Little Nightmares 2 review – puzzler's quest in a fever-dream fairytale
https://www.theguardian.com/games/2021/feb/17/little-nightmares-2-review-nintendo-switch-playstation-pc
Nintendo Switch, PS4, PS5, Xbox, PC, Android; Tarsier Studios/Bandai NamcoNavigate Mono’s surreal, gothic world in a bid to free the adults from their TV addiction
Like its 2017 predecessor, Little Nightmares 2 is a fever-dream made playable, with the creepy, disturbing edge of a Brothers Grimm fairytale or Jan Svankmajer animation, albeit carefully leavened with rare but powerful uplifting moments. It’s superminimal, eschewing even a single word of dialogue; we control a child, Mono, who must work out how to make his way through a surreal and dangerous place.
Little Nightmares 2 review – puzzler's quest in a fever-dream fairytale
Feb 18, 2021, 12:32pm UTC
https://www.theguardian.com/games/2021/feb/17/little-nightmares-2-review-nintendo-switch-playstation-pc
> Nintendo Switch, PS4, PS5, Xbox, PC, Android; Tarsier Studios/Bandai NamcoNavigate Mono’s surreal, gothic world in a bid to free the adults from their TV addiction
> Like its 2017 predecessor, Little Nightmares 2 is a fever-dream made playable, with the creepy, disturbing edge of a Brothers Grimm fairytale or Jan Svankmajer animation, albeit carefully leavened with rare but powerful uplifting moments. It’s superminimal, eschewing even a single word of dialogue; we control a child, Mono, who must work out how to make his way through a surreal and dangerous place.