One of the most overall enjoyable games I have ever played. The puzzles are challenging without being frustrating, which is not an easy balance to achieve. My only complaint would be that the game is a bit on the short side. I do believe it could have been twice as long without overstaying its welcome.
Reasonably enjoyable, but has several serious bugs and is at times frustratingly opaque. InFlux takes a few hours to get through, and as far as I could tell it is possible to skip some of the puzzles. I may be wrong about that, but there appeared to be puzzles that I could not get to, and/or were unsolvable. Whether this was a case of red herring or skippable puzzles I can't say. The game looks nice if you have a good system. Mine is middle of the road and I had trouble with frame rate. Adjusting a few settings helped a lot. I encountered several glitches. It is VERY easy to get stuck in terrain, and upon completing some of the puzzles you may re spawn inside decorative structures with no way out. I also had the graphics completely fail on entering one level. The game was still running and from the audio I was still able to move around in the world, but the screen was a dull grey and nothing would change it. The only fix for all glitches was to restart. There were also some terrain oddities such as grass growing out if thin air and crevices and 'pot holes' that were easy to get stuck in. My main complaint is the physics system. Once any object starts moving it will pretty much keep moving until it hits something. This makes some of the puzzles frustrating because it is almost impossible to accurately position objects. The camera placement was also poor at times. Overall InFlux was an enjoyable few hours of puzzling, but I would not reccomend it at full price. If you can catch it somewhere around $2 or $3 go ahead, enjoy.