Compare Leisure Suit Larry - Wet Dreams Dry Twice | Save the World Edition prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Assemble Entertainment. Available on PC.

Leisure Suit Larry - Wet Dreams Dry Twice | Save the World Edition
Action

Leisure Suit Larry - Wet Dreams Dry Twice | Save the World Edition

Add-on / DLC for Leisure Suit Larry Wet Dreams Dry Twice — view full game
TBAAssemble EntertainmentUnknown
PC
Best Price Available
0.00
at N/A
Historical low: $4.59

Compare Prices(0 stores)

Loading prices...

We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.

Screenshots & Media

Screenshot

About Leisure Suit Larry - Wet Dreams Dry Twice | Save the World Edition

I went into this one curious but skeptical. The Leisure Suit Larry brand has a complicated history, and CrazyBunch had already taken one swing at reviving it with Wet Dreams Don't Dry in 2018. Wet Dreams Dry Twice is the direct follow-up, and after several hours clicking around the Kalau'a archipelago with Larry Laffer and his AI companion Pi, my honest read is: it's a solid, occasionally frustrating, and frequently funny point-and-click adventure that earns its Very Positive Steam rating on the back of genuine charm rather than nostalgia alone. The setup picks up immediately after the previous game, with Larry stranded on the island of Cancum and desperate to reunite with Faith, the woman he lost. If you skipped Wet Dreams Don't Dry, there's a recap, but it's thin enough that newcomers may feel like they wandered into the second act of a film. The story island-hops across more than 50 hand-drawn locations and puts Larry in contact with over 40 characters, many of them genuinely funny. Pi, the Cortana-style assistant living on Larry's PiPhone, doubles as both an objective tracker and a sardonic conscience, correcting Larry's oblivious 1980s worldview at every turn. That dynamic works better than it should. The fourth-wall nudges and winking references to classic point-and-clicks, including nods to Monkey Island and the wider Sierra catalog, land reliably for anyone who grew up in that era. Puzzle design is the most divisive element. The game includes a to-do list that keeps objectives visible and a hotspot highlight system that lets you cycle through every interactive object on screen without pixel-hunting, both of which are genuinely useful quality-of-life additions. Most puzzles are logical enough that you can work through them with patience, building a sea-worthy raft from beach junk, navigating a logic-based labyrinth, crafting combinations from a wild inventory. The difficulty ramps noticeably toward the back half, and a couple of late-game sequences including a repetitive labyrinth and an arcade-style minigame have been criticized across multiple reviews for inconsistent internal logic. One of them can be skipped after enough failures, which is the right call. Inventory combination is the core loop, and while most solutions have method to them, a handful will have you resorting to trying every item on everything, a habit the genre has never fully shed. The humor is the elephant in the room, wearing a white leisure suit. The innuendo is relentless and the background art goes heavy on anatomical imagery. Taken in short sessions, it reads as low-brow but good-natured. Played for hours straight, reviewers and Steam users alike note that the joke density can tip from cheeky into numbing. Some cultural references also feel dated on arrival. The writing never crosses into genuinely offensive territory, largely because Pi's running commentary keeps reframing Larry's obliviousness as the punchline rather than the premise. Some jokes land, some fall flat, and the game is self-aware enough that the duds feel intentional about half the time. There are minor polish issues, including subtitle mismatches with the voice audio and occasional cursor interaction boxes that are too small, but nothing that derails the experience on PC where mouse controls feel natural. Bottom line: this is a confident, competent sequel that improves on its predecessor in scope and puzzle ambition. It knows exactly who it is for and delivers that audience something they will enjoy. Genre newcomers should start with Wet Dreams Don't Dry to understand the characters. Point-and-click fans comfortable with old-school puzzle logic and a tolerance for crude humor will get more than their money's worth. Alex, Scout Team

Tags

tier:no-steam-matchneeds-eneba-scrape

System Requirements

System requirements for Leisure Suit Larry - Wet Dreams Dry Twice | Save the World Edition aren't listed yet. Check the store page for the latest specs.

Community Discussion

Be the first to comment on Leisure Suit Larry - Wet Dreams Dry Twice | Save the World Edition.

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
Assemble Entertainment
Publisher
Unknown
Release Date
TBA

Price Alert

Get notified when the price drops below your target!

Create Alert

Price History

2026-06-074.59(lowest)
2026-06-064.59(lowest)

More from Assemble Entertainment

Buy smarter: helpful guides

Frequently asked questions about Leisure Suit Larry - Wet Dreams Dry Twice | Save the World Edition

Where can I buy Leisure Suit Larry - Wet Dreams Dry Twice | Save the World Edition cheapest?

Compare Leisure Suit Larry - Wet Dreams Dry Twice | Save the World Edition prices across every verified store in the price table on this page. We list the cheapest in-stock key and store offers, updated regularly, so you always see the best current deal before you buy.

What platforms is Leisure Suit Larry - Wet Dreams Dry Twice | Save the World Edition available on?

Leisure Suit Larry - Wet Dreams Dry Twice | Save the World Edition is available on PC.

Who developed Leisure Suit Larry - Wet Dreams Dry Twice | Save the World Edition?

Leisure Suit Larry - Wet Dreams Dry Twice | Save the World Edition was developed by Assemble Entertainment.