
Zeitgeist
A free, sub-two-hour third-person platformer with a pot plant sidekick and a genuinely strange submerged-city heist at its core. Rough around the edges, but the concept earns its runtime.
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About Zeitgeist
I have a soft spot for free games that swing for something weird, and Zeitgeist swings. You play as the Submariner, a female protagonist dropped into a desiccated world where water is almost gone, breaking into the ruins of an ancient submerged city to steal its beating heart. The pot plant companion tagging along is not a gimmick tacked on for charm - it signals the kind of off-kilter, handcrafted intent that small solo-adjacent studios sometimes pull off when nobody is watching. The setting, equal parts sci-fi and ancient mystery, lands in a space that feels genuinely its own. On the mechanical side, Zeitgeist is a linear third-person action-adventure platformer with puzzle elements woven through its halls. You are moving between corridors, triggering ancient mechanisms, and working out spatial routes through the city's labyrinth of chambers. The controller support is real and appreciated. The pacing is tight by necessity - completion data puts the main run at under two hours - and the game does not waste that time with padding. Twelve Steam achievements give completionists a small checklist to chase. What the game asks of you is attention, not endurance. But the community feedback around Zeitgeist is honest, and so should this review be. Players have flagged out-of-bounds geometry that requires reloading checkpoints, mouse sensitivity that tops out too low for keyboard-and-mouse comfort, and invert-Y axis settings that do not reliably stick. The jump sound effect has also drawn specific criticism for feeling out of place against the otherwise atmospheric backdrop. These are polish issues, not design failures, but they are real friction in a game this short - losing five minutes to a geometry clip in a ninety-minute experience stings proportionally harder than it would in a forty-hour open world. For the right player - someone who picks up free games on curiosity alone, who finds something appealing in a post-apocalyptic water-heist with a plant friend, who forgives rough camera edges when the core concept is this specific - Zeitgeist is worth the zero-dollar download and the afternoon it asks for. The atmosphere is there. The world-building is compressed but evocative. The colorful, stylized art direction gives it a look that reads as deliberate, not cheap. It is a first release carrying the scars of a first release, and that is fine. Not every game needs a decade of polish; some just need to exist and be strange. Kai, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 7
- Memory
- 4 GB RAM
- Storage
- 600 MB available space
Recommended
- OS
- Windows 11
- Memory
- 8 GB RAM
- Storage
- 600 MB available space
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Game Info
- Developer
- [SAMPLE TEXT] Studios ltd
- Publisher
- [SAMPLE TEXT] Studios ltd
- Release Date
- Jan 30, 2022