Compara los precios de Costume Quest 2 en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Double Fine Productions. Publicado por Midnight City. Lanzado el 7/10/2014. Disponible en PC, Mac, Linux, Xbox. Géneros: Adventure, Casual, RPG. Puntuación Metacritic: 68/100.

Six hours of trick-or-treating charm wrapped around turn-based combat that runs out of ideas faster than a jack-o-lantern melts in November. Worth it if Double Fine's wit is your candy of choice.

My honest first impression of Costume Quest 2 was relief: relief that the villain is a dentist with a time machine and a grudge against Halloween, and not some grey-cloaked world-ender with daddy issues. Dr. Orel White, D.D.S. is genuinely one of the more memorable antagonists in Double Fine's catalogue, precisely because the game takes a moment to show you who he was as a kid before letting you hate him as an adult. That small narrative grace note is worth more than a hundred overdesigned boss arenas, and it signals the kind of storytelling warmth that makes this sequel easy to root for, even when its systems are working against it. The premise sends twins Wren and Reynold leaping through time portals to undo White's Halloween-banning agenda, hitting stops in a pumpkin-lit present, a colonial past, and a fluoride-scrubbed dental dystopia future. Each zone is full of NPCs with genuinely funny one-liners, and the costume-based world traversal holds up nicely: the wizard staff lights dark paths, the ghost costume sneaks you past laser fencing, and the pterodactyl clears leaf piles to surface hidden items. Collecting costume pieces scattered across each map gives you a steady drip of new abilities that keeps exploration feeling purposeful for most of the runtime. The Creepy Treat Cards add a thin extra layer to combat, functioning a bit like collectible power-ups you can deploy mid-fight. None of it is deep, but the pacing of discovery is well-judged. Combat is where the game's ceiling becomes obvious, and quickly. The timing mechanic, a contracting circle you match to a target to boost attack or reduce incoming damage, works well enough in the first hour. The sequel adds counters, double attacks, and a rock-paper-scissors costume type system where certain outfits deal bonus damage or absorb extra hits depending on enemy class. That elemental wrinkle is a real improvement over the first game, but in practice most players will just run their favourite costumes and brute-force through anyway. The fights themselves almost never threaten to kill you, and with no auto-heal between battles (you walk to a water fountain instead, a baffling change from the first game), the rhythm between exploration and combat starts to drag. The map also lacks a position marker, which means the occasional poorly communicated quest devolves into pixel-hunting across suburbs. These are not fatal problems, but in a game that runs roughly six to nine hours depending on side quest completion, every minute of unnecessary backtracking is felt. The writing is the reason to push through the friction. The dialogue is dry without being cruel, and the scenarios, a speakeasy candy drop-off, a Jefferson costume whose superattack involves hurling the Declaration of Independence at enemies, a future city patrolled by robot dental soldiers, have the kind of absurdist internal logic that Double Fine does better than almost anyone. The art direction reinforces this: costumes look genuinely handmade, all visible tape and fabric, and the environments are packed with Halloween-season detail that rewards slow walkers. The final section stumbles a little, with a narrative that resolves more abruptly than the setup deserves, but the ride getting there is worth it for players on the right wavelength. Mac players should note a known incompatibility with macOS 10.15 Catalina and above, so check your OS before buying. Monika, Scout Team

Costume Quest 2

Costume Quest 2

7 oct 2014Double Fine ProductionsMidnight City
GamerScout opina

Six hours of trick-or-treating charm wrapped around turn-based combat that runs out of ideas faster than a jack-o-lantern melts in November. Worth it if Double Fine's wit is your candy of choice.

