quantum Conundrum is a first-person physics puzzler developed by Airtight Games and published by Square Enix. You play as a kid dropped off at your eccentric uncle's massive mansion, only to find him missing and the place locked down. Your only tool is the Interdimensional Flux Shifter, a glove that lets you toggle between four alternate dimensions on the fly: Fluffy (objects become light), Heavy (objects become dense and crush things), Slow Motion, and Reverse Gravity. Each dimension changes how every object in a room behaves, and most puzzles require chaining multiple shifts together in sequence to move platforms, redirect laser beams, or fling safes across gaps. From a mechanics standpoint, this is a tight, well-scoped puzzle game. The dimensional shifting is the single core system, and the designers squeeze a lot of variety out of it without bloating the runtime. A typical puzzle asks you to make a couch light enough to carry, switch to Heavy mid-throw so it smashes a button, then pop into Slow Motion to sprint across before a door closes. That loop stays satisfying for most of the roughly five-to-six hour campaign. The difficulty curve is mostly fair, though a handful of late-game sections lean into precise timing in ways that feel more like a platformer than a puzzler, which will frustrate players who came for logic over reflexes. Where Quantum Conundrum stumbles is in the execution of its personality. The uncle's voice-over narration is clearly angling for the same comedic warmth Portal achieved with GLaDOS, but the writing lands inconsistently. Some jokes earn a smile; others repeat themselves or overstay their welcome. The mansion aesthetic is charming in screenshots but gets visually repetitive across its three main wings. There is no mod support to speak of, no replay hooks, and no difficulty settings, so the experience is largely linear and self-contained. For a strategy-minded player, that means you get one clean run through the design, absorb what the developers intended, and you are done. That said, the core design philosophy here is genuinely smart. Each room is essentially a small constraint-satisfaction problem: you have four tools, a fixed set of objects, and one correct order of operations. If you enjoy breaking a system down to its variables and solving for the optimal sequence, there is real satisfaction in Quantum Conundrum even if it never reaches the depth that a longer puzzle game might offer. It is not a grand-strategy experience by any means, but the same analytical instinct that helps you optimize a build order will make these puzzles click quickly. New players to the genre will find the early rooms function as a solid, respectful tutorial that introduces one mechanic at a time before combining them. Bottom line: this is a well-built, compact puzzle experience with a clever central mechanic that the developers use responsibly. It is not a long game, it has no community ecosystem around it, and the humor misses as often as it lands. But if you want a few evenings of clean, physics-based puzzle solving with a low barrier to entry, Quantum Conundrum delivers exactly what it promises and not much more.

Diego
Diego · Scout Team

Strategy & simulation

Etiquetas

steamDimension-ShiftingPhysics PuzzlesFirst-Person PuzzlerSingle PlaythroughTimed Platforming SectionsKid ProtagonistShort Campaign

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

Processor
Intel Core 2 Duo 2.2 Ghz / AMD Athlon x2 64 3800+
Memory
2 GB RAM
Graphics
GeForce 8800 GT 512 MB / ATI Radeon HD 2900 512 MB Hard Drive:1.75 GB HD space Sound:DirectX9 compatible sound card

Recomendados

Processor
Intel Core 2 Duo 3 GHz E8400
Memory
2 GB RAM
Graphics
nVidia GeForce 9500 GT / ATI Radeon HD 2900 Hard Drive:1.75 GB HD space Sound:DirectX9 compatible sound card

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Reseñas y valoraciones

Metacritic
77
Steam
85%(2,135)

Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Airtight Games
Distribuidora
Square Enix
Fecha de lanzamiento
21 jun 2012

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible Quantum Conundrum?

Quantum Conundrum está disponible en PC.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Quantum Conundrum?

Quantum Conundrum se lanzó el 21 de junio de 2012.

¿Quién desarrolló Quantum Conundrum?

Quantum Conundrum fue desarrollado por Airtight Games y publicado por Square Enix.

¿Merece la pena comprar Quantum Conundrum?

Quantum Conundrum tiene una puntuación Metacritic de 77/100, lo que lo convierte en uno de los títulos destacados de Casual. Mira las reseñas completas, las valoraciones y los tiempos de duración en esta página para decidir.