Compare Linkito prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Kalinarm. Published by Playdigious Originals. Released on 7/23/2024. Available on PC, Linux. Genres: Indie, Simulation, Strategy. Metacritic score: 83/100.

If circuit boards and logic gates make your brain light up, Linkito is the most accessible entry point the genre has seen in years - and its level editor keeps the challenge alive long after the campaign ends.

I went into Linkito half-expecting a watered-down Zachtronics clone dressed up with a pretty coat of paint. What I got instead was a solo-developer puzzle game that genuinely understands how to teach Boolean logic without making you feel like you are sitting a computer science exam. The setup: you are a lottery-selected engineer at Albatross Technologies, a retro-futurist corporation set in a dystopian alternate late-19th century. The narrative drip-feeds its dystopian undercurrent through manager dialogue, post-it notes, and rebel tapes hidden around the level-select rooms - not deep, but purposeful enough to keep you pushing through a frustrating puzzle rather than closing the app. The core loop starts with the simplest possible idea: route current from yellow outputs to blue inputs. From there, Kalinarm layers in AND gates, OR gates, XOR gates, switches, timers, batteries, and eventually programmable robots that all respond simultaneously to the signals you send them. Each department - the Repair Shop, the Laboratory, the robot floors, the Control Center - introduces a new toolkit before combining everything in the final area. The escalation is well-paced across the 80-plus required puzzles, though players who live in spreadsheets will find the mandatory campaign sits in the comfortable-to-moderate range for most of its runtime. The genuine head-scratchers are cordoned off into optional bonus levels, which is a smart structural decision: nobody gets gate-kept out of the story, and puzzle veterans can find their difficulty ceiling in the extras. Two design choices separate Linkito from its genre peers. First, the hint system places context-sensitive hint buttons directly adjacent to the specific circuit segment most likely to trip you up - not a vague "here is a tip" pop-up, but targeted nudges that respect your intelligence while keeping you unstuck. Second, the level editor is not an afterthought. With over 100 placeable elements, scripting support for microcontrollers, and already a growing library of community-made stages available on launch, the editor adds a longevity layer that the eight-or-so-hour campaign alone could not justify. The game even supports Arduino and OSC protocol connections, meaning hardware tinkerers can wire physical buttons into the game - an absurdly niche but genuinely clever feature that solo developer Kalinarm clearly built out of personal passion. The criticisms are real but narrow. A subset of puzzles introduce timing mechanics - defusing bombs with tight windows, adjusting wires mid-sequence - and some players find this collides badly with the otherwise methodical, pure-logic identity of the game. One late section reportedly abandons the wiring mechanics almost entirely in favor of platforming, which feels tonally disconnected. The campaign also lacks a mid-session save for individual puzzles, which caused at least some players to lose progress on longer attempts. None of these issues are dealbreakers, but if you came specifically for slow, deliberate circuit planning with no time pressure, go in with eyes open. For anyone curious about programming logic, electronics, or the Zachtronics corner of puzzle design but intimidated by the genre's usual hostility to newcomers, Linkito is the correct starting point. The visual style - bold, colorful, vaguely 1950s propaganda-poster aesthetic - makes even cluttered puzzle boards readable. The music holds up without becoming grating over a multi-hour session. And a Metacritic sitting at 83 from critics broadly aligns with the community reception, which skews positive with caveats. It is not the hardest logic puzzler you will play, but it might be the most inviting. Diego, Scout Team

Linkito
IndieSimulationStrategy

Linkito

Jul 23, 2024KalinarmPlaydigious Originals
GamerScout Says

If circuit boards and logic gates make your brain light up, Linkito is the most accessible entry point the genre has seen in years - and its level editor keeps the challenge alive long after the campaign ends.

