Lost Twins 2 opens pre-registration for iOS and Android
Lost Twins 2 is live for iOS and Android pre-registration, but Playdew still hasn’t locked a mobile date. Its calm, co-op puzzle design already has a proven launch on PC and consoles.

Lost Twins 2 has opened pre-registration on iOS and Android, but Playdew still has not set a mobile launch date. That makes this less of a countdown and more of a confidence test: does the game look ready enough to sign up for now? On the strength of what Playdew is showing, the answer is yes.
The pitch is unusually clean for mobile. Lost Twins 2 follows twin siblings Abi and Ben as they try to find each other through a puzzle-platformer built around reshaping the world itself. Instead of pressure-cooker design, Playdew is leaning into calm, logical problem-solving. The game has no enemies, no deaths, and no timer, which is exactly the kind of signal that tells you this is aimed at players who want to think, experiment, and keep moving without a fail-state hanging over every mistake.

That approach is also where the game feels most mobile-friendly. Moving tiles and platforms to create new paths gives Lost Twins 2 a tactile, one-more-room kind of rhythm that fits touchscreens well. Local co-op is part of the package too, so this is not just a solo brain teaser. It can also work as a shared puzzle session, with hidden paths, collectibles, and concept art unlocks giving completionists a reason to poke at every corner of the map. Playdew’s own description calls out “gorgeous, Miyazaki-inspired visuals,” and that handcrafted look matters here because it gives the game a premium feel before a mobile version has even arrived.
The mobile move is also not coming out of nowhere. Lost Twins 2 already launched globally on August 14, 2025, on Steam, PlayStation, and Xbox, with the release going live at 8:00 AM PT. Steam lists the game as supporting local co-op and shows a “Very Positive” rating based on 46 reviews. Playdew’s site also lists it on Steam, Xbox Series X|S, and Windows Store, with single-player and local co-op modes, which underlines that this is a real multiplatform release, not a thin announcement built around a store page.
That is why the pre-registration push feels credible. Lost Twins 2 does not read like a vague mobile teaser with a long runway ahead of it. It reads like a finished puzzle adventure making room for a second launch. If you want a low-stress, visually warm puzzler that trades combat and timers for clever world-shifting, this is worth getting on the list now, because the game already looks past the prototype stage and into the part where mobile is simply the next platform.
This article was produced by Prism’s automated news system from verified source data, official records, and press releases, then run through automated quality and moderation checks before publishing. The system is built and supervised by the people who set the standards it runs under. Read our full AI policy.
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