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My honest first impression of Costume Quest 2 was relief: relief that the villain is a dentist with a time machine and a grudge against Halloween, and not some grey-cloaked world-ender with daddy issues. Dr. Orel White, D.D.S. is genuinely one of the more memorable antagonists in Double Fine's catalogue, precisely because the game takes a moment to show you who he was as a kid before letting you hate him as an adult. That small narrative grace note is worth more than a hundred overdesigned boss arenas, and it signals the kind of storytelling warmth that makes this sequel easy to root for, even when its systems are working against it. The premise sends twins Wren and Reynold leaping through time portals to undo White's Halloween-banning agenda, hitting stops in a pumpkin-lit present, a colonial past, and a fluoride-scrubbed dental dystopia future. Each zone is full of NPCs with genuinely funny one-liners, and the costume-based world traversal holds up nicely: the wizard staff lights dark paths, the ghost costume sneaks you past laser fencing, and the pterodactyl clears leaf piles to surface hidden items. Collecting costume pieces scattered across each map gives you a steady drip of new abilities that keeps exploration feeling purposeful for most of the runtime. The Creepy Treat Cards add a thin extra layer to combat, functioning a bit like collectible power-ups you can deploy mid-fight. None of it is deep, but the pacing of discovery is well-judged. Combat is where the game's ceiling becomes obvious, and quickly. The timing mechanic, a contracting circle you match to a target to boost attack or reduce incoming damage, works well enough in the first hour. The sequel adds counters, double attacks, and a rock-paper-scissors costume type system where certain outfits deal bonus damage or absorb extra hits depending on enemy class. That elemental wrinkle is a real improvement over the first game, but in practice most players will just run their favourite costumes and brute-force through anyway. The fights themselves almost never threaten to kill you, and with no auto-heal between battles (you walk to a water fountain instead, a baffling change from the first game), the rhythm between exploration and combat starts to drag. The map also lacks a position marker, which means the occasional poorly communicated quest devolves into pixel-hunting across suburbs. These are not fatal problems, but in a game that runs roughly six to nine hours depending on side quest completion, every minute of unnecessary backtracking is felt. The writing is the reason to push through the friction. The dialogue is dry without being cruel, and the scenarios, a speakeasy candy drop-off, a Jefferson costume whose superattack involves hurling the Declaration of Independence at enemies, a future city patrolled by robot dental soldiers, have the kind of absurdist internal logic that Double Fine does better than almost anyone. The art direction reinforces this: costumes look genuinely handmade, all visible tape and fabric, and the environments are packed with Halloween-season detail that rewards slow walkers. The final section stumbles a little, with a narrative that resolves more abruptly than the setup deserves, but the ride getting there is worth it for players on the right wavelength. Mac players should note a known incompatibility with macOS 10.15 Catalina and above, so check your OS before buying.

Monika
Monika · Scout Team

RPGs

Etiquetas

singleplayerachievementstrading-cardscloud-savestier:indieTurn-Based CombatTime TravelHalloweenCostume MechanicsType MatchupTimed Input CombatShort CampaignFamily-Friendly RPGCollect-a-thon

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
Windows Vista
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0c
Storage
1500 MB available space
Graphics
256 MB GeForce 8800, Radeon 3850, or Intel HD 3000 Graphics
Processor
1.8 GHz dual core CPU
Sound Card
DirectX Compatible Sound Card

Recomendados

OS
Windows 7
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0c
Storage
1500 MB available space
Graphics
512 MB GeForce 220, Radeon 4550, Intel HD 4000 Graphics
Processor
Intel Core 2 Duo at 2.2 GHz, or AMD Athlon 64 at 2.2 GHz
Sound Card
DirectX Compatible Sound Card

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Reseñas y valoraciones

Metacritic
68

Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Double Fine Productions
Distribuidora
Midnight City
Fecha de lanzamiento
7 oct 2014

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible Costume Quest 2?

Costume Quest 2 está disponible en PC, Mac, Linux, Xbox.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Costume Quest 2?

Costume Quest 2 se lanzó el 7 de octubre de 2014.

¿Quién desarrolló Costume Quest 2?

Costume Quest 2 fue desarrollado por Double Fine Productions y publicado por Midnight City.

¿Merece la pena comprar Costume Quest 2?

Costume Quest 2 tiene una puntuación Metacritic de 68/100, lo que lo convierte en uno de los títulos destacados de Adventure. Mira las reseñas completas, las valoraciones y los tiempos de duración en esta página para decidir.