The console versions of the game boast new content by way of new levels, though at launch PC owners will benefit from having all that new stuff be rolled into the preexisting computer version free of charge. You'll learn to climb, drag, and improvise when things inevitably go horribly awry due to your lack of a spine. Momentum, inertia, and other terms you likely haven't heard since high school ("centripetal force," anyone?) are key to navigating the game.įortunately, the game is patient in escalating you to the more worrying challenges. You play as the titular human, a pudgy mass of Jell-O who's sent rippling and wobbling by the tiniest crack in the road or the seemingly smallest step in a staircase and who's tasked with absurd situations like hugging a wrecking ball to careen over huge pits, whizzing from a catapult, and carefully steering power boats. Unlike so many other video games today, it's a welcome respite with bright colors and an understated sense of humor. You'll be able to tell right away whether you appreciate Human: Fall Flat. This amusing, physics-based puzzler will make you laugh, even when it frustrates you with its wobbly controls.
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