
NZ Gamer - "That’s colour with a ‘U’, by the way."
It’s a polite pointer from Finn Morgan, the lone, Australian-based programmer of physics platform puzzler Colour Bind, as he demos the game at PAX Prime 2012. It’s good to know that Morgan’s not prepared to compromise on our chosen UK English when entering the global video-game market. I guess it also helps to legally distinguish it from another, existing game that goes by the name “Color Bind.” But I digress.

oprainfall writes:
"Since the dawn of platforming games, the ability to mess with gravity has been a staple for at least one level in many games of the genre. Finding the right direction and moving properly within it could be disconcerting for the player, and really shake things up. Oftentimes, enemies and objects weren’t affected by the shift, leading to two inconsistent directions for gravity. But… what happens when there are three?"

Non-Fiction Gaming writer Anthony flips gravity to get his brain going in the right direction. Colour Bind (Not Colourblind) is a fantastic brain teaser that may leave many frustrated.

Welcome to Colour Bind, where red means up... or was it down? Sam checked out this indie puzzle-platformer to test his reasoning abilities.
Portal has opened up the puzzle game genre to everyone with an idea of how to bend physics. I dunno... this game looks like a pass to me.