Three characters. One incident. And everyone has a different story. Who Is Lying drops you into a social deduction puzzle where your only tools are the statements in front of you and your ability to spot a contradiction. Read what each character claims, compare their versions of events, and follow the logic until one alibi falls apart. It starts simple. Two witnesses, one obvious inconsistency. Then the levels add more characters, more conflicting testimony, and suddenly you’re juggling five different stories looking for the thread that unravels them all.
The satisfaction here is the same feeling you get from a great detective story — that moment when two testimonies contradict each other and suddenly the whole case clicks. Who Is Lying leans into that feeling deliberately. No distractions, no fluff. Just statements, logic, and the growing pressure of knowing the answer is right there if you think hard enough. Each level is a closed room with exactly enough information to solve it, which means every wrong guess teaches you something about how the puzzle is structured.
Each puzzle plays fast — a few minutes at most for earlier levels, more for the complex ones later. The format makes it perfect for players who want a mental workout without a lengthy time commitment. It doesn’t demand memory skills or reflexes, just clear reasoning and the patience to read carefully. If you like logic puzzles, deduction games, or anything that makes you feel like the smartest person in the room for figuring it out, this one delivers that feeling clean and consistently.