Compare Another Lost Phone: Laura's Story prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Accidental Queens. Published by Dear Villagers. Released on 9/21/2017. Available on PC. Genres: Single Player, Indie.

You find a stranger's phone on the ground. You probably shouldn't open it. You definitely will. A 1-2 hour narrative puzzle about domestic abuse, digital life, and the quiet dread of knowing too much.

Another Lost Phone: Laura's Story is a phone-simulation narrative game from Accidental Queens, the small French studio behind A Normal Lost Phone. You play as yourself, more or less: someone who found a lost phone and can't quite put it back down. The entire experience takes place inside a fictional Android-style interface, and your only tools are the apps Laura left unlocked: text messages, emails, a photo gallery, a fictionalized LinkedIn-style app called PowerJob Messenger, a calendar, and a music player. Progress means cracking passwords, and cracking passwords means reading everything carefully. The puzzle structure is gentle but intentional. Locked apps and secondary email accounts gate story content behind clues scattered across the phone, so you spend time triangulating birth dates from texts, hunting for wifi passwords buried in notes, and cross-referencing photos with calendar entries. None of it is punishing; the difficulty sits at a comfortable level where logic does the lifting rather than trial and error. The UI occasionally works against you - shuttling between apps on PC with a mouse lacks the tactile fluency of a touchscreen, and a few reviewers noted the back-and-forth could break narrative immersion at critical moments. Keep a pen nearby. What Laura's Story does quietly and well is load its mundane details with weight. Work emails about a job she is overqualified for, texts from a sister about a childhood toy, missed plans with friends - the incidental texture of a real person's phone accumulates until the subtext becomes impossible to ignore. The game deals with domestic abuse and the insidious way coercive control hides in plain sight, and it handles those themes with genuine care, including resources for players who recognize something of their own life in Laura's story. The music app deserves a special mention: a selection of mellow, mood-setting tracks plays throughout, and the fact that you can switch songs from inside the phone's own interface is a small touch that lands with an outsized atmospheric effect. The criticisms are fair and worth knowing before you buy. The runtime is genuinely short - most players finish in one to two hours, and the story's central reveal arrives and resolves quickly enough that some players felt the emotional connection they were building to Laura got cut off before it could fully form. Some supporting characters remain underdeveloped, more functional than felt. The PC port is clearly a mobile game wearing a desktop coat, and that shows. If you need your games to breathe and expand, this one will frustrate you. But here is why I keep recommending it anyway. Another Lost Phone: Laura's Story knows exactly what it is and refuses to overstay its welcome. It is a 90-minute piece of handcrafted interactive fiction that uses the mundane grammar of a smartphone - the one in your pocket right now - to tell a story about something real and underrepresented in games. That specificity of form, where the medium and the message are the same object, is rare. You will think about it after you close the app. That is not nothing. Kai, Scout Team

Another Lost Phone: Laura's Story
Single PlayerIndie

Another Lost Phone: Laura's Story

Sep 21, 2017Accidental QueensDear Villagers
GamerScout Says

You find a stranger's phone on the ground. You probably shouldn't open it. You definitely will. A 1-2 hour narrative puzzle about domestic abuse, digital life, and the quiet dread of knowing too much.

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About Another Lost Phone: Laura's Story

Another Lost Phone: Laura's Story is a phone-simulation narrative game from Accidental Queens, the small French studio behind A Normal Lost Phone. You play as yourself, more or less: someone who found a lost phone and can't quite put it back down. The entire experience takes place inside a fictional Android-style interface, and your only tools are the apps Laura left unlocked: text messages, emails, a photo gallery, a fictionalized LinkedIn-style app called PowerJob Messenger, a calendar, and a music player. Progress means cracking passwords, and cracking passwords means reading everything carefully. The puzzle structure is gentle but intentional. Locked apps and secondary email accounts gate story content behind clues scattered across the phone, so you spend time triangulating birth dates from texts, hunting for wifi passwords buried in notes, and cross-referencing photos with calendar entries. None of it is punishing; the difficulty sits at a comfortable level where logic does the lifting rather than trial and error. The UI occasionally works against you - shuttling between apps on PC with a mouse lacks the tactile fluency of a touchscreen, and a few reviewers noted the back-and-forth could break narrative immersion at critical moments. Keep a pen nearby. What Laura's Story does quietly and well is load its mundane details with weight. Work emails about a job she is overqualified for, texts from a sister about a childhood toy, missed plans with friends - the incidental texture of a real person's phone accumulates until the subtext becomes impossible to ignore. The game deals with domestic abuse and the insidious way coercive control hides in plain sight, and it handles those themes with genuine care, including resources for players who recognize something of their own life in Laura's story. The music app deserves a special mention: a selection of mellow, mood-setting tracks plays throughout, and the fact that you can switch songs from inside the phone's own interface is a small touch that lands with an outsized atmospheric effect. The criticisms are fair and worth knowing before you buy. The runtime is genuinely short - most players finish in one to two hours, and the story's central reveal arrives and resolves quickly enough that some players felt the emotional connection they were building to Laura got cut off before it could fully form. Some supporting characters remain underdeveloped, more functional than felt. The PC port is clearly a mobile game wearing a desktop coat, and that shows. If you need your games to breathe and expand, this one will frustrate you. But here is why I keep recommending it anyway. Another Lost Phone: Laura's Story knows exactly what it is and refuses to overstay its welcome. It is a 90-minute piece of handcrafted interactive fiction that uses the mundane grammar of a smartphone - the one in your pocket right now - to tell a story about something real and underrepresented in games. That specificity of form, where the medium and the message are the same object, is rare. You will think about it after you close the app. That is not nothing. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

steamPhone SimulationNarrative InvestigationPassword PuzzlesDomestic Abuse ThemesSingle SittingVoyeurism MechanicAtmospheric SoundtrackSocial CommentaryPoint-and-Click

System Requirements

Minimum

System requirements
Windows 7+

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
Accidental Queens
Publisher
Dear Villagers
Release Date
Sep 21, 2017

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