Antichamber icon
Antichamber icon

Antichamber

 7 likes

A unique puzzle game that totally ignores normal Euclidean geometry. Cubes that contain something different depending on which way you look into it, stairs that go up and down but arrive at the same place, things that are bigger on the inside, etc.

Antichamber screenshot 1

License model

Application types

Platforms

  • Mac
  • Windows
  • Linux
  No rating
7likes
0comments
0news articles

Features

Suggest and vote on features
No features, maybe you want to suggest one?

 Tags

Antichamber News & Activities

Highlights All activities

Recent activities

Show all activities

Antichamber information

  • Developed by

    Unknown
  • Licensing

    Proprietary and Commercial product.
  • Alternatives

    16 alternatives listed
  • Supported Languages

    • English

AlternativeTo Category

Games

Our users have written 0 comments and reviews about Antichamber, and it has gotten 7 likes

Antichamber was added to AlternativeTo by hexluther on Jul 3, 2015 and this page was last updated Jul 3, 2015.
No comments or reviews, maybe you want to be first?
Post comment/review

What is Antichamber?

Antichamber is a mind-bending psychological exploration game where nothing can be taken for granted. Discover an Escher-like world where hallways wrap around upon each other, spaces reconfigure themselves, and accomplishing the impossible may just be the only way forward.

Antichamber is a single-player first-person puzzle-platform video game developed by Alexander Bruce. Many of the puzzles are based on phenomena that occur within impossible objects created by the game engine, such as passages that lead the player to different locations depending on which way they face, and structures that seem otherwise impossible within normal three-dimensional space. The game includes elements of psychological exploration through brief messages of advice to help the player figure out solutions to the puzzles as well as adages for real life. The game was released on Steam for Microsoft Windows on January 31, 2013,[2] a version sold with the Humble Indie Bundle 11 in February 2014 added support for Linux and Mac OS X.