User Score
6.9

Mixed or average reviews- based on 23 Ratings

User score distribution:
  1. Positive: 10 out of 23
  2. Negative: 4 out of 23

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  1. Aug 10, 2017
    7
    More like an "experience" than a real game, and it's hard to rate it or give thumbs up/down. Yet it can be classified as a puzzle game with hints.

    The good: - pleasant graphics and audio; it's a work of art, not entertainment - some of the puzzles are pretty imaginative The so-so: - the overall feel of pointlessness - that's what the game was actually trying to achieve, since it's
    More like an "experience" than a real game, and it's hard to rate it or give thumbs up/down. Yet it can be classified as a puzzle game with hints.

    The good:
    - pleasant graphics and audio; it's a work of art, not entertainment
    - some of the puzzles are pretty imaginative

    The so-so:
    - the overall feel of pointlessness - that's what the game was actually trying to achieve, since it's about absurdist art. But from a gamer's perspective, it's just a collection of puzzles which aren't really connected with any story - as it should be in this case! After a certain amount of puzzles the game just ends, that's the end of the absurd adventure.
    - some puzzles are borderline schizophrenic. Without hints they are generally unsolvable. Some other puzzles are too obvious. Dunno, maybe it just depends on the player. At least there are hints.

    The bad:
    - the game is very short. I lacked imagination to solve many of the puzzles, so I had to wait for hints to appear (the 1st hint you get after 2 mins, and the second hint after 4 mins). Even with so much waiting, it took me 2.5 hours to complete the whole game.

    It's an artistic experience which, for adults, may be worth the $2-5 you might pay for this. Treat it not like playing a game but like visiting a museum of modern art. In fact, I'd like to see more games like this: pushing boundaries of the medium.
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  2. May 8, 2017
    7
    Althrough it has really good ideas and fun puzzles, it's so short that feels lazy, even for a 10 bucks title. I finished it in 1 hour and a half. The dialogue is poorly writen and it's no match for the puzzles; smart and weird as it has to be.

    A real shame, because this game has a potential they should have exploited way beyond, even if they had to go for a 20€ title: bigger and better.
  3. Apr 17, 2017
    5
    En conclusión, un título curioso pero poco más.

    Nos puede entretener durante 2 o 3 horas con sus puzzles e incluso aportarnos un par de situaciones surrealistas que puede que gusten a los fans de esto. Pero por lo general no podemos decir muchas cosas buenas del título, eso no implica que sea un desastre, pero son una serie de puzzles bastante simples en su mayoría unidos de una
    En conclusión, un título curioso pero poco más.

    Nos puede entretener durante 2 o 3 horas con sus puzzles e incluso aportarnos un par de situaciones surrealistas que puede que gusten a los fans de esto.

    Pero por lo general no podemos decir muchas cosas buenas del título, eso no implica que sea un desastre, pero son una serie de puzzles bastante simples en su mayoría unidos de una forma algo confusa y muy poco rejugable.

    Aún así si eres fan de Kafka o del género dale una oportunidad, porque es un título bastante entretenido.
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  4. Oct 2, 2017
    2
    While Kafka was anything but random, this game sure is.

    It seems that the creator of the game had no clue what Kafka is really all about. Sure, there are plenty of absurdities in the writings of one of the best authors of all time, that one might find random, but they are grotesque and unsettling, they will make you feel insignificant, helpless and powerless against the weight of the
    While Kafka was anything but random, this game sure is.

    It seems that the creator of the game had no clue what Kafka is really all about. Sure, there are plenty of absurdities in the writings of one of the best authors of all time, that one might find random, but they are grotesque and unsettling, they will make you feel insignificant, helpless and powerless against the weight of the system. They serve a purpose.

