
How 2 Escape
Got a friend, a phone, and six hours to kill? How 2 Escape is the rare co-op puzzle game where only one of you needs to own it, and both of you will be arguing by the final train car.
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About How 2 Escape
My first instinct when I saw the setup here was Keep Talking and Nobody Explodes but on a train, and that comparison is honestly both useful and unfair. How 2 Escape from Breakfirst Games is an asymmetrical co-op puzzler built around a single, clever premise: one player controls Emy, a woman trapped on a speeding runaway train, navigating seven carriages in first-person on PC, while the second player runs a free companion app on a phone, tablet, or second PC. The two of you never share a screen. You only have your voice. The app player acts as brother Johann, sitting outside the train with documents, wiring diagrams, delivery schedules, codex entries, and other reference material that the PC player cannot see. Everything requires verbal exchange. Describe what you see, listen carefully, cross-reference, type codes into the Codex app or send messages via the Messages app, and inch toward the locomotive's brake lever before time runs out. The structural hook here is genuinely well-engineered. Unlike most co-op games that require matching hardware or two copies, only one person buys the main game. The companion app is free on iOS, Android, and Steam, which makes this an unusually low-friction recommendation for mixed-platform pairs. The cel-shaded visual style on the PC side is clean and readable, with interactive objects flagged through a scribbled-line effect that shifts based on viewing angle. The companion app is more spartan, mostly 2D art and document screens, but that asymmetry is the point. Each side of the partnership has a radically different workload, and the early carriages do a respectable job of keeping both players busy simultaneously. Here is where the strategy brain in me has to flag the friction points, because they are real. The difficulty curve is uneven in ways that feel unplanned rather than designed. Early puzzles land well, the information handoff feels earned, and both players stay active. But later carriages stretch session length past two hours per room, and the balance tips so that one player ends up waiting while the other grinds through solo interaction chains. The hint system uses coins collected during play, and it gives incremental nudges rather than full solutions, which is the correct design call, but some of the later puzzle logic is opaque enough that even the coin hints do not always land cleanly. Player reviews consistently flag the final carriage as the friction peak, including a timed final puzzle that has ended otherwise solid sessions on a sour note. The companion app also has reported audio issues on newer mobile devices, which matters because several puzzles rely on sound cues. Who is this actually for? The honest answer is couples and close friends who enjoy escape rooms and are already comfortable with the communication overhead that physical escape rooms demand. The asymmetric role split works brilliantly for mixed-gamer pairs: one person navigates a 3D environment while the other reads reference material on a phone screen. Neither role requires gaming expertise. Total playtime across a full run sits around six hours, which positions this as a dedicated evening or a split across two sessions. There is no replayability to speak of once the puzzles are solved, no mod support, no additional content post-launch. The story, a villain-orchestrated train scenario with radio messages from a faceless antagonist, is functional but thin. Steam sits at roughly 71 percent positive across several hundred reviews, which is a fair aggregate signal. The concept earns the enthusiasm; the execution earns the caveats. Diego, Scout Team
Tags
Steam Deck & Linux
Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable.
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 10
- Memory
- 4 GB RAM
- Storage
- 500 MB available space
- Graphics
- GTX 660 or more
- Processor
- i3-5500 or more
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Game Info
- Developer
- Breakfirst Games
- Publisher
- Maximum Entertainment
- Release Date
- Aug 31, 2023
