Compare Jane Angel 2: Fallen Heaven prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by iMaxGen. Published by HH-Games. Released on 12/28/2020. Available on PC. Genres: Adventure, Casual.

A budget-tier hidden object game with a genuinely weird supernatural plot - worth a look if you want a low-pressure afternoon of clue-hunting, but not if you need a polished story to keep you going.

My first honest reaction to Jane Angel 2: Fallen Heaven was mild surprise that a hidden object game this old-fashioned found its way onto Steam in 2020. This is comfort-food casual gaming in its purest form: you play as Nancy, stepsister to the missing detective Jane Angel, and you get pulled through a convoluted mystery that mixes aristocratic inheritance, an ancient curse, time travel, and what the game loosely calls astral projection. The plot is B-movie stuff by design, and if you go in expecting coherent lore you will be let down. Go in expecting a slightly surreal click-fest with some atmospheric scene-painting, and it delivers. The core loop is exactly what the genre promises. Each screen is a static scene where you hunt for objects, pick up inventory items, and carry them forward to unlock new areas. A hint button takes the frustration out of pixel-hunting, the journal logs clues so you are never completely lost, and a quick-travel map means you are not clicking through a dozen transition screens to backtrack. Two difficulty modes - Regular and Expert - let you control how much hand-holding you get, which is a small but meaningful quality-of-life touch the genre does not always bother with. Scene variety is the game's modest high point: the story's time-travel conceit lets the locations hop between eras, so Renaissance-era rooms sit alongside more modern settings without the whole thing feeling samey for long. Where the game struggles is everywhere outside that core loop. The writing is rough in translation - clunky phrasing and tonal whiplash are constant companions. The supernatural story elements pile on fast and resolve messily; a Steam community thread even notes the ending feels abrupt, leaving players unsure whether they hit a bug or finished the game. There are also a handful of launch-era reports of the game refusing to start on some Windows configurations, which is a concern worth flagging for anyone buying solo rather than as part of a bundle. With only 21 Steam reviews sitting at 71 percent positive, the sample is too small to call this a verdict from the crowd - it is more of a shrug. Who is this actually for? Hidden object regulars who have cleared their Big Fish backlog and want something short and strange to fill a free afternoon. Players who enjoy campy supernatural mystery and are not looking for the production values of a Collector's Edition from a major casual studio. At its brief runtime, the time-travel gimmick and the oddball story at least keep things moving faster than a generic haunted-house HOG. Everyone else - especially players new to the genre - should start somewhere better-reviewed before landing here. Alex, Scout Team

Jane Angel 2: Fallen Heaven
AdventureCasual

Jane Angel 2: Fallen Heaven

Dec 28, 2020iMaxGenHH-Games
GamerScout Says

A budget-tier hidden object game with a genuinely weird supernatural plot - worth a look if you want a low-pressure afternoon of clue-hunting, but not if you need a polished story to keep you going.

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About Jane Angel 2: Fallen Heaven

My first honest reaction to Jane Angel 2: Fallen Heaven was mild surprise that a hidden object game this old-fashioned found its way onto Steam in 2020. This is comfort-food casual gaming in its purest form: you play as Nancy, stepsister to the missing detective Jane Angel, and you get pulled through a convoluted mystery that mixes aristocratic inheritance, an ancient curse, time travel, and what the game loosely calls astral projection. The plot is B-movie stuff by design, and if you go in expecting coherent lore you will be let down. Go in expecting a slightly surreal click-fest with some atmospheric scene-painting, and it delivers. The core loop is exactly what the genre promises. Each screen is a static scene where you hunt for objects, pick up inventory items, and carry them forward to unlock new areas. A hint button takes the frustration out of pixel-hunting, the journal logs clues so you are never completely lost, and a quick-travel map means you are not clicking through a dozen transition screens to backtrack. Two difficulty modes - Regular and Expert - let you control how much hand-holding you get, which is a small but meaningful quality-of-life touch the genre does not always bother with. Scene variety is the game's modest high point: the story's time-travel conceit lets the locations hop between eras, so Renaissance-era rooms sit alongside more modern settings without the whole thing feeling samey for long. Where the game struggles is everywhere outside that core loop. The writing is rough in translation - clunky phrasing and tonal whiplash are constant companions. The supernatural story elements pile on fast and resolve messily; a Steam community thread even notes the ending feels abrupt, leaving players unsure whether they hit a bug or finished the game. There are also a handful of launch-era reports of the game refusing to start on some Windows configurations, which is a concern worth flagging for anyone buying solo rather than as part of a bundle. With only 21 Steam reviews sitting at 71 percent positive, the sample is too small to call this a verdict from the crowd - it is more of a shrug. Who is this actually for? Hidden object regulars who have cleared their Big Fish backlog and want something short and strange to fill a free afternoon. Players who enjoy campy supernatural mystery and are not looking for the production values of a Collector's Edition from a major casual studio. At its brief runtime, the time-travel gimmick and the oddball story at least keep things moving faster than a generic haunted-house HOG. Everyone else - especially players new to the genre - should start somewhere better-reviewed before landing here. Alex, Scout Team

Tags

steamHidden ObjectTime TravelSupernatural MysteryHint SystemQuick-Travel MapDifficulty ModesShort PlaytimeSingle Sitting

System Requirements

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Reviews & Ratings

Steam
71%(21)

Game Info

Developer
iMaxGen
Publisher
HH-Games
Release Date
Dec 28, 2020

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