After all, the Unravel series is all about the power of connection. Fostering in-person gaming relationships was important to Unravel developers at Coldwood Interactive, an independent studio based in Sweden. This control scheme is crucial, especially because Unravel Two isn't an online co-op game - it's local only. The two characters can also combine into one blue-and-red-streaked Yarny. The entire game is playable solo, with one person alternating between the blue and red Yarny to solve spatial puzzles. The cooperative aspect of Unravel Two is new, but it doesn't require two players to actually work. The characters can swing from each other, climb up one another's strings, and even tie those strings together to create a thin trampoline that boosts them up the level. They swing from branches and wall-jump up the crevasses between rocks, helping each other along the way. Using the strings hanging from their bottoms (See? Absolutely adorable), Yarny and its blue buddy traverse beautiful, sidescrolling 3D landscapes of jagged rocks, busted logs, smoldering forest floors, clear waters and dangerous animals. Unravel Two stars Yarny, the same anthropomorphized ball of red yarn that carried players through the first game, and it adds a second, blue Yarny, instantly upping the cute factor 100 percent. Unravel Two is the follow-up to 2016's Unravel, the first indie game published under EA's Originals brand - and it is just as adorable and emotionally powerful as the original.
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February 2023
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