User Score
8.2

Generally favorable reviews- based on 41 Ratings

User score distribution:
  1. Positive: 31 out of 41
  2. Negative: 4 out of 41

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  1. Feb 17, 2017
    3
    Q.U.B.E. is a minimalist first-person puzzle game. You wake up in a sterile environment consisting entirely of white cubes. There are a small number of colored blocks – when you point at them and press your mouse, you can cause them to extrude from the walls or retract back into them. There are four kinds of blocks – purple blocks, which rotate the environment (either 90 degrees or, in aQ.U.B.E. is a minimalist first-person puzzle game. You wake up in a sterile environment consisting entirely of white cubes. There are a small number of colored blocks – when you point at them and press your mouse, you can cause them to extrude from the walls or retract back into them. There are four kinds of blocks – purple blocks, which rotate the environment (either 90 degrees or, in a small number of puzzles, 45 degrees. There are red blocks, which extrude a line up to three blocks long. There’s yellow blocks, which always come in threes; clicking on either end causes them to extrude 1 block on the opposite end, 2 blocks in the middle, and 3 blocks on the clicked block. And there’s blue blocks, which slingshot you (or any other object) when you touch them.

    There’s a couple other mechanics – there are some round marbles which must be navigated through environments by use of the block mechanics, as well as some autonomous robots which always turn left which must be navigated through the environment using block mechanics. Later on, there are some wires (which, when they contact pads, light them up – these are only used for a very small number of puzzles, as they are pretty limited) and a few laser light puzzles, where you must reflect a laser using mirrors to get to the final point.

    A few puzzles make use of tinting blocks – either to change the color of lasers or to change the color of marbles – which adds an additional element to some puzzles.

    While the game tries to do a lot with its mechanics, I have to say that a lot of the puzzles weren’t actually all that much fun to solve. The game was very fond of the marble puzzles, but I have to say these were my least favorite part of the game; some of them involved fairly exact timing, particularly on some blocks with some amount of delay to them (the yellow ones), and on at least one puzzle that involved rotation, I’m fairly certain I “cheated” the game and didn’t solve it the “right way”. It was also common to face several marble puzzles in a row, which made them feel a bit more repetitive than they might have otherwise.

    However, the game as a whole doesn’t have all that many tricks to show the player; it clocks in around four hours in length for the main game, plus maybe another couple hours for the various side challenges if you’re intent on getting a lot of medals. But the game simply doesn’t have all that many puzzle elements to it, and so after a while it feels like the game is just remixing stuff you’ve seen a bunch without doing anything particularly clever with it. The fifth zone – doing puzzles in the dark – was particularly notable in this regard, as the main mechanic was that you couldn’t see all of what you were doing at the same time. This wasn’t a particularly fun mechanic, but it didn’t really do anything new with the puzzles, just made it more inconvenient to solve them. The first couple zones of the game were basically a tutorial in the games’ mechanics as well, with a lot of very simple puzzles which weren’t all that interesting to solve.

    And unfortunately, this game doesn’t boast much else other than puzzles; whereas Portal boasted GlaDOS, Wheatly, and Cave Johnson constantly chattering at you, Q.U.B.E.’s “mission control” voices are somewhat more limited in their appearances. Worse, however, is the fact that they just aren’t all that interesting; one of them says you’re saving the Earth, the other one says that the first voice is lying and you’re imprisoned in the Earth solving puzzles for their sadistic satisfaction. The second voice introduces a fair bit of fridge logic to the game, but neither scenario being presented to the player ultimately feels like it makes much sense – the second voice points out the ridiculousness of the game’s premise, but the game never really to justify why someone would be doing what they were doing. And unfortunately, in a non-comedy game that seems to be taking itself seriously, that’s a bit of a problem; why am I supposedly in some sort of alien spaceship solving puzzles to destroy it? How does that make sense? How does the player character solving these puzzles have any relation to stopping the ship? And, assuming that mission control really is telling the truth, how do they know that there is an escape shuttle waiting at the end of the ship for you?

    There isn’t even any real attempt at explaining all this made by the game, which seemed to be trying to be cleverly ambiguous but instead simply undermined itself.

    The one thing that I can say that the game did well was its graphics; Q.U.B.E. is an indie game, but by making use of the extremely minimalist environment composed almost entirely of white cubes, the producers managed to make a game that looks very good, even if it looks a bit samey by the end.

