Reviews

Homo Machina review for Nintendo Switch

Platform: Switch
Publisher: ARTE Experience
Developer: Seaven Studio/Darjeeling Production
Medium: Digital
Players: 1
Online: No
ESRB: E

Homo Machina is not what you?d call complicated: it?s a puzzle game where none of the puzzles are all that difficult, and you should be able to easily finish it in under an hour. If you?re looking for something you can really sink your teeth into…well, this isn?t it.

If, however, you want a quick, cute puzzle game that will leave you with a smile on your face, then Homo Machina definitely is that game. It imagines the human body as a factory, drawing inspiration from the work of Fritz Kahn, an early 20th century doctor and author who sought to explain the body using similar metaphors. It?s a world where your eye functions like a camera leading to a movie theatre, or where your ears have to match frequencies using giant tape reels, or where your limbs function using a system that, for lack of a better comparison, looks like one giant game of Operation.

As I said, none of the puzzles involved in these operations are all that difficult. In most cases, they?re just a matter of touching the screen a couple of times. There are one or two puzzles where you need to put the tiniest bit of thought into what you?re doing, but for the most part you?re just moving the action along with a bare minimum of effort or thought required on your part.

Homo Machina makes up for this lack of challenge with a fun sense of humour and fantastic art style. The latter, of course, draws heavy inspiration from Kahn?s work in Weimar Republic Germany, but you don?t have to look too hard to see a post-WWII, 1950s imagining of factory life, either. As far as the humour goes, the game is propelled along by the misadventures of the body?s absent-minded director and his highly efficient secretary, who encourage and cajole the body?s workers to get the job done, all while being occasionally baffled by what?s going on in the world outside. It?s not the funniest game I?ve ever played or anything, but it was at least humorous enough to make me crack a smile pretty frequently.

While none of this is enough to make Homo Machina a must-play, at the same time, there?s enough worthwhile stuff going on here that it?s not not a must-play, either. I mean, it?s only $3 or so, and for that price you get a fun little story that wraps up nicely and never overstays its welcome. That?s hardly GOTY material, but it?s nothing to sneeze at, either.

ARTE Experience provided us with a Homo Machina Nintendo Switch code for review purposes.

Grade: A-
Matthew Pollesel

Recent Posts

Sony Interactive Entertainment teams up with Bad Robot Games to produce their first internally developed title

Sony and Bad Robot Games are working on a 4-player co-op shooter under the direction…

11 hours ago

Nintendo eShop Update – Metroid Prime 4: Beyond, Assassin’s Creed Shadows, Red Dead Redemption, MARVEL Cosmic Invasion

There's a very well-rounded selection of new Nintendo eShop titles, content and sales launching today/soon…

12 hours ago

Looks like Megatron has some backup finally as Robosen announced an auto-converting Soundwave

...and it’s backup he can rely on…unlike that sniveling worm Starscream!

13 hours ago

You’ve climbed to the top in Let it Die, now race to the bottom in Let it Die: Inferno!

I’m not looking forward to this game monopolizing my PlayStation recap in 2026…

17 hours ago

The Undertaker joins the Elden Ring Nightreign: The Forsaken Hallows as the second new Nightfarer

Meet the ass-kicking female faith fighter set to launch alongside the Nightreign DLC later this…

2 days ago

This website uses cookies.