Compare PowerWash Simulator 2 prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by FuturLab. Published by FuturLab. Released on 10/23/2025. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Casual, Indie, Simulation. Metacritic score: 83/100.

If the original made you lose three hours cleaning a dirt-bike at midnight, this sequel knows exactly what it's doing to you and does it better.

I'll be honest: the first PowerWash Simulator had me convinced I'd found a productivity hack disguised as a game. PowerWash Simulator 2 uses the same trick, and it works just as well. FuturLab took a nearly-perfect feedback loop and sanded the rough edges off without sanding away its soul. The result lands at Metacritic 83, and based on what's actually changed under the hood, that number makes sense. The core loop remains exactly what it says on the tin: you show up to a grimy location, blast dirt off surfaces with a pressure washer, collect your fee, and move on. What the sequel adds is a surprising amount of mechanical texture on top of that simplicity. Soap is now unlimited and works on every surface, which instantly removes one of the original's more fiddly friction points. The new SwirlForce surface cleaner attachment spins a disc-like scrubber over flat areas, eating through large floors and rooftops at a pace the old nozzles could never match. A scissor lift and an abseiling rig let you tackle tall buildings without the scaffolding shuffle that plagued the first game. Nozzles now include a manually adjustable option alongside the familiar color-coded range. Multi-stage jobs reveal new areas as you complete cleaning chunks, so a public bathroom entrance clears and then the interior door opens, extending the level organically. There are 38 new jobs set across an expanded Caldera County, including locations like Sponge Valley and Lubri City, with targets ranging from a traveling carnival funhouse to a roller disco to a rock-climbing park. The home base hub is a new addition between jobs. You return to a personal space, pet the resident cats (Ulysses, Bubble, and Squeak are always waiting), customize furniture earned from completed jobs, and pick your next assignment from a large map. It sounds cosmetic, and largely it is. The decoration system has real limitations: you can only furnish the ground floor, you can't rotate items freely, and there are no skins for the pressure washer itself, which is the thing you stare at for the entire game. Critics noted this as a missed opportunity, and it's hard to argue otherwise. Multiplayer gets a meaningful upgrade. Campaign co-op now supports shared progression, meaning what you clean with a friend actually counts toward your solo career. Split-screen has been added alongside the existing online option, and up to four players can tackle free-play jobs together. For a game that hits its best rhythm as low-effort background company, co-op turns it into something genuinely social. The main criticism across reviews is the honest one: if you played a lot of the first game, novelty fatigue sets in. The mechanics are better, the levels are bigger and more varied, the visuals are sharper, but the baseline sensation is familiar enough that the sequel's improvements register as refinements rather than revelations. Veterans will appreciate the polish; newcomers get the best version of the concept with no baggage. FuturLab has also committed to a post-launch content roadmap including free Caldera Chronicles jobs and paid crossover DLC packs, continuing the tradition that kept the original alive for years after launch. Alex, Scout Team

PowerWash Simulator 2

PowerWash Simulator 2

Oct 23, 2025FuturLab
GamerScout Says

If the original made you lose three hours cleaning a dirt-bike at midnight, this sequel knows exactly what it's doing to you and does it better.

PCXbox
Best Price Available
€0.00
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Historical low: €15.92

GamerScout Verdict

The definitive version of the concept: buy it fresh if you skipped the original, return if the first game had you power-washing at 1am.

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Screenshots & Media

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About PowerWash Simulator 2

I'll be honest: the first PowerWash Simulator had me convinced I'd found a productivity hack disguised as a game. PowerWash Simulator 2 uses the same trick, and it works just as well. FuturLab took a nearly-perfect feedback loop and sanded the rough edges off without sanding away its soul. The result lands at Metacritic 83, and based on what's actually changed under the hood, that number makes sense. The core loop remains exactly what it says on the tin: you show up to a grimy location, blast dirt off surfaces with a pressure washer, collect your fee, and move on. What the sequel adds is a surprising amount of mechanical texture on top of that simplicity. Soap is now unlimited and works on every surface, which instantly removes one of the original's more fiddly friction points. The new SwirlForce surface cleaner attachment spins a disc-like scrubber over flat areas, eating through large floors and rooftops at a pace the old nozzles could never match. A scissor lift and an abseiling rig let you tackle tall buildings without the scaffolding shuffle that plagued the first game. Nozzles now include a manually adjustable option alongside the familiar color-coded range. Multi-stage jobs reveal new areas as you complete cleaning chunks, so a public bathroom entrance clears and then the interior door opens, extending the level organically. There are 38 new jobs set across an expanded Caldera County, including locations like Sponge Valley and Lubri City, with targets ranging from a traveling carnival funhouse to a roller disco to a rock-climbing park. The home base hub is a new addition between jobs. You return to a personal space, pet the resident cats (Ulysses, Bubble, and Squeak are always waiting), customize furniture earned from completed jobs, and pick your next assignment from a large map. It sounds cosmetic, and largely it is. The decoration system has real limitations: you can only furnish the ground floor, you can't rotate items freely, and there are no skins for the pressure washer itself, which is the thing you stare at for the entire game. Critics noted this as a missed opportunity, and it's hard to argue otherwise. Multiplayer gets a meaningful upgrade. Campaign co-op now supports shared progression, meaning what you clean with a friend actually counts toward your solo career. Split-screen has been added alongside the existing online option, and up to four players can tackle free-play jobs together. For a game that hits its best rhythm as low-effort background company, co-op turns it into something genuinely social. The main criticism across reviews is the honest one: if you played a lot of the first game, novelty fatigue sets in. The mechanics are better, the levels are bigger and more varied, the visuals are sharper, but the baseline sensation is familiar enough that the sequel's improvements register as refinements rather than revelations. Veterans will appreciate the polish; newcomers get the best version of the concept with no baggage. FuturLab has also committed to a post-launch content roadmap including free Caldera Chronicles jobs and paid crossover DLC packs, continuing the tradition that kept the original alive for years after launch.

Alex
Alex · Scout Team

Catch-all

Tags

tier:no-steam-match:aaa-pricedenriched-from-kinguinZen GameplayCo-op ProgressionMulti-stage JobsSurface Cleaner MechanicHome Base CustomizationCouch Co-opASMR-adjacentPost-launch Roadmap

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Win 10 (64 Bit)
Processor
Intel Core i3 10100TE (Q2 2020), Intel Core i5 7400 (Q1 2017), AMD Ryzen™ 3 1300X (Q3 2017) AMD Ryzen™ 5 PRO 2500U (Q1 2019), Intel Core i7…

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Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
83

Game Info

Developer
FuturLab
Publisher
FuturLab
Release Date
Oct 23, 2025

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Frequently asked questions about PowerWash Simulator 2

How much does PowerWash Simulator 2 cost?

PowerWash Simulator 2 pricing changes often and varies by store, edition and region. The live price table on this page compares the cheapest in-stock offers from trusted key stores like Eneba and Kinguin, so you always see the current lowest price before you buy.

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What platforms is PowerWash Simulator 2 available on?

PowerWash Simulator 2 is available on PC, Xbox.

When was PowerWash Simulator 2 released?

PowerWash Simulator 2 was released on 23 October 2025.

Who developed PowerWash Simulator 2?

PowerWash Simulator 2 was developed by FuturLab.

Is PowerWash Simulator 2 worth buying?

PowerWash Simulator 2 holds a Metacritic score of 83/100, making it one of the standout Casual titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.