    My advice? Play the Portal games or The Talos Principle instead.
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  2. May 28, 2014
    10
    This is a massive improvement over the original! I believe that the main thing that;s better is the addition of a storyline of sorts - this really gives you something to think about as you're working through the intuitive puzzles and gives you a really good reason to continue playing!
  3. Nov 28, 2015
    7
    Short (up to 4 hours) and entertaining first-person puzzler. The puzzles are not too difficult, but still satisfying. The minimalist style suits the game. Nice touches, like rhythmic movement of the walls, enhance the immersion. The narrative, though well-intentioned, tends to undermine the sense of place (or placelessness) by inserting unnecessary detail. Since the player has no choiceShort (up to 4 hours) and entertaining first-person puzzler. The puzzles are not too difficult, but still satisfying. The minimalist style suits the game. Nice touches, like rhythmic movement of the walls, enhance the immersion. The narrative, though well-intentioned, tends to undermine the sense of place (or placelessness) by inserting unnecessary detail. Since the player has no choice in the outcome, the story feels overly dramatic and awkwardly staged. Nevertheless these minor annoyances do not detract so much that the experience is spoiled. Bundled for around 1$, the game is very worth it. At $15, your time is probably better spent elsewhere. Expand
  4. Jun 24, 2021
    8
    It may wear its inspirations on its sleeves, but that doesn't stop Q.U.B.E. from evoking a chilling atmosphere with existential questions to hold up its simple, and at times really challenging, puzzle gimmick.
  5. Dec 7, 2020
    8
    I was gifted this game, and it has quickly become something of a puzzle that I don't want to put down. It is like solving a Rubik's Cube from the inside. It starts subtle and simple, but the story and puzzle become quite intense and enthralling. This game is one that I can strongly recommend for thinker types. I have completed the game once now, and I am definitely going to have to goI was gifted this game, and it has quickly become something of a puzzle that I don't want to put down. It is like solving a Rubik's Cube from the inside. It starts subtle and simple, but the story and puzzle become quite intense and enthralling. This game is one that I can strongly recommend for thinker types. I have completed the game once now, and I am definitely going to have to go through it again, and see if I can find the things that I missed.

    The story is not excessively deep, but is very interesting. You have to question your objective. Which path is the objective? While I know now, I will not spoil it for anyone. Fantastic!
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  6. Dec 4, 2022
    8
    The story, puzzle, challenge... most of this game seems the imitation of "Portal 1" to me. But it is not bad to enjoy a simple puzzle game, because of short playtime and cheap price.

    스토리부터 퍼즐 구성, Challenge까지 포탈1의 아류작의 느낌이 강했지만, 짧고 간단하게 즐기기엔 나쁘지 않은 순발력(?) 퍼즐 겜. 일단 플레이타임이 짧고, 가격이 저렴하니까.
    The story, puzzle, challenge... most of this game seems the imitation of "Portal 1" to me. But it is not bad to enjoy a simple puzzle game, because of short playtime and cheap price.

    스토리부터 퍼즐 구성, Challenge까지 포탈1의 아류작의 느낌이 강했지만, 짧고 간단하게 즐기기엔 나쁘지 않은 순발력(?) 퍼즐 겜. 일단 플레이타임이 짧고, 가격이 저렴하니까.
  7. Sep 30, 2022
    8
    My Q.U.B.E: Director’s Cut Video Review:
    https://youtu.be/qNBKK0932dE
    Has Q.U.B.E: Director’s Cut met my expectations for atmospheric science fiction game with challenging puzzles to solve? It has unarguably many pluses - atmospheric story worth following, great level and puzzle design, easy to learn but hard to master concept, many new ideas driving your forward, challenging
    My Q.U.B.E: Director’s Cut Video Review:
    https://youtu.be/qNBKK0932dE

    Has Q.U.B.E: Director’s Cut met my expectations for atmospheric science fiction game with challenging puzzles to solve? It has unarguably many pluses - atmospheric story worth following, great level and puzzle design, easy to learn but hard to master concept, many new ideas driving your forward, challenging difficulty, responsive controls, nice looking graphics, atmospheric music and sounds and great fully-voiced narration. There are only a few downsides - the absence of tutorial for casual players, the environment is maybe too sterile, lack of new skills or light RPG elements and slippery feeling of platforms sometimes. There is no local multiplayer in the game but I can hardly complain about it here as it is a pure atmospheric single player experience. It is still suitable for family playing as there is no violence in the game and the game can develop your children’s ability of spatial thinking and also thinking forward. Plus you can show your little ones how the ideally cleaned room should look like by example of the game environment.

    Pros:
    - atmospheric story
    - level and puzzle design
    - easy to learn hard to master concept
    - still serving new ideas
    - difficulty
    - controls
    - graphics
    - music and sounds
    - narration

    Cons:
    - no proper tutorial
    - sterile environment
    - absence of RPG elements
    - slippery feeling of some platforms

    Q.U.B.E: Director’s cut is able to drag you in thanks to its interesting science fiction story, challenging puzzles and great level design that teases your curiosity about what comes next which naturally drives you forward. I can say that I have enjoyed this strong single player puzzling experience and I am therefore giving Q.U.B.E: Director’s Cut Thumbs Up and VideoGaming Father’s Index 8+ out of 10 - recommended!
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  8. Mar 19, 2022
    8
    Una versión actualizada de ese viejo e indie QUBE que conocimos alguna vez, siento que podrían agregarle algo mas de campaña pero bueno parece que no era la idea
  9. Feb 23, 2023
    10
    Este ha sido uno de mis juegos favoritos de puzles durante un montón de tiempo y no sabría con cuál quedarme:¿portal o qube? Sin duda ese es un gran duelo de titanes.
    Bueno, hablando del juego en sí , este es un juego impresionante en primera persona con unos graficazos y unos niveles EXTRAORDINARIOS, cada uno distinto al otro.
    Tiene buenos efectos sonoros y es muy original...
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No score yet - based on 1 Critic Review

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 1 out of 1
  2. Mixed: 0 out of 1
  3. Negative: 0 out of 1
  1. Oct 3, 2014
    80
    Silly story aside Q.U.B.E Director’s Cut is very good game. Most first person games fall apart when the have platforming sections, but Toxic Games managed to pulled off a whole game with first person platforming.