Lost Records: Bloom & Rage Tape 2 is a magic-infused exploration of grief, girlhood, and rebellion

Girl meets otherworld

Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
(Image: © DON'T NOD)

TechRadar Verdict

Lost Records: Bloom and Rage Tape 2 meaningfully explores friendship, queer romance and tragedy. DON’T NOD’s compassionate writing style is consistently bolstered by stellar performances from its small but mighty cast. And, if you take the time to look, there’s detail in every nook and cranny of this inimitable 90s world. While the snappier runtime does mean the supporting characters don’t get as much screen time as they deserve, the heartwarming finale feels like a fitting end to this rebellious and often-brilliant bildungsroman.

Pros

  • +

    Striking visuals ensure each dioramic space is packed with world-building detail

  • +

    Clever and empathetic writing handles heavy topics with utmost care

  • +

    A tasteful smattering of original and licensed tracks gives rhythm to the world

Cons

  • -

    Occasional technical hiccups get in the way of gameplay

  • -

    A shorter runtime means some character arcs feel rushed

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The first tape of DON’T NOD’s latest narrative adventure, Lost Records: Bloom & Rage, ended on a particularly heart-rending cliffhanger. Kat, the beloved firecracker of the titular girl group, has been hiding an illness and isn’t likely to make it through the year. After two months of waiting, Tape 2 picks up almost immediately after this climactic information is revealed, with the once inseparable girl group now splintering as the weight of the real world starts to seep into their surreal summer.

Review information

Platform reviewed: PC
Available on:
PS5, Xbox Series X|S, PC via Steam
Release date:
April 16, 2025

Ever since I rolled credits on the first half of Lost Records, I’ve been anxious to unpack the remaining hours of this time-bending coming-of-age story, which highlights heady themes like rebellion, girlhood, and grief. Not just because I wasn’t ready for the story to end, but because DON’T NOD’s ambitious narrative had a lot of big questions to answer, and I wasn’t entirely sure how or if they would bring it home.

I was also keen to get back behind the lens of protagonist Swann’s video camera to record and relive more memories, which is by far the game’s most compelling mechanic.

Unfortunately, single-player game and follow-up, Lost Records: Bloom and Rage Tape 2, doesn’t fully investigate the most exciting motifs Lost Records laid up in the first half, and the addition of janky new modes of gameplay don’t play nice with the previously curated vibe. Still, even with Tape 2’s rough edges, Lost Records: Bloom and Rage tells an important story that celebrates the complexities of female friendship in a sincere and meaningful way.

The kids aren't alright

Lost Records: Bloom & Rage

(Image credit: DON'T NOD)

If Lost Records: Bloom & Rage Tape 1 concerns the slow burn of blossoming friendships, this second part is more about raging violently against the machine. The hazy palette that dominated Tape 1 has been swapped for a darker, more brooding set of hues that create a shrouding atmosphere.

The local watering hole is now adorned in chauvinistic graffiti, and Swann’s clutter-filled room is half empty and ready for her big move out of state. This tone shift feels wonderfully emblematic of the second tape’s narrative pivot – I felt the Summer slip away and a cold Autumn breeze roll in in its place.

As the girls struggle to negotiate their positions in the past, their adult counterparts wobble in the present, too. Unearthing their memories of Kat introduces a new tension in conversation that feels difficult to navigate from both a gameplay perspective and an emotional one.

Swann, Autumn, and Nora appear ready to thaw their frozen feelings, though how they choose to cope seems oppositional from one another, and I found myself enthralled by the complexity of their characters, even though I was constantly walking on eggshells when picking a conversational response.

Best bit

Lost Records: Bloom & Rage

(Image credit: DON'T NOD)

Across both tapes of Lost Records: Bloom & Rage, you work on a song with your gal pals to condemn Dylan’s antagonizing boyfriend Corey and the other close-minded folks of the town through the sonic lens of 90s punk. See You In Hell – a nostalgic earworm performed IRL by Montreal’s Nora Kelly Band – is revisited throughout the game and feels like an auditory timestamp that reflects the emotions of the protagonists as they journey towards Tape 2’s climactic finale.

However, it’s not just the mood that’s changed as the gameplay in Tape 2 has evolved in tow – with mediocre results. Sadly, Swann’s profound camcorder documentation projects take a back seat and are replaced with fetch quests, minor puzzles and a surprising bout of forced stealth, which all feel strangely out of step with a game that was previously story-first and better for it.

Searching an area for a screwdriver or using your wits to intuit the owner of a toothbrush felt like passable additions. On the other hand, sneaking around a house at night and dealing with janky sightlines was much less interesting.

