If not, I highly recommend it. It's a lot of fun as a pure puzzle game, but the entire story appears to be an excuse to do a bunch of marxism. It's full of dialectical materialism. It's got Lenin quotes. It's talking about how material conditions shape history. It loves talking about power and how it's not inherently bad and it should be wielded for good.
I haven't looked into who wrote it (I should), but I can almost guarantee they're some sort of marxist.
Can you believe the developer who makes Serious Sam developed an incredibly communist video game?
That's good to hear, I remember the first one libbing out a bit in the dialogues you could have with the satan figure, where you could basically argue marxist points up to a point, only to be met with some lib response that you could only either accept or disengage from completely with no option to stick to your convictions.
Yes, this was frustrating. My partner just played the original a couple of months ago (I played it when it came out and loved it) and we both were a little frustrated and the story fell a little flat by today's standards.
I've now finished Talos Principle 2 and can confirm you are never forced to lib out.