![]() ![]() I’m sure that within due time there will be min-max oriented strategy guides out there detailed every exploit and the “fastest” or “best” way out of each scenario, but the entire point of the game is to come up with your own plan and see it through. For those who crave unforgiving challenges, the Escapists 2 brings them in spades, but it often comes at the cost of your patience.Some of the later prisons (a Gulag, a medium security location, a jungle compound, a rough Federales prison, and a supermax) will test the resolve of some of the greatest strategy enthusiast due to their complexity. However, the monotony of gathering items and playing errand runner for other inmates sours the experience, and the awkward controls don't help. When you find the right offbeat item, or barely squeak by a guard in Escapists 2, it's incredibly refreshing. For that same reason, though, it doesn't have much staying power. This makes the experience different and more rewarding I enjoyed versus the most because all of the tedious constraints were gone. Co-op mirrors the standard game, where other players can distract guards or help you find materials, while versus opens up the prison, makes inmates sell things to you for free, and removes the routine. The new multiplayer is a nice touch, especially as it's available as both co-op and versus for up to four players. Building a makeshift carrot on a train to coax a nearby horse was both charming and rewarding. Execution was everything, and failure didn't cause huge setbacks. The streamlined transportation prisons don't run into these challenges, and were by far my favorite thanks to their more defined goals. ![]() All of my carefully planned progress was lost in a split second. My character fell to the ground immediately because there was no confirmation for this action. ![]() I used my makeshift ladder to access a vent that would get me to where I needed to be, and while going through menus to grab my cutter, I accidentally hit up on the PS4's directional pad – the surrender button. I was ready to escape with all of my gear on hand and a dummy sitting in my cell. One particularly irritating moment didn't even involve me getting caught by the guards. I wish I could have turned this off for local play. It wouldn't be so frustrating if the game allowed for manual saves, but the individual levels are tied to their online leaderboards and autosave every few seconds. Any contraband you've hidden in your desk remains, but the on-hand keys, equipment, and weaponry you spent your time crafting are gone, and it's not quick or easy to regain. This is my number one frustration, as any mistake puts you back much closer to square one. Get caught by the guards? You'll get put in the infirmary or solitary and – most importantly – lose any contraband you have on you at the time. You curry favor with inmates via quests, pilfer items from those same cohabitants, beat people up, steal keys from guards, craft a variety of makeshift weaponry, and crawl through ventilation ducts. As you'd expect in a prison, you must plan your escape while adhering to a daily routine of eating, exercising, roll call, and working. The Escapists 2 doesn't lack things to do. Formerly stark prisons now have plenty of wall decorations and items on desks, and even the pixel-art figures have evolved and are properly shaded. These environments are much larger and enhanced by the much-improved visuals. The most notable change The Escapists 2 delivers is a wider variety of confines to escape, from Wild West holding cells to futuristic space prisons. The improvements over the previous game are plentiful and novel, but the frequent loss of progress and lack of manual saves stifles experimentation. The Escapists 2 gives you the same types of tools to escape a variety of themed confines, but also shares the tedium of working slowly toward an elusive goal. The men spent six months preparing, and used everything from papier-mâché dummy heads left in beds to raincoats stitched together into a lifeboat. ![]() Almost everyone has heard of history's amazing prison escapes, like Frank Morris, John Anglin, and Clarence Anglin fleeing from the world-famous Alcatraz Federal Penitentiary in 1962. ![]()
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