These mechanical changes align with Swann’s deflated mood, but I persistently missed the nostalgic, game-defining act of whipping out my camera in search of collectable memories I could remix and watch back later.

There are still a handful of camcorder moments to encounter, they just don’t feel essential this time around, which is a real shame. I didn’t feel that exploring every nook and cranny would necessarily teach me anything new in Tape 2. It was as if I’d done my due diligence already with the first half, and these final hours were more about rewarding my previous attentiveness than giving me some fresh narrative meat to chew on.

The adults aren't talking

Lost Records: Bloom & Rage

(Image credit: DON'T NOD)

Even with the inclusion of new mechanics, Lost Records: Bloom & Rage Tape 2 has a significantly shorter runtime than Tape 1, which can make the pacing feel a bit uneven at times. In Tape 1, I had hours between pivotal points to roam and investigate the quirks and familial history of the supporting cast.

There isn’t the same amount of downtime in Tape 2, as you jump between plot points at an urgent pace. It makes sense in the broader context of the story, but it means that the most intriguing developments established in the first half are left unanswered when the credits roll.

In particular, I was left with more questions than answers when it came to Kat’s sister, Dylan, and her abusive boyfriend Corey. Despite efforts to give both of them personalities and depth in Tape 1, Tape 2 sees the duo reduced to strangely one-dimensional archetypes. I wasn’t looking for any kind of redemption arc, but I would have loved to investigate the nuances of their messy relationship in more detail.

Yet despite all my gripes, I was still in floods of tears when the curtains closed on this sensational story. Ultimately, the primary cast of Lost Records are just so tenderly written and easy to connect with – even when the framerate chugs or an annoying gameplay mechanic rears its head to stifle your fun. I could see pieces of myself in all four girls – as teens and adults – from their sisterhood to their shame, and even their awkward kisses.

Should you play Lost Records: Bloom and Rage Tape 2?

Play it if...

You want to play a game that will stick with you beyond the credits
If you thought Lost Records: Bloom & Rage Tape 1 was emotional, Tape 2 capitalizes on those intense story beats to deliver a moving finale you won’t soon forget.

You prefer cinematic games
Lost Records: Bloom & Rage Tape 2 is filled with thoughtfully choreographed scenes and shocking moments that propel the story towards its climactic end.

Don't play it if...

You prefer action-oriented games
Lost Records: Bloom & Rage Tape 2 flubs its attempts to fold in more action-oriented gameplay. The main purpose of this narrative adventure is just that… to embark on a story-driven journey propped up by memorable characters.

Accessibility

Lost Records: Bloom & Rage Tape 2 arrives as an update from Tape 1, and so the accessibility settings are essentially the same. From the settings menu, you can choose the interface text size (small, medium, and large) and toggle on and off subtitles. From this screen, you can also select the size of the subtitles (small, medium, large). Due to the heavy themes in Lost Records: Bloom & Rage, you’ll also have the choice to turn on trigger warnings.

These warnings include topics such as drugs, tobacco, and alcohol. On this screen, you can also tweak audio dynamic range, choosing between a narrow (little difference between loud and quiet moments, suitable for low-quality sound systems or noisy playspaces), Medium (moderate difference between loud and quiet moments, ideal for most speakers), and Wide (sizable difference between loud and quiet moments, ideal for high-quality sound systems or quiet playspaces).

From the pause menu, under controls, you can toggle on and off vibrations and how the camcorder behaves in the game. There are also options to reduce motion sickness, such as toggling off head bob, camcorder motion controls, and shifting the camcorder feel between regular, light, very light, and none. You can additionally invert cameras and movements and remap the entire keyboard from this menu.

Where visual effects are concerned, you can toggle on and off motion blur, camera smoothing, and camera shake. From the interface menu, you can also toggle on and off a speaker cue that provides a visual cue for who is talking, as well as toggle the persistent reticle in first and third person.

How I reviewed Lost Records: Bloom and Rage

I completed Lost Records: Bloom & Rage Tape 2’s story in around six hours on PC. In that time, I searched thoroughly through each environment and made conversational choices until the finale. I used an AOC 27-inch QHD VA 144Hz gaming monitor, a Logitech MX Master 3S mouse, and a Logitech G915 TKL gaming keyboard.

For sound, I used my external Creative Pebble V2 computer speakers and Audio Technica ATH-MX50X headphones plugged into a Scarlett 2i2 interface. My gaming PC is powered by an RTX 3080 graphics card, and my CPU is an AMD Ryzen 9 3950X.

First reviewed April 2025

Freelancer

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