OXENFREE II: Lost Signals on Steam - User reviews, Price & Information

Quick menu

Five years after the events of OXENFREE, Riley returns to her hometown of Camena to investigate mysterious radio signals. What she finds is more than she bargained for.

OXENFREE II: Lost Signals is a thriller, supernatural and adventure game developed by Night School Studio and published by Netflix.
Released on July 12th 2023 is available on Windows and MacOS in 31 languages: English, French, German, Japanese, Simplified Chinese, Italian, Spanish - Spain, Arabic, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, Greek, Hungarian, Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese - Brazil, Portuguese - Portugal, Romanian, Spanish - Latin America, Swedish, Traditional Chinese, Turkish, Ukrainian, Vietnamese, Croatian, Hebrew, Hindi, Indonesian and Thai.

It has received 1,911 reviews of which 1,698 were positive and 213 were negative resulting in a rating of 8.5 out of 10. 😎

The game is currently priced at 19.99€ on Steam.


The Steam community has classified OXENFREE II: Lost Signals into these genres:

Media & Screenshots

Get an in-depth look at OXENFREE II: Lost Signals through various videos and screenshots.

System requirements

These are the minimum specifications needed to play the game. For the best experience, we recommend that you verify them.

Windows
  • Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system
  • OS: Windows 10 (64-bit OS required)
  • Processor: Intel Core i5-4570T or AMD
  • Memory: 8 GB RAM
  • Graphics: GeForce GTX 650 1GB or Radeon HD 7750 1GB
  • DirectX: Version 11
  • Storage: 6 GB available space
MacOS
  • OS: macOS 10.13 (High Sierra) or later
  • Processor: Dual Core CPU @ 2.5GHz
  • Memory: 8 GB RAM
  • Graphics: 2GB VRAM / Metal or OpenGL 4.2 support
  • Storage: 6 GB available space

User reviews & Ratings

Explore reviews from Steam users sharing their experiences and what they love about the game.

