Limbo stakes everything on atmosphere: a child's silhouette, a monochrome world, and traps that kill without warning. The physics puzzles stay elegant, the sound design chilling. Short but unforgettable, perfect for a late-night Switch session.
Your verdict
Category
Puzzle1 player12+
Description
A young boy crosses a monochrome forest strewn with deadly traps in search of his sister. Published by Playdead, released worldwide in 2018. Tense environmental puzzles, spare staging, silhouettes in stark chiaroscuro and a minimalist, anxious atmosphere.
Limbo review
MAX
Art direction
★★★★★
"Iconic"
4/5
Music
★★★★★
"Excellent"
4/5
Story
★★★★★
"Captivating"
Absolute black and white, film grain and silhouettes cut from the mist: everything rests on shadow and backlight. This monochrome austerity, of funereal elegance, instils a muffled dread where the frail child looks tiny against an indifferent world.
It became an indie touchstone, cited so often that people forget what made it stick: an almost choreographed sense of rhythm and cruelty, where every trapped death teaches without a word. On Switch many skip it, assuming they've seen it. Picking it up controller in hand, in the dark, recalls exactly why its anxious minimalism remains a benchmark.
Is Limbo still worth playing in 2026?
Limbo may originally date back to 2010, yet its black-and-white chiaroscuro stays timelessly elegant. The game is short and some puzzles lean on cruel trial and error, a choice that can grate today. But the dread, the silence and the minimalist staging still leave a mark. It is a brief work you cross in one sitting, more sensory experience than pure challenge. On Switch its portability suits it well. A classic of the indie puzzle-platformer that still earns a look for its singular atmosphere.