Compare The Turing Test prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by BULKHEAD. Published by BULKHEAD. Released on 8/30/2016. Available on PC. Genres: Adventure. Metacritic score: 74/100.

If the Portal-shaped hole in your puzzle library has been collecting dust, Bulkhead's Europa-set mystery fills it well enough - just don't go in expecting the same wit or bite.

My first hour with The Turing Test felt comfortably familiar in a way that cuts both ways. You are Ava Turing, awoken from cryosleep on a station orbiting Europa while a very 2001-esque AI named T.O.M. quietly nudges you toward a base where your crew has gone silent. The setup works. The atmosphere - clean, sterile corridors, mellow ambient piano, a single voice keeping you company through seventy puzzle rooms - is genuinely well constructed, and the central dynamic between Ava and T.O.M. carries real weight. T.O.M. thinks, shows doubt, and does not always seem honest. That tension between a machine that feels human and a human acting increasingly like a machine is the game's strongest card, and Bulkhead plays it consistently across the whole runtime. The core mechanic is the Energy Manipulation Tool - the EMT gun - which lets you pull power spheres from sockets and redeploy them into other receptacles to unlock doors and activate machinery. Think Portal's portal gun stripped back to its logic skeleton, with coloured energy charges adding routing complexity as you progress. The puzzle structure is organized into sectors inside chapters, with each chapter capped by an explorable crew area full of audio logs and notes that flesh out the story. Those quieter moments between puzzles are where The Turing Test earns its slower pace. The problem is the difficulty curve hits a plateau roughly halfway through. The early chapters introduce mechanics a touch too fast and then under-test them, meaning you can breeze through sections without feeling like you earned it. A late-game mechanic involving perspective switching through monitoring cameras and controllable robots reshapes the formula meaningfully, but plenty of players will have wished it arrived sooner. On the "how does it hold up" question: the Unreal Engine 4 visuals still read as clean and functional, and the game runs without notable technical friction on PC. The voice acting for both Ava and T.O.M. is a genuine strength - unexpectedly good for the scale of the project. The optional side puzzles scattered across the chapters are where the real challenge lives; a handful of those are clever enough to stump you properly and feel distinct from the main path. The mandatory puzzles, by contrast, rarely demand the same lateral thinking, and some players who cut their teeth on Portal 2 or The Talos Principle will find the baseline difficulty noticeably lower. Steam players rate it at 87% positive across over four thousand reviews, which feels about right - this is a well-made thing that knows what it is, even if it stops short of pushing its own ideas as far as they could go. Who is it for? Puzzle fans looking for a six-to-eight hour sci-fi story that treats philosophy as texture rather than pretension will get solid value here. If you burned through Portal's test chambers in an afternoon and found The Talos Principle too cryptic, The Turing Test sits comfortably between the two in both tone and difficulty. Go in expecting a thoughtful, atmospheric puzzler with a story that mostly sticks the landing, and it delivers. Expect the genre's ceiling, and you will hit the limits faster than you would like. Alex, Scout Team

The Turing Test

The Turing Test

Aug 30, 2016BULKHEAD
GamerScout Says

If the Portal-shaped hole in your puzzle library has been collecting dust, Bulkhead's Europa-set mystery fills it well enough - just don't go in expecting the same wit or bite.

PC
Steam Deck PlayableProtonDB Platinum
Best Price Available
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GamerScout Verdict

Solid atmospheric puzzler for players who want a story-driven Portal alternative without the genre's steepest difficulty demands.

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Screenshots & Media

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About The Turing Test

My first hour with The Turing Test felt comfortably familiar in a way that cuts both ways. You are Ava Turing, awoken from cryosleep on a station orbiting Europa while a very 2001-esque AI named T.O.M. quietly nudges you toward a base where your crew has gone silent. The setup works. The atmosphere - clean, sterile corridors, mellow ambient piano, a single voice keeping you company through seventy puzzle rooms - is genuinely well constructed, and the central dynamic between Ava and T.O.M. carries real weight. T.O.M. thinks, shows doubt, and does not always seem honest. That tension between a machine that feels human and a human acting increasingly like a machine is the game's strongest card, and Bulkhead plays it consistently across the whole runtime. The core mechanic is the Energy Manipulation Tool - the EMT gun - which lets you pull power spheres from sockets and redeploy them into other receptacles to unlock doors and activate machinery. Think Portal's portal gun stripped back to its logic skeleton, with coloured energy charges adding routing complexity as you progress. The puzzle structure is organized into sectors inside chapters, with each chapter capped by an explorable crew area full of audio logs and notes that flesh out the story. Those quieter moments between puzzles are where The Turing Test earns its slower pace. The problem is the difficulty curve hits a plateau roughly halfway through. The early chapters introduce mechanics a touch too fast and then under-test them, meaning you can breeze through sections without feeling like you earned it. A late-game mechanic involving perspective switching through monitoring cameras and controllable robots reshapes the formula meaningfully, but plenty of players will have wished it arrived sooner. On the "how does it hold up" question: the Unreal Engine 4 visuals still read as clean and functional, and the game runs without notable technical friction on PC. The voice acting for both Ava and T.O.M. is a genuine strength - unexpectedly good for the scale of the project. The optional side puzzles scattered across the chapters are where the real challenge lives; a handful of those are clever enough to stump you properly and feel distinct from the main path. The mandatory puzzles, by contrast, rarely demand the same lateral thinking, and some players who cut their teeth on Portal 2 or The Talos Principle will find the baseline difficulty noticeably lower. Steam players rate it at 87% positive across over four thousand reviews, which feels about right - this is a well-made thing that knows what it is, even if it stops short of pushing its own ideas as far as they could go. Who is it for? Puzzle fans looking for a six-to-eight hour sci-fi story that treats philosophy as texture rather than pretension will get solid value here. If you burned through Portal's test chambers in an afternoon and found The Talos Principle too cryptic, The Turing Test sits comfortably between the two in both tone and difficulty. Go in expecting a thoughtful, atmospheric puzzler with a story that mostly sticks the landing, and it delivers. Expect the genre's ceiling, and you will hit the limits faster than you would like.

Alex
Alex · Scout Team

Catch-all

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supporttrading-cardscloud-savestier:aaaFirst-Person PuzzlerPortal-likeSci-Fi MysteryEMT Gun MechanicsPhilosophy ThemesAI NarrativeOptional Challenge RoomsPerspective SwitchingLinear Progression

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7 64-bit
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
10 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 560 / ATI Radeon HD 5770
Processor
Core i3 / Athlon 64 X2 6400

Recommended

OS
Win 7 64bit / Win 8.1 64-bit / Windows 10
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
10 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 970 / ATI Radeon R9 280 or above
Processor
Core i7-920 / A8-3870K or above

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Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
74

Game Info

Developer
BULKHEAD
Publisher
BULKHEAD
Release Date
Aug 30, 2016

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What platforms is The Turing Test available on?

The Turing Test is available on PC.

When was The Turing Test released?

The Turing Test was released on 30 August 2016.

Who developed The Turing Test?

The Turing Test was developed by BULKHEAD.

Is The Turing Test worth buying?

The Turing Test holds a Metacritic score of 74/100, making it one of the standout Adventure titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.