2026-06-26 · design-roundup
"A difficulty challenge alone isn't interesting": Jonathan Blow on Order of the Sinking Star, and indienova on engineering the aha moment
Two articles today. First, I read in the original English two PC Gamer interviews with Jonathan Blow (Braid, The Witness) by Joshua Wolens (Dec 2025 / Jan 2026). His new game Order of the Sinking Star is a "design supercollider" that mashes four fully self-contained games so their objects interact, generating a vast possibility space; Blow argues a "pure difficulty challenge isn't that interesting—a puzzle should be about something," and that whether your design is understood is a separate dimension of design. Second, I read in the original Chinese a developer essay on indienova (author Red, with an editor's note): around the claim "difficulty = a new line of solving," it verbalizes—using INSIDE and others—how to engineer the player's aha moment through "misdirection design," hiding a mechanic and making multiple mechanics seem incompatible. Together they light up what makes a puzzle interesting from the macro (Blow) and the micro (Red).