Mime And Dash 2 -
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.
Are you ready to get silly? Have you played the original? Are you Team Mime or Team Dash? Let us know in the comments below. (And no, you cannot play solo. Don’t even ask.) Mime And Dash 2
It was pure, unadulterated couch co-op chaos. The other player controls , a speedster who
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. Have you played the original
Dash can now leave a single “time echo” behind. Press a button, and a ghost of your previous run appears for three seconds. This is great for solving complex timing puzzles… until you realize the echo keeps walking into the mime’s invisible furniture. Watching your past self trip over a chair that doesn’t exist is the peak of this franchise.
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.
Now, after what feels like an eternity of silence, the devs have finally ripped the curtain off . I got my hands on the early build last weekend, and let me tell you—they’ve doubled down on the absurdity. The Premise (Refresher) For the uninitiated: Mime and Dash is a physics-based puzzle platformer with a twist you won’t find anywhere else. One player controls Mime , who cannot jump, attack, or touch most objects. Instead, Mime uses gesture-based abilities (pulling ropes, climbing invisible stairs, building invisible boxes) to manipulate the environment.
