
Hotline Miami 2: Wrong Number closes out the Hotline Miami saga, picking up the thread of violence and revenge that the first game set in motion. Rather than following a single protagonist, the story splinters across several distinct factions, each driven by its own murky motives and dubious code of conduct. As their paths cross and the consequences pile up, the narrative dissolves once more into a shimmering fog of neon and carnage. This is where the bloodshed reaches its final reckoning.
The action stays as unforgiving as ever, demanding total concentration against enemies who punish the slightest hesitation. Combat evolves as the perspective moves from group to group, layering in fresh weapons, movement options, melee attacks, and new ways to dispatch your foes. The game's signature look, all lurid color and disorienting style, carries you through the massacre as you carve a path toward the truth behind all the killing.
An enormous soundtrack anchors the experience, with more than forty driving tracks drawn from a wide roster of musicians. Returning names such as M|O|O|N, Perturbator, Jasper Byrne, Scattle, and El Huervo share the bill with newcomers, giving this indie action title an audio backdrop as intense as its combat on PC.