Lost Records: Bloom & Rage - Tape 2
74 /100
Based on 13 reviews

Lost Records: Bloom & Rage - Tape 2 Reviews

Check out Lost Records: Bloom & Rage - Tape 2 Review Scores from trusted Critics below. With 13 reviews on CriticDB, Lost Records: Bloom & Rage - Tape 2 has a score of:

74

Game Page
75/100

Lost Records: Bloom and Rage - Tape 2 is a solid continuation of Tape 1, offering emotional depth and an atmosphere that pulls you in. However, pacing issues and the underwhelming supernatural elements hold it back from being truly great.

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6.1/10

Lost Records: Bloom & Rage - Tape 2 continues the nostalgic '90s aesthetic as you follow the events after the first tape's rock show. Let's go!

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Lost Records is a visually gorgeous game and proves that the team who pioneered Life is Strange still have the aesthetic nailed down. Unfortunately this and some smart adaptations of mechanics do little to hide a story that tries in vain to recapture the same energy, managing to totally lose itself by the end. I can see what they were going for here, but that vision is lost in a game that doesn't know what it wants to commit to. A deeply personal story is subsumed by what feels like an obligation to the supernatural. A story about the supernatural...

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Lost Records: Bloom and Rage Tape 2 meaningfully explores friendship, queer romance and tragedy. DON’T NOD’s compassionate writing style is consistently bolstered by stellar performances from its small but mighty cast. And, if you take the time to look, there’s detail in every nook and cranny of this inimitable 90s world. While the snappier runtime does mean the supporting characters don’t get as much screen time as they deserve, the heartwarming finale feels like a fitting end to this rebellious and often-brilliant bildungsroman.

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GamesRadar
April 22, 2025

With the story complete, Lost Records: Bloom & Rage is dazzling. Teen rage, girl power, sapphic love – it's all explored with care and consideration. It's rough around the edges in parts, but Don't Nod has created a wonderful supernatural coming-of-age story that ends with teen defiance and queer rage.

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Lost Records: Bloom & Rage Tape 2 drops you straight into the story with next to no recap on what has happened before. It has been months since the first part, so you may have forgotten major parts of the storyline. It would have been great to get a cutscene of the band's past adventures, like each Life is Strange episode did back in the day. Once you get further into the plot, however, you'll begin to remember major elements of the narrative. This is obviously not going to be an issue for those who play both parts simultaneously from...

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Lost Records: Bloom & Rage is the latest narrative adventure game from Don’t Nod. I reviewed the opening half of this journey, Bloom, a couple of months back; this is a review for the second part, Rage. For the uninitiated, Lost Records: Bloom & Rage most closely resembles Don’t Nod’s previous work on Life is Strange, a character-driven narrative game where player decisions shape the story.

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7.5/10

Lost Records: Bloom & Rage Tape 2: Rage delivers a ton of power in its exploration of fear, death, and friendship. It doesn’t always bring its elements together smoothly, but when it does, it delivers a summer that you will never forget.

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TheGamer
April 19, 2025

Lost Records: Bloom & Rage, from Life is Strange developer, Don't Nod, returns for its second and final episodic entry, Tape 2: Rage.

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COGConnected
April 18, 2025
70/100

Lost Records: Bloom & Rage – Tape 2 refines the gameplay while delivering a story conclusion that may divide players. The story gives satisfying resolutions to many of the complex, multilayered narrative threads, but some of the more ambitious supernatural elements fail to deliver a full payoff. The addition of new gameplay mechanics, particularly the puzzles that shift between past and present, adds welcome depth to the experience. Ultimately, the story comes together in a way that feels emotionally fitting, but it leaves several key questions unanswered. As it stands, the game feels incomplete, and it needs another Tape or...

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Through all the wonderful moments together, the four outcast girls living in rural Michigan during this moment in their lives. The summer when you’re sixteen, what a fucking time, man. Hanging out at the beach, the hideout in the woods, bloody mary in the outhouse, finding the abyss, playing a parking lot concert, and recording all of it with a handycam. I felt like I lived an extra life, even in the short playtime of both games. I let Autumn down. But I wasn’t going to let that stop me from loving the best summer ever.

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Eurogamer
April 17, 2025

Stronger emotional stakes and faster-paced drama promise an explosive climax that ultimately pulls its biggest punch.

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