
With near-perfect execution, Cut the Rope is a must-play for any arcade fan.
90
Verdict
91%
Steam
—
IGDB
Verdict score based on confidence-adjusted Steam reviews?
Very Positive on Steam (91% positive from 368 reviews)
No significant drawbacks reported
Cut the Rope is a physics-based puzzle video game developed by ZeptoLab and published by Chillingo for iOS, Android, Windows Phone, web browsers, Nintendo DSi, and Nintendo 3DS. The game was succeeded by Cut the Rope: Experiments in 2011 while a direct sequel, Cut the Rope 2, was released in 2013.

Runs well on modern hardware.
Cut the Rope is a physics based puzzle game, where you have to give a candy for your pet monster named Om Nom. The game is simple to play, but levels gets more difficult one by one. It also introduces new mechanics here or there which adds on the complexity of future levels. The game has a cute, cartoon like graphics, sounds and musics is fit to that too. If you know this game, you already know what you expect and that's what you get. However, for those who don't know this is a mobile game ported to Steam without any microtransaction or ads. This is probably the most clean way to play this game, but you can only enjoy it if you set your expectations beforehand. Also, sadly this game is no longer available to buy on Steam, because to introduce the game's 10 year's anniversary edition, which never came. Cut the Rope is a really simple and fun little puzzle game and this version makes it playable without any ad or microtransaction. It's pretty alright, however it's a shame that it got delisted and never really cared for.
this disgusting creatures greed sickens me
good game but make sure you cap the framerate to 60fps with a program like rivatuner or nvidia app if you have anything higher than a 60hz monitor cause if not everything will be as fast as my metabolism
Reviews sourced from Steam. All reviews belong to their respective authors.
Data sourced from RAWG, Steam, IGDB, CheapShark, Wikipedia, HLTB, and GX Corner. Sources: rawg, steam, igdb, wikipedia.
All game titles, trademarks, and copyrights belong to their respective owners.