Apunkagames Inversion -
Inversion used the Saber3D engine. It was remarkably well-optimized. A low-end PC with a Core 2 Duo and an Nvidia 9500 GT could run it at 30fps. ApunkaGames specifically targeted gamers with low-end hardware, and Inversion was a "top recommendation" on their site for 2012-2013.
ApunkaGames itself has largely shut down or pivoted away from direct cracking due to increased ISP blocking and legal pressure in India. If you find a copy via archival sites (remembering the ApunkaGames repack), Inversion is a fascinating time capsule. It is not a great game, but it is a great "B-game." It offers 6 hours of ridiculous, gravity-flipping fun, complete with a cliffhanger ending that will never be resolved. apunkagames inversion
Because Inversion was a commercial flop (it reviewed poorly, scoring 5/10 on most major outlets due to a generic story and clunky controls), physical copies vanished from store shelves quickly. ApunkaGames provided the only accessible copy for many. Their repack used SmartSteamEmu or THETA cracks to bypass DRM. Inversion used the Saber3D engine
For titles like Inversion , ApunkaGames offered what the official stores often didn't: a . The original Inversion weighed in at roughly 6 GB. ApunkaGames typically offered a version ripped down to 1.5 GB or 2 GB, stripping out multi-language audio or compressing FMVs (Full Motion Videos) to fit slower DSL connections. The Game: Inversion (2012) Developed by Saber Interactive (famous later for World War Z and the Halo: Combat Evolved Anniversary remake) and published by Namco Bandai, Inversion was marketed as a blend of Gears of War cover-shooting mechanics with Gravity Rush style physics. It is not a great game, but it is a great "B-game