Puddle
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Dive into Puddle, a physics game unlike any other where you have to guide a puddle of fluid by tilting the environment to the left or right! Play carefully taking friction, gravity and temperature into account, and by using the unique properties of each type of fluid (water, oil, nitroglycerin, molten lava…) in a range of original environments. Conserve as much fluid as possible when crossing a variety of obstacles such as burning passageways, carnivorous plants and electric currents!
Steam User 1
Puddle is an inventive and quietly captivating physics-based puzzle game that transforms a simple concept into an experience filled with tension, experimentation, and surprising elegance. Developed and published by Neko Entertainment, it shifts away from character-driven platforming and instead places the player in control of something much more fluid and unpredictable: a puddle of liquid. The game’s core idea is deceptively minimalist — tilt the environment left or right to guide your chosen liquid safely to the exit — yet this simplicity becomes the foundation for a continually evolving set of challenges that demand careful timing, observation, and adaptability.
Rather than directly manipulating droplets or issuing complex commands, the player influences the world itself. Each level becomes a physics playground where gravity, momentum, viscosity, temperature, and environmental hazards interact in ways that feel both intuitive and chaotic. The liquid you guide is subject to the properties of its material: water flows with familiar curves, oil glides with slippery speed, molten metal moves heavily and cools into solid clumps, and volatile substances like nitroglycerin turn the gentlest tilt into a potential catastrophe. Every fluid behaves differently, forcing you to adjust your approach with each new scenario. This variety ensures that the game’s puzzles rarely feel repetitive, even though the control scheme uses only two inputs.
The creativity in Puddle’s level design is one of its most appealing qualities. Across dozens of stages, the game sends your liquid through a diverse array of environments — industrial labs, household pipes, sewers, botanical gardens, laboratories, furnaces, and even conceptual or surreal spaces. Each location presents unique threats: flames that evaporate your liquid, chemical baths that dissolve it instantly, sponges that absorb it, electrical currents that destabilize movement, and sharp inclines that can split droplets apart. The satisfaction of navigating these hazards lies in learning how your liquid responds to the world and predicting how momentum will carry it through narrow passages or over perilous drops.
Underlying these challenges is the game’s fluid simulation, which is expressive and visually clear despite the modest graphical style. Droplets stretch, compress, divide, merge, and cling to surfaces in ways that feel organic. Watching a stream of liquid surge into a pipe or cascade over a ledge can be unexpectedly beautiful, creating moments of flow and rhythm that elevate the otherwise puzzle-centric structure. When everything lines up — when your timing, angle, and the fluid dynamics sync perfectly — the game delivers a rare sense of harmony between player input and simulation.
But Puddle is not always gentle. Its difficulty gradually ramps up, and some of the later stages abandon precision for trial-and-error. Because the liquid is fragile, even slight misjudgments can send too much of it splattering or evaporating, forcing a restart. This unforgiving nature may frustrate players who prefer puzzles with more deliberate planning and less reliance on twitch reactions. While the physics system is central to the game’s identity, it also introduces unpredictability: occasionally, droplets behave in ways that feel just outside of your intended control. When this happens, especially in levels with strict thresholds for how much liquid must survive, the sense of challenge can slip into annoyance.
Despite these limitations, Puddle retains a distinct charm. The interplay between simple mechanics and complex outcomes makes it easy to pick up but difficult to master. Levels are short enough to encourage repeated attempts, and the grading system — awarding medals based on performance — provides incentive to refine your approach. Optional modes and unlockable content expand the game’s scope for those who enjoy experimenting with physics in a more relaxed format, offering a sandbox-like layer that complements the structured campaign.
Puddle excels most when approached as a meditative puzzle experience rather than a high-intensity platformer. It invites the player to observe, anticipate, and experiment, rewarding patience and steady hands. Its originality lies not only in its unusual protagonist — a mass of fluid — but also in how it uses physics to generate surprising, often delightful challenges. While it may stumble with difficulty spikes and occasional unpredictability, it remains a memorable and imaginative game that transforms something as ordinary as liquid into a compelling and atmospheric adventure. For players seeking a unique puzzle experience rooted in real-world physics and elegant design, Puddle offers a refreshing and absorbing journey.
Rating: 7/10
Steam User 0
A fun physics puzzle game to do with tilting and speed.
Got this in a bundle years ago so well worth it.
Nice little twists every time the rules change (or your liquid should i say)
I haven't given up yet....I don't think.
Steam User 0
game is fun
Steam User 1
i was the water the entire time