You know you’re not alone but you aren’t sure what lies around the corner. Little Nightmares 2 creates this constant state of anxiety and fear that just follows you like a cloud. Granted, in terms of horror games, I have a weak constitution and it doesn’t take that much to make me toss a controller across the room, but mainly the causes are jump scares. On top of the janky melee controls and sometimes janky platforming controls that will send Mono swan diving off the top of a shelf, there is also the terror factor. I can’t tell you how many times I died in that school from not hitting the button at just the right time. If you swing too late, the dolls will attack and your weapon will go flying across the room. If you swing too soon, you miss and they jump. These feral toys will attack you and they thankfully have a tell before they pounce but you have to swing JUST RIGHT. The most difficult parts of the game for me are the instances of melee attacks you must perform, specifically on the dolls in the school. Reason one is the fact that I died…a LOT. While the game’s producer says that the main campaign is over three hours long, it took several days for me for a couple of reasons. There is SO much more that I want to talk about but this is a game that is truly meant to be experienced. All of this and so much more are all punctuated by Mono seeing the shadows of other small children and having to “tune” into TVs that transport him to a long and dark hallway as the duo make their way through Pale City to the Signal Tower and find the source of the strange transmissions and the Tall Man haunting Mono. Some of these parts are put together into horrifying amalgamations that chase you in the dark until a flashlight is shined in their direction. Old, rundown hospitals are terrifying in itself but this one is littered with mannequin (and possibly human) parts. Mono and Six must traverse this school, make their way past fatal traps, killer dolls and the slithering teacher to an even shadier dilapidated hospital. This school is run by The Teacher, a snake-necked old woman that teaches hundreds of small, mean dolls. Just as you finally make your way out of the hut, The Hunter becomes aware he isn’t alone.Īrmed with a shotgun and ready to re-articulate some tiny skeletons, The Hunter chases the pair until they manage to escape, only to find themselves in the creepiest school known to man. You attempt to save her but it takes a little to earn her trust. That girl just happens to be the raincoat-less Six. In The Hunter’s hut, you come across a small, imprisoned girl. You begin coming across traps and shoes and realize that many people did not make it out of that forest alive courtesy of a taxidermy crazy man named The Hunter. He wakes up in a forest and as you move forward, you can quickly tell that something isn’t right. Little Nightmares 2 is a puzzle-platformer adventure game that follows the story of a young boy named Mono. We dive back into Six’s world for more terror in Little Nightmares 2. With gameplay (with DLCs) lasting less than four hours, players have been chomping at the bit for a sequel and now the wait is over. Similar games, like INSIDE, had set a precedent for dark-themed puzzle games and Little Nightmares delivered and delivered hard. When Little Nightmares came out in 2017, it stunned players with its dark graphics and even darker themes. Platforms: PS4, PS5 (reviewed), Xbox One, Xbox Series X, Switch, PC, Stadia
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