Nov. 2025
The team banter wasn’t quite as frequent or lively as in the first game, and Jacob, the main sidekick, definitely got on my nerves at times his clingy, weak, and overly shy "lost puppy" vibe rubbed me the wrong way, it does lead the characters to not click as well or feeling flat compared to the original. That said, the walkie talkie radio conversations were excellent checking in with folks like the park ranger Shelley or lonely fisherman Nick felt super immersive and built these cool side stories, and the friendship that gradually developed with Jacob ended up being genuinely awesome by the end. The horror wasn’t as intense or dread filled this time around (less of that slow-burn creep from Oxenfree 1) it let the story breathe, feel more grounded in adult regrets and choices, and actually land harder emotionally, but was missing that creepy aura that I enjoyed so much from the former. Overall, a solid follow up generally favourable with sharp writing and atmosphere.
Expand the review
Sept. 2025
I loved Oxenfree II. A lot of reviews say it’s just a copy paste of the first game, but honestly that’s why I enjoyed it so much. It has the same atmosphere, the same style of dialogue, and the same eerie feeling I loved in the first one. To me that felt comforting, not repetitive or changing something up that didn't need to be changed. I also really liked when certain familiar characters showed up again. I won’t spoil who, but it felt like seeing old friends in the middle of all the weirdness, and it hit me harder than I expected. What I appreciated most was how it tied up the ending of the first game. It gave me closure while still being creepy and mysterious, and it made both games feel like one complete story. If you liked the first game, don’t listen to the complaints of it being copy paste or nothing new and instead just experience it for yourself! I went into this game worrying about the negative reviews and thinking I wouldn't like it but I truly did. That’s exactly what made me love it even more.. that it remained familiar while still giving me something new to experience with fun new characters. 🌸 I highly recommend.
Expand the review
July 2025
So, Oxenfree is one of my favorite games. So, I was happy, unable to contain my joy even. So, I was dying because of how nervous the prospect of a sequel made me. Would it be as good? Better? Would it be worse? Would my experience with the og be tarnished because of it? Would I be strong enough to not let it tarnish? So. It was good. Not better, but Oxenfree II: Lost Signals, contrary to what some people would like to tell you, works best as a response to the first game. do yourself a favor and play that one. It is a direct continuation, and it does put on the Big Person Pants to deal with the implications of being a direct continuation. There are no perfect choices, no perfect outcomes, just people doing what people do: their best, hopefully, and pray it is enough. Whether it is or isn't is up to you. About Lost Signals. You are Riley, a 30-something down on her luck woman in need of a job, any job, and the one that hires you happens to be in your old hometown, that place you thought you could leave behind. You'd actually returned a bit before, for reasons unrelated, but here you are, cold and accompanied by some wiry guy you went to high school with. Hi name's Jacob, and he, besides mission control, is also not having the best of days. I'd like to think that Night School Studio chose to have a more 'disconnected' cast, as in these people barely know or don't know each other at all, because Oxenfree was exactly the opposite of that, sort of. Here you'll be building relationships from zero, how tall your metaphorical buildings go, in which direction, how far and wide and all that jazz, is up to you. The script is strong and heartbreaking all the same. You might tune in and talk to that lonely radio host, or that lonely sailor, or that lonely park ranger. They're all lonely tonight. You are lonely tonight, but you don't have to be, if you make the effort to connect with them and with Jacob and with the world you so dread. Maybe. It really is up to you. Gameplay remains similar to the first game, with the addition of a walkie talkie you'll use to talk to everyone not present at the location, and extra, much needed polish. The backgrounds and sound design are, once again, very painterly and heart tugging, and the voice acting is stellar. This is a solid one. Would rather only say this: the climax does hit harder if you play the first game, which is a good game, so go play it and then play this. Please. I'm on my knees. My cat's on his knees. Please. For more reviews of games that are creepy, or cute, or both, check out my curator page: https://store.steampowered.com/curator/44079361/
Expand the review
April 2025
OXENFREE 2 is a good continuation of the original story. Like the first game, it is an amazing experience that can be completed in one sitting. The game is fairly short (6-7h). Unlike the first game, it does not require multiple playthroughs for additional endings, just achievements. I left PC running for days, hence why 45h on record, ffs. (The final collectible letter spawning only after you have collected all the others was a skum move by the devs.) While the first game focused on teenagers like from "Stranger Things" and their angst-filled struggles, Oxenfree 2 follows two adults that basically have to clean-up the mess left behind. For that reason the characters and story are more mature. Good writing. - The music is great, like in the original, and best of all the audio mixing is better. Meaning no interruptions or voices and sounds playing over each other. - The voice acting is good, but Jacob should learn to shut the f UP ! This anxiously nervous modern Western way of talking is beyond annoying: "I, I, I was just... uh maybe so Yeah, no, uh like, iF yOu dOn'T miND mE aSkiNg, anyway uh so actually I guess what just happened uh, [sigh ... what was I saying?" This AIN'T cute, stfu and LEARN TO SPEAK ENGLISH MAZAFAKA!! English is not my 1st language and even I don't talk like that. I met weedheads more sober, confident and clear than this backwater hick Jacob. Even racist village rednecks are more coherent, educated and easier to understand than this challenged foolish stuttering. OXENFREE 2 was still developed by "Night School Studio" and thankfully the vision was not compromised, but we can already feel Netflix's tendrils slithering into the writing and trying to add some "they/them" bs. Thankfully it is optional and can be completely disregarded if you simply don't chose this nonsense. Overall the sequel was a beautiful game and experience. The cult church segment was spooky and had good action. This game answers all the questions and should be played by fans of the first game. I do recommend.
Expand the review
March 2025
Never reaches the heights that the first game established but overall its not a bad game. I enjoyed the second half of the game more than the first half and it has some great voice acting and visuals but it falls short of delivering a full experience when the credits roll.
Expand the review

Similar games

View all
Cognition: An Erica Reed Thriller FBI agent Erica Reed has an uncanny talent: she can see the past and piece together how a crime unfolded. But not even this sixth sense could save her younger brother, Scott, from a brutal serial killer. Three years later, the investigation into Scott’s murder has gone cold -- but Erica’s work has only just begun.

Similarity 70%
Price -96% 0.60€
Rating 7.8
Release 19 Sep 2013
Blackwell Epiphany The last game in the Blackwell series.

Similarity 66%
Price -92% 0.87€
Rating 9.2
Release 24 Apr 2014
Dread Flats This is a first-person Chinese horror game, players will go to a murder building, uncover the truth of the murder, find the missing people..

Similarity 64%
Price -16% 4.95€
Rating 8.1
Release 10 Jul 2025
Blackwell Convergence The third game in the Blackwell series

Similarity 61%
Price -65% 1.60€
Rating 8.9
Release 13 Jan 2012
Blackwell Unbound The year is 1973. The sound of a lone, ethereal saxophone drifts over the Roosevelt Island promenade, while a series of accidents plague a midtown construction site. The citizens of Manhattan take no notice of these events, let alone think they are connected.

Similarity 60%
Price -88% 0.55€
Rating 8.8
Release 13 Jan 2012
CARIMARA: Beneath the forlorn limbs A mute little thing with borrowed magic. A house that murmurs back. Ask wrong, and you might wake something that remembers your name.

