Compare Discolored 2 prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Godbey Games. Published by Godbey Games. Released on 1/8/2025. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Adventure, Casual, Indie.

A four-to-five hour first-person puzzler where restoring color to a drained world is less a gentle pastime and more a tense cat-and-mouse with a very creepy organization. Gorgeous to watch, occasionally maddening to solve.

I spent the better part of an evening with all the lights off playing Discolored 2, and I mean that as a genuine recommendation of atmosphere, not a warning. Jason Godbey, a one-person digital artist operating under the Godbey Games banner, has built something quietly ambitious here: a first-person puzzle-horror that runs about four to five hours, picks up immediately after the 2019 original, and expands the scope so dramatically that the first game starts to feel like a proof-of-concept by comparison. The monochrome world you move through is intentionally stark, and each color you coax back into the environment lands with a small visual thrill. Watching a grey interior suddenly bloom with primary hues is the game's best trick, and it does not get old. The puzzle design sits at the heart of things, as you'd expect. You'll be manipulating switches, connecting wires, slotting color prisms into mechanisms, and reading environmental clues with the same patient attention you'd give a locked-room mystery. Early puzzles establish a logic that the game then trusts you to extend forward on your own, which is admirable design economy. There is a hint system gated behind a short timer, which nudges rather than spoon-feeds, and most players will find it essential at least a couple of times. The friction is real: some puzzle solutions veer into abstract territory that left reviewers and players reaching for hints more than they'd prefer, and a handful of environmental interaction hotspots are genuinely fiddly to locate. Inventory handling has drawn criticism for feeling clunky, and quick-time event sequences received mixed responses, with some finding them a disruptive fit in what is otherwise a contemplative experience. None of these are dealbreakers, but they stack up unevenly. What Discolored 2 adds on top of its predecessor is a layer of psychological horror that changes the texture entirely. A shadowy organization is actively hunting you through the game's surreal interiors, and their members are rendered with a visual unease that the original never attempted. These pursuit sequences introduce the only real way to die in the game, and they double as puzzle-adjacent challenges in their own right. Checkpointing is fair enough that dying never stings badly. If the horror side feels like too much, a Safe Mode disables the threat entirely, letting you treat the whole run as pure exploration and puzzle work. That flexibility is genuinely thoughtful. The aesthetic is where Godbey's background as a digital environment artist earns every moment of scrutiny. The symmetrical location layouts, the stark primary-color motifs bleeding into grey surroundings, the character designs of the organization's agents, and especially the soundtrack, which leans into something unearthly without tipping into generic horror ambient, all cohere into a world that feels hand-authored from a single precise vision. It won't shatter your expectations for what first-person puzzlers can do structurally, and the story's conclusion is abrupt enough to feel like a deliberate setup rather than a resolution. But within a compact runtime, this is a game that knows what it wants to be and commits to it with real craft. New players should consider starting with the 2019 original first, which is brief and inexpensive, to get the context the sequel assumes you have. Kai, Scout Team

Discolored 2
AdventureCasualIndie

Discolored 2

Jan 8, 2025Godbey Games
GamerScout Says

A four-to-five hour first-person puzzler where restoring color to a drained world is less a gentle pastime and more a tense cat-and-mouse with a very creepy organization. Gorgeous to watch, occasionally maddening to solve.

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About Discolored 2

I spent the better part of an evening with all the lights off playing Discolored 2, and I mean that as a genuine recommendation of atmosphere, not a warning. Jason Godbey, a one-person digital artist operating under the Godbey Games banner, has built something quietly ambitious here: a first-person puzzle-horror that runs about four to five hours, picks up immediately after the 2019 original, and expands the scope so dramatically that the first game starts to feel like a proof-of-concept by comparison. The monochrome world you move through is intentionally stark, and each color you coax back into the environment lands with a small visual thrill. Watching a grey interior suddenly bloom with primary hues is the game's best trick, and it does not get old. The puzzle design sits at the heart of things, as you'd expect. You'll be manipulating switches, connecting wires, slotting color prisms into mechanisms, and reading environmental clues with the same patient attention you'd give a locked-room mystery. Early puzzles establish a logic that the game then trusts you to extend forward on your own, which is admirable design economy. There is a hint system gated behind a short timer, which nudges rather than spoon-feeds, and most players will find it essential at least a couple of times. The friction is real: some puzzle solutions veer into abstract territory that left reviewers and players reaching for hints more than they'd prefer, and a handful of environmental interaction hotspots are genuinely fiddly to locate. Inventory handling has drawn criticism for feeling clunky, and quick-time event sequences received mixed responses, with some finding them a disruptive fit in what is otherwise a contemplative experience. None of these are dealbreakers, but they stack up unevenly. What Discolored 2 adds on top of its predecessor is a layer of psychological horror that changes the texture entirely. A shadowy organization is actively hunting you through the game's surreal interiors, and their members are rendered with a visual unease that the original never attempted. These pursuit sequences introduce the only real way to die in the game, and they double as puzzle-adjacent challenges in their own right. Checkpointing is fair enough that dying never stings badly. If the horror side feels like too much, a Safe Mode disables the threat entirely, letting you treat the whole run as pure exploration and puzzle work. That flexibility is genuinely thoughtful. The aesthetic is where Godbey's background as a digital environment artist earns every moment of scrutiny. The symmetrical location layouts, the stark primary-color motifs bleeding into grey surroundings, the character designs of the organization's agents, and especially the soundtrack, which leans into something unearthly without tipping into generic horror ambient, all cohere into a world that feels hand-authored from a single precise vision. It won't shatter your expectations for what first-person puzzlers can do structurally, and the story's conclusion is abrupt enough to feel like a deliberate setup rather than a resolution. But within a compact runtime, this is a game that knows what it wants to be and commits to it with real craft. New players should consider starting with the 2019 original first, which is brief and inexpensive, to get the context the sequel assumes you have. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supporttrading-cardscloud-savestier:sub-5Psychological HorrorColor MechanicsSafe ModeEnvironmental PuzzlesQTE SequencesHint SystemShort RuntimeSequel

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck Verified

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System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10+ 64-bit
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
4 GB available space
Graphics
Intel HD Graphics or equivalent
Processor
Intel (R) Core (TM) i5 or equivalent
Additional Notes
Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system

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Game Info

Developer
Godbey Games
Publisher
Godbey Games
Release Date
Jan 8, 2025

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Price History

2026-06-060.39(lowest)

Frequently asked questions about Discolored 2

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What platforms is Discolored 2 available on?

Discolored 2 is available on PC, Xbox.

When was Discolored 2 released?

Discolored 2 was released on 8 January 2025.

Who developed Discolored 2?

Discolored 2 was developed by Godbey Games.