Close Menu
Best in TechnologyBest in Technology
  • News
  • Phones
  • Laptops
  • Gadgets
  • Gaming
  • AI
  • Tips
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Global
    • Press Release

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest tech news and updates directly to your inbox.

What's On
Everything Announced At The 2026 Capcom Spotlight

Everything Announced At The 2026 Capcom Spotlight

12 July 2026
Lizzy Caplan Joins The Cast Of FX’s Far Cry Anthology Series

Lizzy Caplan Joins The Cast Of FX’s Far Cry Anthology Series

12 July 2026
ConcernedApe Explains Why He’s Shown So Little Of Haunted Chocolatier: ‘I Would Rather Serve A Fully Baked Bread’

ConcernedApe Explains Why He’s Shown So Little Of Haunted Chocolatier: ‘I Would Rather Serve A Fully Baked Bread’

12 July 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Just In
  • Everything Announced At The 2026 Capcom Spotlight
  • Lizzy Caplan Joins The Cast Of FX’s Far Cry Anthology Series
  • ConcernedApe Explains Why He’s Shown So Little Of Haunted Chocolatier: ‘I Would Rather Serve A Fully Baked Bread’
  • 5 reasons I keep coming back to Apple Reminders despite paying for premium task managers
  • Star Fox Remake, Steam Next Fest, And The Adventures Of Elliot | The Game Informer Show
  • Ranking The Star Fox Series
  • EA Sports UFC 6 Review – Complacency At The Top
  • The Video Games You Should Play This Weekend – June 26, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
Best in TechnologyBest in Technology
  • News
  • Phones
  • Laptops
  • Gadgets
  • Gaming
  • AI
  • Tips
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Global
    • Press Release
Subscribe
Best in TechnologyBest in Technology
Home » World of Goo 2 review: puzzle classic gets the meta sequel it deserves
News

World of Goo 2 review: puzzle classic gets the meta sequel it deserves

News RoomBy News Room5 August 20247 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
World of Goo 2 review: puzzle classic gets the meta sequel it deserves
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

World of Goo 2

MSRP $30.00

“World of Goo 2 is the meta sequel that the eccentric puzzle classic deserves.”

Pros

  • Ingenious puzzles
  • Clever new gimmicks
  • Takes a surprising turn
  • Looks and sounds great

Cons

  • Some dud ideas
  • Sloppy controls
  • Frustrating undo button

Once upon a time, a game like World of Goo 2 didn’t need to exist. A creative studio like Tomorrow Corporation could create a successful game, make a name for itself off that success, and move on to its next project. These days, however, IP has become as good as gold and audiences are hungrier than ever to see them mined for all they’re worth. Sequels, remakes, remasters — if your hit game isn’t franchising, does it make a sound?

Leave it a studio as fiercely satirical as Tomorrow Corporation to critique that insatiable hunger in a meta sequel. World of Goo 2 doesn’t just deliver a new set of ingenious physics-based puzzles. The left-field release serves as a commentary on World of Goo’s own legacy, imagining an alternate timeline where the series never stopped feeding the flame it sparked in 2008. As sharp as that vision is, World of Goo 2 is hampered by a few bum gimmicks and sloppy controls that bog down the high-concept sequel.

More, more, more

Like its 2008 predecessor, World of Goo 2 is a puzzle game that’s all about physics and engineering. Levels have players building wobbly structures out of goo balls in order to reach a pipe. That simple concept gets twisted and turned in dozens of ways with additional goo types and level gimmicks like lava. The twist this time is that there’s an emphasis on liquids, as players often guide geysers of thick oil around mazelike stages. That little tweak makes a 16-year old formula feel as creative as ever.

Tomorrow Corporation is at its most creative here, turning levels into Rube Golberg machines. In one, I need to find a way to push around a giant goo ball and grind it up to make smaller ones. Another has me carefully building bridges out of matchsticks over pools of lava. The tension of the original game is enhanced by ideas like that, as unstable goo towers now teeter over unpredictable obstacles, and minutes of work can up in smoke in an instant.

World of Goo 2 is the legacy-appraising send-off that the series deserves.

Not every new idea works. Its most frustrating challenge puts me in a pitch black room where I need to move around three light-up balls as I build a sprawling structure. It’s not only a deeply frustrating puzzle, but the only one like it in the entire game. A times, it feels like Tomorrow Corporation has been sitting on a wealth of puzzle twists since 2008 and just threw scraps of each in. New mechanics aren’t always clearly introduced and they disappear as soon as they start to make sense. It’s throwing the goo at the wall and seeing what sticks.

That scattershot approach may very well be the intent. While all seems normal at first, everything takes a surprising turn in its fourth chapter. Much like The Stanley Parable: Ultra Deluxe, another surprise sequel that takes aim at an IP-hungry industry, World of Goo 2 has something to say about the franchise that never was. I won’t give its surprising levels away, but the chapter pokes fun at a gaming industry that’s constantly milking good ideas dry to fulfill a consumerist appetite that can never be appeased. It’s a delightfully absurd twist that makes the entire project snap into place.

Tomorrow Corporation has often chipped away at this idea in its work. Little Inferno, for instance, has players buying trinkets from a catalog and feeding them into a fireplace to get more money to buy more trinkets. It’s an endless cycle of consumption that distracts its participants as the outside world burns at the hands of greedy corporations. World of Goo 2 shares some of those themes, all while appraising its own legacy. Will anyone remember World of Goo if Tomorrow Corporation doesn’t keep making sequels well into the 2100s — even if the studio runs out of good ideas along the way?

Judging by World of Goo 2’s quiet launch, which garnered little fanfare despite the original’s once-great reputation, the sequel may have answered its own question.