Similarity 59%
Price 4.99€
Rating 9.2
Release 06 Oct 2025
The Suicide of Rachel Foster Coming back to the family hotel after years, a young woman finds herself trapped with the ghosts from her past and an old cellular telephone as the only way to unveil a terrible truth.

Similarity 59%
Price -95% 0.93€
Rating 6.7
Release 19 Feb 2020
Broken Pieces Broken Pieces is a psychological thriller taking place in a french coastal village somehow outside the flow of time. Solve the mysteries by putting the pieces of the story back together by figuring out the enigma behind this mystical place.

Similarity 58%
Price -95% 0.49€
Rating 7.0
Release 09 Sep 2022
Murdered: Soul Suspect MURDERED: SOUL SUSPECT™ takes players into a whole new realm of mystery where the case is personal and the clues just out of reach, challenging gamers to solve the hardest case of all… their own murder.

Similarity 57%
Price -96% 0.96€
Rating 8.4
Release 05 Jun 2014
Gabriel Knight: Sins of the Fathers 20th Anniversary Edition Revisit of one of adventure gaming’s greatest classics by master storyteller Jane Jensen! Struggling bookstore owner Gabriel Knight investigates the sinister Voodoo Murders in New Orleans, discovering the secrets of his family history and unfolding his destiny in this tale of horror and suspense.

Similarity 57%
Price -85% 3.03€
Rating 8.6
Release 15 Oct 2014
Crowns and Pawns: Kingdom of Deceit Legends of the past come back to life in this charming point-and-click adventure. Pack your bags and journey with Crowns and Pawns: Kingdom of Deceit through modern day Europe to uncover the conspiracy behind a cursed relic and the secrets of the King who was never crowned.

Similarity 55%
Price -86% 2.88€
Rating 7.7
Release 06 May 2022
Night Book Tricked into reading an ancient book, Loralyn summons a demon into her home. Night Book is an interactive occult thriller movie, created in lockdown, from the publishers of The Complex, Five Dates and Maid of Sker.

Similarity 55%
Price -95% 0.85€
Rating 6.7
Release 27 Jul 2021

Frequently Asked Questions

OXENFREE II: Lost Signals is currently priced at 19.99€ on Steam.

OXENFREE II: Lost Signals is currently not on sale. You can purchase it for 19.99€ on Steam.

OXENFREE II: Lost Signals received 1,698 positive votes out of a total of 1,911 achieving a rating of 8.49.
😎

OXENFREE II: Lost Signals was developed by Night School Studio and published by Netflix.

OXENFREE II: Lost Signals is playable and fully supported on Windows.

OXENFREE II: Lost Signals is playable and fully supported on MacOS.

OXENFREE II: Lost Signals is not playable on Linux.

OXENFREE II: Lost Signals is a single-player game.

OXENFREE II: Lost Signals does not currently offer any DLC.

OXENFREE II: Lost Signals does not support mods via Steam Workshop.

OXENFREE II: Lost Signals does not support Steam Remote Play.

OXENFREE II: Lost Signals is enabled for Steam Family Sharing. This means you can share the game with authorized users from your Steam Library, allowing them to play it on their own accounts. For more details on how the feature works, you can read the original Steam Family Sharing announcement or visit the Steam Family Sharing user guide and FAQ page.

You can find solutions or submit a support ticket by visiting the Steam Support page for OXENFREE II: Lost Signals.

Data sources

The information presented on this page is sourced from reliable APIs to ensure accuracy and relevance. We utilize the Steam API to gather data on game details, including titles, descriptions, prices, and user reviews. This allows us to provide you with the most up-to-date information directly from the Steam platform.

Additionally, we incorporate data from the SteamSpy API, which offers insights into game sales and player statistics. This helps us present a comprehensive view of each game's popularity and performance within the gaming community.

Last Updates
Steam data 18 January 2026 07:08
SteamSpy data 21 January 2026 05:47
Steam price 29 January 2026 04:33
Steam reviews 29 January 2026 08:07

If you'd like to dive deeper into the details about OXENFREE II: Lost Signals, we invite you to check out a few dedicated websites that offer extensive information and insights. These platforms provide valuable data, analysis, and user-generated reports to enhance your understanding of the game and its performance.

  • SteamDB - A comprehensive database of everything on Steam about OXENFREE II: Lost Signals
  • SteamCharts - Analysis of OXENFREE II: Lost Signals concurrent players on Steam
  • ProtonDB - Crowdsourced reports on Linux and Steam Deck OXENFREE II: Lost Signals compatibility
OXENFREE II: Lost Signals
Rating
8.5
1,698
213
Game modes
Features
Online players
6
Developer
Night School Studio
Publisher
Netflix
Release 12 Jul 2023
Platforms