Compara los precios de The Operator en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Bureau 81. Publicado por Bureau 81. Lanzado el 22/7/2024. Disponible en PC, Mac, Linux. Géneros: Adventure, Indie, Simulation. Puntuación Metacritic: 78/100.

Four hours at a government desk, a hacker you shouldn't trust, a bomb you have to defuse over the phone. Bureau 81's tight cyberthriller makes spreadsheet work feel genuinely tense.

My instinct with puzzle-sims is to treat them like strategy games: stress-test every tool, cross-reference every database, find the depth. The Operator is a lesson in expectation management. You play as Evan Tanner on his first shift at the FDI, a federal intelligence department that sits somewhere between the FBI and CIA, and every bit of casework happens through a simulated CRT desktop. License plate lookups, facial recognition scans, chemical compound analysis, CCTV monitoring, a civilian database called PeopleDB and a password-cracking puzzle that borrows Wordle's colour-coded feedback logic. On paper, that toolkit sounds elaborate. In practice, Bureau 81 has deliberately streamlined each interaction down to its clearest form: spot the anomaly, click it, link the result to the active case. The difficulty ceiling is low. If you want to feel like a super-competent intelligence operative with zero friction, it delivers. If you want to feel like you're outsmarting a system, it doesn't. Where the game earns its Metacritic 78 is in the quality of its set-pieces, not its moment-to-moment depth. The bomb defusal sequence in the latter half is the standout: you cross-reference a multi-page technical manual against an agent's description in real time, identifying the bomb type, then talking her through each wire cut in sequence. It is the one puzzle with a meaningful time limit, and the tension is real in a way the earlier cases never quite manage. A separate sequence involving live CCTV feeds and floor plans to guide an agent through a building is cinematic but much lighter on actual decision-making. The chemical compound analysis tool, meanwhile, appears once and then disappears entirely, which is the game's recurring structural frustration: it introduces a mechanic, uses it sparingly, then moves on. Reviewers and players alike have flagged this pattern as the core disappointment. The narrative layer is where The Operator earns loyalty. You pick up cases from two main field agents, each with distinct voice performances, and gradually a conspiracy starts threading through what initially look like unrelated assignments. There is also HAL, a known hacker who makes contact through your desktop and offers information you shouldn't officially accept. The story escalates quickly, possibly a touch too quickly, and the ending lands as an explicit sequel setup rather than a resolution. Dialogue choices exist throughout, but they are largely cosmetic. The game is a linear thriller told through a puzzle wrapper, not an interactive drama with branching outcomes. Players hoping to shape the story will hit that wall fast. For the strategy and simulation crowd, the honest framing is this: The Operator is a short, well-crafted narrative experience wearing sim clothing. It clocks in at roughly four to five hours depending on pace, with no replay value built in and no sandbox mode for running extra cases outside the main story. The desktop interface is convincing enough to create genuine immersion, and the voice acting is consistently solid. The tutorial is immediate and respectful of your time, which matters. What the game lacks is the systemic depth that would make it a true sim. The tools feel constructed per-puzzle rather than assembled as a coherent investigative sandbox. If the pitch were reframed as a cinematic puzzle adventure with a government-agency aesthetic, the gap between expectation and delivery shrinks considerably. Approached that way, it is a confident and focused experience from a small team that knew exactly which corners to trim. Diego, Scout Team

The Operator

The Operator

22 jul 2024Bureau 81
GamerScout opina

Four hours at a government desk, a hacker you shouldn't trust, a bomb you have to defuse over the phone. Bureau 81's tight cyberthriller makes spreadsheet work feel genuinely tense.

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Mínimo histórico: €6.99

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My instinct with puzzle-sims is to treat them like strategy games: stress-test every tool, cross-reference every database, find the depth. The Operator is a lesson in expectation management. You play as Evan Tanner on his first shift at the FDI, a federal intelligence department that sits somewhere between the FBI and CIA, and every bit of casework happens through a simulated CRT desktop. License plate lookups, facial recognition scans, chemical compound analysis, CCTV monitoring, a civilian database called PeopleDB and a password-cracking puzzle that borrows Wordle's colour-coded feedback logic. On paper, that toolkit sounds elaborate. In practice, Bureau 81 has deliberately streamlined each interaction down to its clearest form: spot the anomaly, click it, link the result to the active case. The difficulty ceiling is low. If you want to feel like a super-competent intelligence operative with zero friction, it delivers. If you want to feel like you're outsmarting a system, it doesn't. Where the game earns its Metacritic 78 is in the quality of its set-pieces, not its moment-to-moment depth. The bomb defusal sequence in the latter half is the standout: you cross-reference a multi-page technical manual against an agent's description in real time, identifying the bomb type, then talking her through each wire cut in sequence. It is the one puzzle with a meaningful time limit, and the tension is real in a way the earlier cases never quite manage. A separate sequence involving live CCTV feeds and floor plans to guide an agent through a building is cinematic but much lighter on actual decision-making. The chemical compound analysis tool, meanwhile, appears once and then disappears entirely, which is the game's recurring structural frustration: it introduces a mechanic, uses it sparingly, then moves on. Reviewers and players alike have flagged this pattern as the core disappointment. The narrative layer is where The Operator earns loyalty. You pick up cases from two main field agents, each with distinct voice performances, and gradually a conspiracy starts threading through what initially look like unrelated assignments. There is also HAL, a known hacker who makes contact through your desktop and offers information you shouldn't officially accept. The story escalates quickly, possibly a touch too quickly, and the ending lands as an explicit sequel setup rather than a resolution. Dialogue choices exist throughout, but they are largely cosmetic. The game is a linear thriller told through a puzzle wrapper, not an interactive drama with branching outcomes. Players hoping to shape the story will hit that wall fast. For the strategy and simulation crowd, the honest framing is this: The Operator is a short, well-crafted narrative experience wearing sim clothing. It clocks in at roughly four to five hours depending on pace, with no replay value built in and no sandbox mode for running extra cases outside the main story. The desktop interface is convincing enough to create genuine immersion, and the voice acting is consistently solid. The tutorial is immediate and respectful of your time, which matters. What the game lacks is the systemic depth that would make it a true sim. The tools feel constructed per-puzzle rather than assembled as a coherent investigative sandbox. If the pitch were reframed as a cinematic puzzle adventure with a government-agency aesthetic, the gap between expectation and delivery shrinks considerably. Approached that way, it is a confident and focused experience from a small team that knew exactly which corners to trim.

Diego
Diego · Scout Team

Strategy & simulation

Etiquetas

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supportcloud-savestier:aaaDesktop SimCyberthrillerLinear NarrativePuzzle AdventureVoice ActingGovernment AgencySingle SittingLow Difficulty

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
Windows 7
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Storage
3 GB available space
Graphics
GTX 970
Processor
Intel i5 or equivalent

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Reseñas y valoraciones

Metacritic
78

Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Bureau 81
Distribuidora
Bureau 81
Fecha de lanzamiento
22 jul 2024

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible The Operator?

The Operator está disponible en PC, Mac, Linux.

¿Cuándo se lanzó The Operator?

The Operator se lanzó el 22 de julio de 2024.

¿Quién desarrolló The Operator?

The Operator fue desarrollado por Bureau 81.

¿Merece la pena comprar The Operator?

The Operator tiene una puntuación Metacritic de 78/100, lo que lo convierte en uno de los títulos destacados de Adventure. Mira las reseñas completas, las valoraciones y los tiempos de duración en esta página para decidir.