Cyber Sentinel game banner

Cyber Sentinel

$9.99
Release Date:
Developer:
mindhelix.pl
Publisher:
mindhelix.pl
Platforms:
Windows Mac Linux
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Game Tags

About This Game

Cyber Sentinel aka Turing Machine „state” diagrams based puzzle game nobody asked for


Near future. Information is the most precious of resources. International corporations fight a data war for access to new medical, government and military patents and contracts. In an ongoing arms race talented individuals find a way to earn money...

Experience the hacker's side of cyberpunk in Cyber Sentinel! This design-based puzzle game features a complete visual programming kit for designing your own viruses.

Features:

  • addictive puzzles - be a godlike hacker observing his creations come to life
  • easy to learn, hard to master - more elegant solutions are rewarded with more points
  • feeling of 80'/90' cyberpunk movies
  • 45 levels with increasing difficulty and grading system
  • level editor and option to play and rate other players' levels
  • 32 achievements to unlock

Screenshots

User Reviews

Very Positive
22 user reviews
82%
Positive
3 hrs at review
Recommended

This is fun. I am not exaclty certain about the hacker thing because this game has little to do with real hacking. I believe that was added perhaps for marketing purposes. That said, you solve puzzles/challenges using logic. The goal is to solve the challenges with the fewest number of steps. The tutorial is helpful to get you started but it's easy to catch on and away you go. Most interesting to me was when your solution "blows up" ,you have the opportunity to tweak and get it right. Game can be finished in 4-5 hours. Certainly worth at least the current discounted price.

31 helpful
10 hrs at review
Recommended

Cyber Sentinel is an interesting twist on a Turing machine - instead of a tape that can be moved right or left, a matrix is used allowing for a 2-dimensional puzzle to be constructed and solved. This game is not for everyone. If you don't enjoy the kind of puzzle that makes you feel like an idiot until you reach the "Eureka!" moment that makes you feel smart again, you won't like this. Some of the puzzles border on the fiendish, and I haven't even completed the game yet. I'm having too much fun optimizing my solutions to use the fewest number of states I can manage. You don't need to be a programmer, or even understand what a [url=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turing_machine]Turing machine[/url] is, to have fun with this game. Having a logical mind and enjoying puzzle solving is all you really need and something puzzle afficianaods typically have anyway. Having done some fiddling with Turing machines in the past certainly helped me understand things quicker, though! [u]Pros[/u]...

21 helpful 1 funny
27 hrs at review
Recommended

[h1]TR;DR Simple (but not too easy) programming game at a reasonable price[/h1] This is an interesting twist on programming games (The first video on the store page is a good gameplay example). You start with a cube (representing a hacking probe) that can move around a series of rooms like a maze (representing some sort of cyberspace architecture that you are trying to hack). You need to get the cube to move various locations in the maze (representing data file locations) to complete each level. However all movement is pre-programmed, and you have a limited way to get the cube to do what you want. You write programs by putting "nodes" of one of five commands together (move Left, Right, Up, Down, and wait), and setting up different colored tiles within the maze. These colored tiles are branch points for your program, and how you get the cubes to change direction. For example, "move left until land on blue tile, then move down". There are about 45 levels and the difficulty varies. It t...

11 helpful
4 hrs at review
Recommended

This is a case where I really don't like Steam's binary review system. Because, while I like this game, it has some problems, and I wish I could reflect that in my rating. It's an obvious mobile port, the tutorials didn't even bother changing "tap" to "click". The cutscenes will give you flashbacks to the mid 90s. While it does have good aspects as a programming game, its puzzles won't scratch the programming "itch" as well as a Zachtronics game would. The solution space is too narrow to allow for truly innovative solutions, and the puzzles overall lack that "eureka" quality. Overall, the game feels like it lacks polish, and could have done with some more development time. While I did enjoy the game, and I do recommend it to those who enjoy programming games, my recommendation is not as strong as it would be for other games in this genre. Maybe buy it when it's on sale.

5 helpful
2 hrs at review
Recommended

Great indie game, very addictive, intuitive gui and very well polished. Nice features like sharing your solutions and checking out others approaches to problem solving. Surely worth checking out and in very reasonable price!

2 helpful
7 hrs at review
Recommended

Nice puzzle game about finite state maschines. If you like programming games like Human Rescource Maschine or Space Chem you'll have fun with this one. Besides the campaign there's a level editor and community levels comfortably downloadable from within the game. So there's as much content as you like. The campaign story might as well not exist, although the presentation is quite nice. But stories are not why we play these games, right? The controls can be a little finicky at times and cause you to accidentally delete a state transition or drag the wrong component. A feature to save/restore multiple solutions for a level similar to how HRM does it would be useful to be able to try different attempts.

1 helpful
1 hrs at review
Recommended

Great game about visual programming with correctly increasing complexity If you like games like this, you should definitely buy it.

1 helpful
5 hrs at review
Recommended

Fun + I learn The game is great, the tutorial is very good, the learning curve is perfect

18 min at review
Not Recommended

The tutorial seems to be broken. It doesn't start playing at first until I click the back button and answer "no" when it asks me if I want to exit the tutorial. After that, there doesn't seem to be anything that causes it to advance. I've clicked everything onscreen with ever button on the mouse, and pressed every button on the keyboard, and nothing does anything. I can play the level by exiting the tutorial, but I can tell there are things about the program editor that I wasn't able to figure out by trial and error. If this problem gets fixed, I'll give the game another try.

15 hrs at review
Recommended

If you enjoy games where you plan a series of manoeuvres to accomplish a goal while avoiding collisions (like Opus Magnum) then you should consider adding this game to your library. It has a unique "programming" format that really works for the way the game is designed. The puzzles are challenging but not so difficult that you give up after a couple of levels.

System Requirements

Minimum

Minimum:
  • OS *: Windows XP SP2+
  • Processor: 1.2 Ghz
  • Memory: 1 GB RAM
  • Graphics: 256MB
  • DirectX: Version 9.0
  • Storage: 500 MB available space

FAQ

How much does Cyber Sentinel cost?

Cyber Sentinel costs $9.99.

What are the system requirements for Cyber Sentinel?

Minimum: Minimum: OS *: Windows XP SP2+ Processor: 1.2 Ghz Memory: 1 GB RAM Graphics: 256MB DirectX: Version 9.0 Storage: 500 MB available space

What platforms is Cyber Sentinel available on?

Cyber Sentinel is available on Windows PC, macOS, Linux.

Is Cyber Sentinel worth buying?

Cyber Sentinel has 82% positive reviews from 22 players.

When was Cyber Sentinel released?

Cyber Sentinel was released on Jul 29, 2016.

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