    Here everything is just random without any real purpose. What's the deal with the monkey-detective? Or the astronaut, that we never see again? A flying fish or a flying boat? Random things just happen and we're done with them forever. The whole game seems completely amateur and lacks focus. You can't just throw random things at us and pass that as Kafkaesque, it doesn't work that way. To top it off, there is also a pointless Twin Peaks reference that doesn't go anywhere and a cameo of some dude in a fighting minigame in a style of Mortal Kombat.

    The story has very little to do with Kafka, except that the protagonist of the story, named simply K. is involved in events that are beyond his own control and tries to find the way out of it (kind of, there are no clear motives for what he's doing), which is somewhat Kafkaesque, I must admit. There are some twists and turns, but overall, not too much of a story at all. The Kafka references are nothing but a pop-culture joke. Stretched over 4 chapters, the whole script probably took no more than 2 regular pages, including the dialog. The events don't connect to each other much or at all. Random things just happen and nothing really makes any sense or has any purpose.

    The characters are non existent, even the main protagonist has no personality whatsoever. I have hard time to say anything else about any of them, because there is nothing to say. There is also a companion dog, fallowing K. for some reason. Do I have to mention that there is zero interaction with the dog throughout the game?

    You might think that this is a short game and a single person effort, so how much of a story and character development I should expect?

    But short games, and even games that were made by a single person can be good or even great games: Milkmaid of the Milky Way is a great example, Gemini Rue is a single person effort, while not exactly short, Fran Bow was developed by a team of 2, I'm yet to play The Darkside Detective, but I've heard it's great. The thing is, I bought this game because I knew it's short, I love short games. If I have just one evening a month I can spend point-and-clicking, there is nothing better for me than a 2-4 hour game.

    Sure, short, small team games might not have it all, maybe the story is lacking, perhaps puzzles are somewhat weak, but there must be something that makes them worthwhile. I could forgive a lot if there is at least one aspect in the game that stands strong. In fact, I wouldn't mind anything that's wrong with this game, if at least puzzles were half decent.

    But the puzzles in this game are downright annoying and actually the worst part of the game! They have absolutely nothing to do with the game itself, they are just a very amateur way of dragging this game longer than it should have been. Of course, the number sliding puzzle has to be in there, how else are you going to show your lack of creativity? Oh, here is an idea: maybe instead of creating some real puzzles as obstacles to overcome, why not simply depict going somewhere as a simple board game?!

    Most of these puzzles can be solved simply by clicking and dragging things around. Sometimes you might not know exactly what you're supposed to be doing, but just click enough things around and eventually you'll get there.

    Other times, I failed to find the logic behind the puzzles whatsoever. Sure, there were hints for how to solve most of them, but they still made no sense. There was a puzzle with a toy monkey, you drag the string, the monkey plays the drums. Notice the number on the hat and play the drums to represent that number. I get it, but in what way does that make any sense whatsoever? Why would there be something when we played the correct sequence?

    Other times there were brute force puzzles: click on something, see what happens, rinse, repeat. Perhaps I just wasn't looking hard enough, but it looked like there's all there is to them. The hardest part of the most puzzles were to find things that you're able to click on, or find what obj
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Metascore
64

Mixed or average reviews - based on 17 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 1 out of 17
  2. Negative: 0 out of 17
  1. Nov 14, 2018
    50
    The Franz Kafka Videogame offers a highly surreal taste of the renowned author’s works in a linear puzzle-oriented experience, but lacks enough depth to truly do them justice.
  2. Jul 13, 2017
    60
    Regardless of its visual design, The Franz Kafka Game fails to deliver a satisfying experience. Literary devotees of Kafka may find plenty of Easter eggs that reward their esoteric knowledge, but the average player will likely find irritating puzzles that are only slightly palatable thanks to the game’s appealing aesthetic.
  3. Jul 10, 2017
    50
    The game encapsulates the frustration and confusion that I have often heard Kafka’s work draws upon. Unfortunately, these things work about as well in a videogame as a dollop of jam does in a classic novel. I’d avoid unless you really like the author.