Sticky situation

Though I love World of Goo 2’s satirical edge, actually playing through its stages can be frustrating. Its biggest roadblock is its messy control schemes. I played the Nintendo Switch version of the game, which features only touchscreen or motion-control options. I started with the latter, which initially seemed like a great way to play. There’s a tactile joy to grabbing a goo ball with my Joy-Con and physically placing it in a tower. That quickly became untenable, though, as my motion calibration kept drifting off-center every 30 seconds. While it can be recalibrated with the click of a button, it eventually wasn’t worth the frustration.

I wound up skipping a handful of stages that I knew how to solve, but didn’t feel like struggling through.

Touch controls (or mouse, if you’re on a PC) is a better option, but still imperfect. Some later levels have me trying to grab specific goo types as hundreds swarm around the screen. In one of its last levels, I needed to quickly grab some balloon goo balls to keep a long, fragile structure from dipping into lava. When I went to grab it, I instead kept picking up the regular black goo around it. Another great gimmick-turned-annoying has me flipping over a cube to change the direction of gravity. It’s a finicky task that’s only made more difficult by clumsy touch controls. I wound up skipping a handful of stages that I knew how to solve, but didn’t feel like struggling through for 20 minutes.

Small aggravations like this add up. There’s an undo button, but it’s presented as a tiny fly that buzzes around the screen, sometimes blending in with the background. Tapping it rewinds time in what feels like an unpredictable manner. Sometimes it undoes more work than I wanted, other times it barely goes back at all. Considering how easy it is to stumble into an accident due to the controls, having an unreliable backtrack is frustrating.

While it can be a mess, Tomorrow Corporation doesn’t skimp on its signature presentation (aside from some stilted, robotic voice acting that’s already raising some AI accusations). The orchestrated soundtrack is a highlight and the whole game looks like an interactive cartoon full of wobbly structures. A late game twist even sees the developer experimenting with some new art styles as it lampoons other genres. “Look what we could be doing if we didn’t have to pump out a sequel,” it screams.

Perhaps it’s a self-created problem; it’s not like many people were really begging for a World of Goo sequel. Even so, World of Goo 2 is the legacy-appraising send-off that the series deserves. Its inventive puzzling serves as a friendly reminder that the 2008 classic deserves its place in gaming history, even as a decade and a half of shiny new games pass it by. It’s still that foundational goo ball in an industry that keeps building higher and higher, even as the structure starts to sway. Without it, everything would fall apart.

World of Goo 2 was reviewed on the Nintendo Switch OLED.











Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleZoom Is Going After Google and Microsoft With AI-Driven Docs
Next Article Jane Goodall Thinks It’s Not Too Late to Save the World

Related Articles

5 reasons I keep coming back to Apple Reminders despite paying for premium task managers
News

5 reasons I keep coming back to Apple Reminders despite paying for premium task managers

12 July 2026
What happens when AI detectors fail? Researchers say we must be trained to spot fake AI faces
News

What happens when AI detectors fail? Researchers say we must be trained to spot fake AI faces

12 July 2026
Your next Spotify song could soon carry an AI warning label, and the music industry is all for it
News

Your next Spotify song could soon carry an AI warning label, and the music industry is all for it

12 July 2026
Volkswagen’s ID. Unyx 09 doesn’t look like any VW I’ve seen, and I want it in the US
News

Volkswagen’s ID. Unyx 09 doesn’t look like any VW I’ve seen, and I want it in the US

12 July 2026
Federal Investigators Say Certain DOGE Records Were Deleted
News

Federal Investigators Say Certain DOGE Records Were Deleted

12 July 2026
China’s answer to SpaceX’s reusable rockets literally catches boosters in a net
News

China’s answer to SpaceX’s reusable rockets literally catches boosters in a net

11 July 2026
Demo
Top Articles
5 laptops to buy instead of the M4 MacBook Pro

5 laptops to buy instead of the M4 MacBook Pro

17 November 2024133 Views
ChatGPT o1 vs. o1-mini vs. 4o: Which should you use?

ChatGPT o1 vs. o1-mini vs. 4o: Which should you use?

15 December 2024111 Views
Costco partners with Electric Era to bring back EV charging in the U.S.

Costco partners with Electric Era to bring back EV charging in the U.S.

28 October 2024100 Views

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest tech news and updates directly to your inbox.

Latest News
Ranking The Star Fox Series Gaming

Ranking The Star Fox Series

News Room12 July 2026
EA Sports UFC 6 Review – Complacency At The Top Gaming

EA Sports UFC 6 Review – Complacency At The Top

News Room12 July 2026
The Video Games You Should Play This Weekend – June 26, 2026 Gaming

The Video Games You Should Play This Weekend – June 26, 2026

News Room12 July 2026
Most Popular
The Spectacular Burnout of a Solar Panel Salesman

The Spectacular Burnout of a Solar Panel Salesman

13 January 2025137 Views
5 laptops to buy instead of the M4 MacBook Pro

5 laptops to buy instead of the M4 MacBook Pro

17 November 2024133 Views
ChatGPT o1 vs. o1-mini vs. 4o: Which should you use?

ChatGPT o1 vs. o1-mini vs. 4o: Which should you use?

15 December 2024111 Views
Our Picks
5 reasons I keep coming back to Apple Reminders despite paying for premium task managers

5 reasons I keep coming back to Apple Reminders despite paying for premium task managers

12 July 2026
Star Fox Remake, Steam Next Fest, And The Adventures Of Elliot | The Game Informer Show

Star Fox Remake, Steam Next Fest, And The Adventures Of Elliot | The Game Informer Show

12 July 2026
Ranking The Star Fox Series

Ranking The Star Fox Series

12 July 2026

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest tech news and updates directly to your inbox.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
© 2026 Best in Technology. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.