I've had Minit in my library for a while, and I finally got around to playing it. It's published by Devolver Digital, who publishes a lot of indie games by various people. Some are games with more tried-and-true mechanics and a significant amount of content, and some are more experimental things, like Minit here.
Minit is a very short game, apparently completed on average in some 2-4 hours. It's also a very simple game, only giving you an interact key in addition to basic movement. The gimmick is that you only have a minute (hence the name of the game) to play, before the game starts all over. Most importantly, you, as the player, retain your memories, so you become better with each run at accomplishing your goal, whatever that is. I guess it's also important that items you find show up at the start on subsequent runs, and a few actions in the world persist, but not most. The game doesn't give you a concrete goal, rather sending you off to find things to do. It does have an end though, and if you are so inclined, you can browse the achievements to find ideas what to strive for.
Despite its short average length and absolutely nonexistant run length, it quickly lost my interest. I would say the idea is new, but I've been aware of Outer Wilds since maybe 2015, and a couple other less-known games that explore this sort of time loop. Especially in the case of Outer Wilds (though I haven't played the release version), it has a longer time loop, and a much more interesting world. The time loop gimmick does not do anything for the game on its own, and Minit's gameplay is boring. The world is barely interesting, the puzzles are basic, and I'm not somehow more captivated by having to restart every minute.
So, I wouldn't recommend Minit. Not only is it too short, it's also too unremarkable. If the idea of restarting the game every minute is, for some reason, very appealing for you, go ahead, but from an adventure / puzzle game standpoint, it's quite shallow and boring.
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