The last game I finished is Return of the Obra Dinn. It's done by the guy who made Papers, Please, which I didn't play, but I heard only good things about it. It's a detective adventure with simple game mechanics and a beautiful graphic style (highly stylized, so it might not be for everyone, but I enjoyed it). It's in full 3D, but it's done in the style of black and white book illustrations.
You play as a detective, trying to solve the mystery of a ship lost at sea which was recently found with nobody on board. You start with no knowledge of what happened and have to learn the fate of all 60 crew members and passengers. The way you do it is with a magical pocket watch which, when you activate it near the body or the remains of a person, shows you the exact moment that person died. You then gather the clues which can help you learn the fate of not just that person, but also others on the ship. It's masterfully done and is a great exercise in deduction. If you're looking for something to play with your brain on cruise control, skip this one, it requires a lot of thinking. In fact, that is the thing you'll do the most in this game.
Sound in the game is also masterfully done, and I can say it's one of the best games on that front I played in years. Sound effects, voice acting and the soundtrack were so good It actually made me feel I was on a ship.
Controls can be clunky at times and there are some things I would like to see changed. For example, once you activate the watch near a body for the first time, you can't simply leave the scene. Instead you have to wait arbitrary amount of time and then that scene ends by itself. However, that is only a minor thing which only irked me a bit but it didn't make the game unplayable.
Bug-wise, the game is almost flawless. I have only encountered one bug where you get stuck in a staircase when I activated a certain scene from a certain angle, but I fixed it by reloading the game, which spawned me with the same progress on a safe place. The game auto-saves after each interaction so you never lose progress. There are no manual saves, but you don't really need them since you can't really fail. You can leave the ship after a certain point without learning everything and you'll get a bad ending, but you then get an option to rewind back to ship and continue with solving the puzzle. The game is not long, I finished it in about 8,5 hours, but that will mainly depend on how fast you can connect all the dots.
The game just came out and is $20 or so, and I must admit it was an impulse buy from me. I saw it on GOG few days before, when it came out, but I didn't bother to check it out. But then it popped up on YouTube and I watched the first 20 minutes of gameplay and was immediately hooked. All in all, I highly recommend this game for anyone who likes puzzles, detective work, mystery and such. Solid 9/10.