Just played this for the first time last month since it finally went on sale for 12 dollars, HOLY hell it was really something. I remember being exposed a little bit to this game in 2022 and it was interesting, and it had somehow topped bloodborne in the shilling department: Endless "You have to play this game bro, but DON'T look up anything!!", it really got on my nerves and kinda drove me away for the longest time. I can affirm they were all right though. What we have on our hands here is a very intriguing physics/puzzles/reading/mystery game, and like most mystery games you sadly cannot "experience" it the right way again after beating it the first time. After beating it I bought it for two of my friends to try and vicariously experience it through their playthroughs and they both sucked total eggs at it, I was kinda disappointed that they didn't get to run into those "Aha!" moments that got me hooked onto this game. I guess they're stupid or something. Maybe you should have to beat this game without a walkthrough to be able to vote, Starship Troopers-style. Also an underdiscussed aspect of this game is the unsettling-ness of it. For a game that never TRIED to scare me, it scared me an awful lot; perhaps more than any horror game I can think of. This took me ~26 hr to beat, so you're pretty much going to have to dedicate a whole week to knock this game down. Just trust me, it will be worth it in the end. If you like physics, reading (a LOT of reading), buzzing abound in a small spacecraft, bounding across a low-g celestial body with a jetpack, feeling clever when you figure something out, or the movie 'Interstellar', this game has all those things in the spades. But you really can't pick this game up again once you've beaten it. Once I turn 30 years old, I plan on buying the DLC and trying to beat it, but I'm worried by that point I'll still remember too much of this game to experience the rest of it properly. Maybe I should push it up to age 35.