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Screenshots & Media

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About Linkito

I went into Linkito half-expecting a watered-down Zachtronics clone dressed up with a pretty coat of paint. What I got instead was a solo-developer puzzle game that genuinely understands how to teach Boolean logic without making you feel like you are sitting a computer science exam. The setup: you are a lottery-selected engineer at Albatross Technologies, a retro-futurist corporation set in a dystopian alternate late-19th century. The narrative drip-feeds its dystopian undercurrent through manager dialogue, post-it notes, and rebel tapes hidden around the level-select rooms - not deep, but purposeful enough to keep you pushing through a frustrating puzzle rather than closing the app. The core loop starts with the simplest possible idea: route current from yellow outputs to blue inputs. From there, Kalinarm layers in AND gates, OR gates, XOR gates, switches, timers, batteries, and eventually programmable robots that all respond simultaneously to the signals you send them. Each department - the Repair Shop, the Laboratory, the robot floors, the Control Center - introduces a new toolkit before combining everything in the final area. The escalation is well-paced across the 80-plus required puzzles, though players who live in spreadsheets will find the mandatory campaign sits in the comfortable-to-moderate range for most of its runtime. The genuine head-scratchers are cordoned off into optional bonus levels, which is a smart structural decision: nobody gets gate-kept out of the story, and puzzle veterans can find their difficulty ceiling in the extras. Two design choices separate Linkito from its genre peers. First, the hint system places context-sensitive hint buttons directly adjacent to the specific circuit segment most likely to trip you up - not a vague "here is a tip" pop-up, but targeted nudges that respect your intelligence while keeping you unstuck. Second, the level editor is not an afterthought. With over 100 placeable elements, scripting support for microcontrollers, and already a growing library of community-made stages available on launch, the editor adds a longevity layer that the eight-or-so-hour campaign alone could not justify. The game even supports Arduino and OSC protocol connections, meaning hardware tinkerers can wire physical buttons into the game - an absurdly niche but genuinely clever feature that solo developer Kalinarm clearly built out of personal passion. The criticisms are real but narrow. A subset of puzzles introduce timing mechanics - defusing bombs with tight windows, adjusting wires mid-sequence - and some players find this collides badly with the otherwise methodical, pure-logic identity of the game. One late section reportedly abandons the wiring mechanics almost entirely in favor of platforming, which feels tonally disconnected. The campaign also lacks a mid-session save for individual puzzles, which caused at least some players to lose progress on longer attempts. None of these issues are dealbreakers, but if you came specifically for slow, deliberate circuit planning with no time pressure, go in with eyes open. For anyone curious about programming logic, electronics, or the Zachtronics corner of puzzle design but intimidated by the genre's usual hostility to newcomers, Linkito is the correct starting point. The visual style - bold, colorful, vaguely 1950s propaganda-poster aesthetic - makes even cluttered puzzle boards readable. The music holds up without becoming grating over a multi-hour session. And a Metacritic sitting at 83 from critics broadly aligns with the community reception, which skews positive with caveats. It is not the hardest logic puzzler you will play, but it might be the most inviting. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supportcloud-savestier:aaaBoolean LogicCircuit RoutingLevel EditorHint SystemNarrative PuzzleRetro-FuturistCommunity LevelsArduino IntegrationTiming MechanicsSolo Developer

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck PlayableProtonDB Platinum

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable. Runs flawlessly on Linux out of the box. Based on 4 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10
Memory
8 GB RAM
Storage
1 GB available space
Graphics
Dedicated Graphics Card
Processor
2.3Ghz processing power

Recommended

OS
Windows 10
Memory
12 GB RAM
Storage
5 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GTX 960 or equivalent
Processor
3.5Ghz processing power

Community Discussion

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Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
83

Game Info

Developer
Kalinarm
Publisher
Playdigious Originals
Release Date
Jul 23, 2024

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Frequently asked questions about Linkito

Where can I buy Linkito cheapest?

Compare Linkito prices across every verified store in the price table on this page. We list the cheapest in-stock key and store offers, updated regularly, so you always see the best current deal before you buy.

What platforms is Linkito available on?

Linkito is available on PC, Linux.

When was Linkito released?

Linkito was released on 23 July 2024.

Who developed Linkito?

Linkito was developed by Kalinarm and published by Playdigious Originals.

Is Linkito worth buying?

Linkito holds a Metacritic score of 83/100, making it one of the standout Indie titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.