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Get to Know About The Platform

I stumbled onto The Platform one evening when I was browsing for something a bit off the beaten path, and it ended up being one of the more surprisingly immersive VR puzzle-platformers I’ve tried lately. You start floating above an enormous, slowly descending structure that’s divided into tiles and rooms, each one offering a new twist on jumping, grabbing, or manipulating objects. Right away I appreciated how it doesn’t hold your hand—you figure out which levers to pull or which blocks to push by experimenting, and that sense of discovery kept me hooked.

Mechanically, the game leans hard into physics interactions. You’ll find yourself shimmying along ledges, timing leaps between moving sections, and sometimes improvising by stacking crates or using ropes to swing across chasms. There’s a real tactile satisfaction in reaching out with your controllers, feeling the weight of an oddly shaped gear or balancing precariously on a rotating beam. Puzzles tend to ramp up gradually, so you’re rarely stuck for too long—but when you do get stumped, breaking out a new viewpoint or revisiting an earlier room often shines a light on the trick you missed.

Visually, The Platform opts for a minimalist, almost industrial style. Concrete walls, rusty metal supports, and the occasional flickering lamp give each level a kind of stark beauty, and the soundtrack hums quietly in the background, never too intrusive but enough to amplify the tension when you’re teetering over a yawning drop. I liked how each section felt distinct, too—some areas are drenched in warm sunset tones while others are bathed in cool blues, so you always have a visual landmark to guide your memory.

By the time I reached the top, I realized the game isn’t about flashy graphics or over-the-top set pieces; it’s about that pure, “aha!” moment when everything clicks and you pull off a launch or a pulley sequence just right. If you’re on the hunt for a lean, cleverly designed VR platformer that challenges your spatial thinking without ever feeling unfair, The Platform is definitely worth a spin. And even after you’ve beaten it, those handcrafted rooms still tempt you to go back and shave a few seconds off your best time.