Geometry Dash Problematic is a 1.9 Easy Demon level created by Dhafin. It is a remake of the legendary Nine Circles level.
Instead of the usual red and black colors, Dhafin used bright neon green and turquoise. The level is short. It only takes about 54 seconds to complete. However, those 54 seconds are packed with fake blocks, tight gaps, and blinding visual effects. The song used here is Problematic by Rukkus (NIGHTKilla), and the gameplay syncs perfectly with the heavy beat.
To beat this level, you need more than just fast fingers. You need good muscle memory. The level is divided into three main parts: the cube, the ship, and the wave.
The controls are very standard. You can play using:
Here is the truth. The beginning of this level is harder than it looks.
The first cube section requires weird timings. You have to jump much earlier than you expect. I died at least fifty times just trying to pass the first 20%. Memorize the exact jump points here.
Next comes the ship. This part is actually very easy. Just stay in the middle and follow the music. It gives you a nice break before the real challenge begins.
Then, the beat drops. You enter the famous wave section.
The screen flashes violently in green and black. It feels overwhelming. My best tip? Stop looking at the background. I forced my eyes to focus strictly on my little wave icon. There are fake blocks that act as real walls, and real walls that are just illusions. You must practice this part in Practice Mode. Drop checkpoints every few seconds until your hand remembers the pattern.
Once you get comfortable with this wave style, you will feel a huge skill boost. In fact, after beating this, I found the wave sections in other levels like Geometry Dash Altra much easier to handle.
Yes. Despite the crazy flashing lights, it is officially rated as an Easy Demon. The gaps are quite wide compared to other levels in the same series.
Yes. The creator placed several fake blocks throughout the wave maze. You can fly right through them safely, but you have to memorize where they are.
No. You do not need high-end gear. I beat this level on a standard 60Hz monitor. It relies heavily on memory rather than frame-perfect precision.