Review jared_c 4/5 · Jan 27, 2026
An Underrated Gem
4.5/5
Citizen Sleeper 2 is a standalone sequel that's also developed by a single developer. The game is a CRPG taking place in space where you play as a "sleeper" which is a human mind/conscience housed within a robotic body. Your main objective is to free yourself from a criminal entity that seems to constantly be there, no matter where …
4.5/5
Citizen Sleeper 2 is a standalone sequel that's also developed by a single developer. The game is a CRPG taking place in space where you play as a "sleeper" which is a human mind/conscience housed within a robotic body. Your main objective is to free yourself from a criminal entity that seems to constantly be there, no matter where you flee within space. The story has both some light hearted missions where you are trying to find who or what is lurking on your ship stealing your food supplies, to very touching moments where a character overcomes a tragic backstory to keep pushing on. The writing within this game is fantastic and feels like one of the best interactive stories in the media in a long time.
Gameplay consists of taking on missions, contracts, and other various tasks with a set of randomly decided die that you are given at the start of each in game day (cycle). These determine your success or failure rate for all tasks you do in that day. You are given the danger levels of any negative consequences prior to inserting the die (Safe, Risky, Dangerous) then given the success rate of what that roll will be. Higher number die equates to higher chances of success. What this (and the first game) does so well is an unsuccessful roll doesn't always mean failure. You'll take on negative conditions, but even "failing" a mission or task in the game doesn't mean game over. The game will adapt to what happens and open up other avenues you may need to pursue for success. This adds a unique level of stress and need for adapting to the outcomes. There is the obvious main story quest line to follow, but you'll also discover a large amount of side quests. These will often grant you additional supplies, experience points, as well as unlocking additional crew members to bring along on your ship and with you on future missions.
My only minor complaint is the tutorial here is not very good. Even with playing the first game and understanding everything there, the second entry introduces a few new mechanics that I'm still not sure I ever fully understood by the end of the game. I would know how to react to situations that arise, but never fully figured out WHY they happened.
I was able to finish this game just within a few days prior to it leaving Xbox GamePass, but just like the first game would really encourage everyone to pay for this game on whatever the platform of their choosing to support this developer. It's a shame this game is not as talked about as it should, as it's a marvel from front to back!