Party Hard 2 Reviews
Bringing together the best between strategy and stealth, Party Hard 2 is a game that brings fun to the reality of serial killers that don't want to be harassed by noisy neighbors. With visuals, soundtrack and well-aligned gameplay, the title marks its own identity promoting an intriguing and addictive experience supported by characteristic humor that is the key to its success.
Review in Portuguese | Read full review
Party Hard 2 is an engaging and great looking game. The transition from 2D to 2.5D has worked really well for this title and now there are a lot more environmental elements that play important roles in making this game better than its predecessor. Though, there are some issues that make the gamer enjoy it a little less, but the overall result deserves a try.
Review in Persian | Read full review
Party Hard 2 is a grower, not a shower. You have to ease into it and appreciate your surroundings to produce some truly inspired executions. If skulking and lurking is your jam, then Party Hard 2 is the game for any budding clandestine manslayer.
I found Party Hard 2 lacking in anything to keep me interested. There are only so many times and so many ways you can kill people to end a party. The whole idea and concept of the game just felt generic and contrived in an attempt to be edgy. I find it very hard to recommend. Party Hard 2 is anything but a party.
There’s a lot of creativity on display here, and while it can get frustratingly tricky at times, it’s nevertheless a fun way to let off some steam.
An evident leap forward from the already notable first chapter. Not every new feature works out well, and the boss fights are here to prove it, but Pinokl's game stands as an interesting and funny little stealth game.
Review in Italian | Read full review
Party Hard 2 does what all sequels should. It keeps what worked, cuts or changes what didn't, and adds some new stuff to keep things interesting.
Party Hard 2 riffs off the Hitman formula, mixing it with a pixel art style and humorous flourishes wherever you look. It can be frustrating when you're caught and sent back to the start of a level, but so long as you don't find the premise too extreme, there's enough here to scratch your stealth action itch.