Mime And Dash 2 -

If you played the original Mime and Dash , you remember the feeling. You were halfway across a precarious floating platform, your friend (trapped in a classic French mime costume) was frantically pressing the “invisible wall” button, and the third “Dash” character was busy rewinding time right off a cliff.

If you loved Overcooked but wished it had more existential confusion, or if you enjoyed Portal 2 ’s co-op but found it too logical, this is your next obsession.

Back in the Silly Suit: Why ‘Mime and Dash 2’ is the Chaos We Needed Mime And Dash 2

It was pure, unadulterated couch co-op chaos.

The other player controls , a speedster who can touch everything, but has a severe case of temporal ADHD. Dash can rewind, fast-forward, and freeze time, but his moves are fragile—one wrong zap and the level resets. If you played the original Mime and Dash

Do not play this over voice chat. You need to see your partner’s face when they realize you’ve been holding the “invisible leash” for thirty seconds just to mess with them.

The graphics are crispier, the soundtrack is a chaotic mix of accordion music and dubstep (don’t ask, it works), and the difficulty curve goes from “hand-holding” to “why are we climbing an invisible staircase over a pit of lava?” Back in the Silly Suit: Why ‘Mime and

The goal? Get the single “Applause Token” to the exit. The reality? Screaming at your screen. 1. The Silent Speech Bubble Mime now has a limited “pantomime phrase book.” Instead of just invisible walls, you can mime a “rope swing” or a “heavy anvil.” The catch? You have to hold the pose. If Dash bumps into you while you’re holding an invisible anvil? You both go flying. Physics have never been funnier.