Compara los precios de The Plane Effect en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Innovina/StudioKiku. Publicado por PQube. Lanzado el 23/9/2021. Disponible en PC, Xbox. Géneros: Adventure, Casual, Indie. Puntuación Metacritic: 68/100.

A visually arresting isometric nightmare about a man who just wants to go home, built on atmosphere so thick you could cut it, and puzzles obtuse enough to make you want to quit before the credits.

I went into The Plane Effect fully ready to be its advocate. The low-poly isometric world, the muted grays punctuated by single bursts of colour, the promise of a surreal commute through a dystopian cityscape while a cosmic red entity looms overhead, all of it had me leaning forward. The opening image of Solo, a salaryman clacking away alone in a darkened office on his last day, says more without words than most games manage in an hour of cutscenes. That atmosphere is genuine, handcrafted, and it carries the game for longer than the mechanics deserve. The world itself is the highlight, full stop. Each level operates like a stage set built specifically to unsettle you: muted charcoal cityscapes give way to surreal encounters with drones, sewer creatures, giant ants, and Escher-style staircases that warp under impossible physics. The developers clearly had VFX expertise and it shows in the lighting design and parallax motion across the isometric plane. If you have a soft spot for Inside or Mosaic, the visual language here will feel familiar and welcome. The recurring motif of Solo's daughter's paper plane, which pulls you back to reality across chapters, is quietly beautiful, exactly the kind of small intentional detail that makes handcrafted games worth championing. But here is where the honesty has to arrive. The puzzle design works against the atmosphere at nearly every turn. The core loop is a strict sequential point-and-click structure: you cannot pick up the oil can until you have visited the cogs, you cannot interact with the taxi until you have done something else the game never told you about. Three difficulty modes exist, ranging from no-hint to a full Guided mode that draws a literal line to your next objective, and most players will find themselves sliding toward Guided faster than they expected. The platforming sections compound the problem. The fixed isometric camera makes spatial judgment unreliable, and timed chase sequences with sluggish controls and inconsistent hitboxes produce the kind of frustration that breaks immersion completely. The run button is slow to respond. The jump carries no convincing momentum. For a 3 to 6 hour game, these friction points land hard. The community reception reflects that split. Steam user scores sit in mixed territory and critic reviews cluster around the same tension: the art direction is praised almost universally, while the puzzle logic and controls draw consistent criticism across platforms. A Metacritic score of 68 is exactly where you would expect a game that gets half the equation right to land. If you treat the hint system as a design feature rather than a concession, lean into Guided mode from the start, and come for the surreal atmosphere and moody ambient soundtrack rather than puzzle satisfaction, you will find something genuinely strange and worth seeing. If you want the puzzle layer to carry its own weight, this is not that game. Kai, Scout Team

The Plane Effect

The Plane Effect

23 sept 2021Innovina/StudioKikuPQube
GamerScout opina

A visually arresting isometric nightmare about a man who just wants to go home, built on atmosphere so thick you could cut it, and puzzles obtuse enough to make you want to quit before the credits.

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I went into The Plane Effect fully ready to be its advocate. The low-poly isometric world, the muted grays punctuated by single bursts of colour, the promise of a surreal commute through a dystopian cityscape while a cosmic red entity looms overhead, all of it had me leaning forward. The opening image of Solo, a salaryman clacking away alone in a darkened office on his last day, says more without words than most games manage in an hour of cutscenes. That atmosphere is genuine, handcrafted, and it carries the game for longer than the mechanics deserve. The world itself is the highlight, full stop. Each level operates like a stage set built specifically to unsettle you: muted charcoal cityscapes give way to surreal encounters with drones, sewer creatures, giant ants, and Escher-style staircases that warp under impossible physics. The developers clearly had VFX expertise and it shows in the lighting design and parallax motion across the isometric plane. If you have a soft spot for Inside or Mosaic, the visual language here will feel familiar and welcome. The recurring motif of Solo's daughter's paper plane, which pulls you back to reality across chapters, is quietly beautiful, exactly the kind of small intentional detail that makes handcrafted games worth championing. But here is where the honesty has to arrive. The puzzle design works against the atmosphere at nearly every turn. The core loop is a strict sequential point-and-click structure: you cannot pick up the oil can until you have visited the cogs, you cannot interact with the taxi until you have done something else the game never told you about. Three difficulty modes exist, ranging from no-hint to a full Guided mode that draws a literal line to your next objective, and most players will find themselves sliding toward Guided faster than they expected. The platforming sections compound the problem. The fixed isometric camera makes spatial judgment unreliable, and timed chase sequences with sluggish controls and inconsistent hitboxes produce the kind of frustration that breaks immersion completely. The run button is slow to respond. The jump carries no convincing momentum. For a 3 to 6 hour game, these friction points land hard. The community reception reflects that split. Steam user scores sit in mixed territory and critic reviews cluster around the same tension: the art direction is praised almost universally, while the puzzle logic and controls draw consistent criticism across platforms. A Metacritic score of 68 is exactly where you would expect a game that gets half the equation right to land. If you treat the hint system as a design feature rather than a concession, lean into Guided mode from the start, and come for the surreal atmosphere and moody ambient soundtrack rather than puzzle satisfaction, you will find something genuinely strange and worth seeing. If you want the puzzle layer to carry its own weight, this is not that game.

Kai
Kai · Scout Team

Indie & narrative

Etiquetas

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supporttier:indieIsometric Puzzle-AdventureGuided Hint SystemSurreal NarrativeAtmospheric HorrorSequential InteractionCinematic Set PiecesCosmic Dread

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
64 bit Windows 10 / 8 / 7
Memory
4 GB RAM
Storage
4 GB available space
Graphics
GeForce GTX 550 Ti / Radeon HD 6790 2GB VRAM
Processor
Intel Core i5-2500K 3.3GHz / AMD FX-8150 3.6GHz or equivalent

Recomendados

OS
64 bit Windows 10
Memory
8 GB RAM
Storage
4 GB available space
Graphics
GPU - NVIDIA GTX 1080 or equivalent video card with a dedicated memory of 2GB or high VRAM.
Processor
Processor - Core i5 2.8GHz processor.

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Reseñas y valoraciones

Metacritic
68

Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Innovina/StudioKiku
Distribuidora
PQube
Fecha de lanzamiento
23 sept 2021

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible The Plane Effect?

The Plane Effect está disponible en PC, Xbox.

¿Cuándo se lanzó The Plane Effect?

The Plane Effect se lanzó el 23 de septiembre de 2021.

¿Quién desarrolló The Plane Effect?

The Plane Effect fue desarrollado por Innovina/StudioKiku y publicado por PQube.

¿Merece la pena comprar The Plane Effect?

The Plane Effect tiene una puntuación Metacritic de 68/100, 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.