- Publisher: Sega
- Release Date: Mar 4, 2025
- Also On: Nintendo Switch 2, PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X
- Critic score
- Publication
- By date
- Unscored
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Mar 11, 2025I loved every moment of this game, and didn't have a single issue throughout. There were no frame issues, the game was incredibly accessible and easy to dive into, and didn't have that overwhelming factor that a lot of new sandbox games do. It brings in moments of comedy to break up tense moments, and the campaign helps ease you in to the mechanics little by little.
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Mar 5, 2025Two Point Museum takes all the lessons from the previous games and builds on them to make a thoughtful and hugely entertaining contribution to the management sim genre.
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Feb 25, 2025Childhood dream has been very effectively transformed into digital reality in the game Two Point Museum. The game is delightful in both gameplay and graphics and offers hours of great museum management fun.
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Feb 25, 2025Two Point Museum isn’t just your run of the mill management sim, it’ll take your breath away with how much is on offer with its addicting gatcha expeditions and vast customisation options. Every Museum is a delight to play and if it's anything like its predecessors, I’m pumped for the sea of DLC to come. If you’re looking for a game to sink hundreds of hours into, then you can never go wrong with a Two Point game, but Two Point Museum may take the crown amongst its peers.
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Apr 8, 2025For the creativity involved and the fun it provides, Two Point Museum certainly deserves to be in the pantheon of the best simulators of all time, crowning the Two Point trilogy with what can be considered its most ambitious game to date. Inventive, relaxed and challenging, this is a title recommended both for those who are just getting to know the franchise and for those who have been following it since its inception, a few good years ago in a certain very crazy hospital.
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Mar 28, 2025Two Point Studios took the recipe of their previous games and improved upon it. And, while Two Point Museum is not a revolution in games of this genre, it is at the very least a big step forward. The game adds depth to its micromanagement systems without forgetting about the comfort and convenience for players, all the while offering bright, cheerful visuals and impressive gameplay.
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Mar 22, 2025Two Point Museum retains the classic Two Point magic while adding more to the mix. Each map has a distinct motif and mechanics, making it difficult to move to another without creating yet another exhibit.
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Edge MagazineMar 20, 2025A step forward over both previous entries, combining those elements with meticulous campaign craft and a gallery of inventive ideas. [Issue#409, p.116]
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Mar 4, 2025As a newcomer to the Two Point series, I was pleasantly surprised by how intuitive and accessible Two Point Museum is, but that's not to say there isn't still a decent challenge in trying to manage and maintain the different museum sites. Having since played both Two Point Hospital and Two Point Campus, I can confidently say that Museum is the strongest entry in the series so far. Everything Two Point Museum sets out to do, it achieves with flying colors. From the core gameplay loop to the specifics of Expeditions and arrangement, everything comes very naturally and effortlessly. I have already clocked up over 25 hours so far, and I can't imagine getting bored with this game any time soon.
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Mar 3, 2025Two Point Museum is everything you expect and love about a Two Point County game, wth classic characters from the franchise returning for a good history lesson. But Two Point Studios, the developers behind the series, fail to learn from the past and continue to skimp out on subtitles while still missing the mark on controller mapping.
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Feb 27, 2025Two Point Museum takes an already excellent series to new heights thanks to the incredible variety offered by the museums. Each challenge—bringing these institutions to a state of glory—feels unique in its own way while remaining interconnected through the progressive unlocking of rooms, objects, staff, and more, all influencing one another. The five museum locations in the story mode each present their own challenges, guiding players through the experience without ever making them feel lost. Management requires careful planning but never feels overwhelming. With the signature wacky humor of the series—along with the sharp sarcasm of an overworked receptionist—this third installment stands out for the sheer number of mechanics and dynamics to juggle. Between educating adults, keeping mischievous kids occupied, and preventing a caveman thawed from the ice from wreaking havoc, becoming a curator worthy of Two Point County is both an addictive and wildly entertaining experience.
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Feb 26, 2025I can’t think of a single other game that lets you manage museums, and it’s baffling it hasn’t been done before now. Two Point Museum clicks within minutes of taking control, and it only grows more captivating with time. It delicately strikes a balance between complex and approachable, and it’s genuinely hard to imagine how Two Point Studios can improve on its formula from here.
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Feb 26, 2025Whether in sandbox or campaign modes, Two Point Museum lets you dream up your perfect museum, and gives you the tools to realise your creative vision. While it does occasionally force you to pump the breaks on your ambitions, with a focus on careful placement and research over easy wins, this pacing makes the entire game a more thoughtful, deep experience. Take your time, smell the roses and dinosaur bones, and Two Point Museum will open your eyes to the possibilities of your imagination.
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Feb 26, 2025Two Point Museum is an addictive blend of creative building, curating, management challenges, and sharp British humor. It stumbles occasionally in pacing, but once you dive in, you’ll lose track of time—and maybe even reality.
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Feb 25, 2025Two Point Studios once again manages to strike a balance between fun, sophistication and accessibility: Two Point Museum is a time-consuming build and boasts humor, handling and versatility.
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Feb 25, 2025Two Point Museum is a big step forward for Two Point Studios, which intertwines sharp and interesting RPG features in the management mechanics, with expeditions, resource management and objectives to complete to unlock new locations. A work of great finesse that with the constant exploration of the map will end up creating a game within the game, increasing the proposed content and allowing us to increase the hours of fun beyond measure. The only unwelcome note is having imitated the lootboxes in the recovery of relics, but it is a sin that we can overlook.
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Feb 25, 2025Once again Two Point Studios have delivered a bright, fun, and likeable management sim that is simple to get into it, but deep enough to keep you invested – and I can’t wait to see what they do next.
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Feb 25, 2025Writing this review has only made me love the game more, because I’m sitting here reflecting on the lovely moments of achieving success through the loops of exploring and finding cool stuff to line the halls of my buildings. As far as I’m concerned, this is the best entry in the Two Point series and if you were already a fan of those, you’re going to adore this trip through history.
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Feb 25, 2025Two Point Museum is a rewarding, deep, challenging, and highly entertaining tycoon game that demonstrates Two Point Studios has really hit its groove with this third iteration of the idea. The variety of different exhibits to unlock and level up, the thrill of discovering new expedition maps, and the array of clever and easy-to-use management tools make designing and running a museum joyful and consistently rewarding. I've sunk more than 40 hours into it already and I could easily see doubling that without running out of stuff to do. Call the curator. They're really going to want to take a look at this.
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Feb 25, 2025With both Hospital and Campus, once I’d achieved maximum efficiency at each medical facility or school, there wasn’t much left to do, and I never felt compelled to revisit them. However, with Museum, I often still felt motivated by the idea of further completing each collection, or decorating each museum more to better showcase existing exhibits. Two Point Museum is arguably one of the most highly-anticipated management games of 2025, and through innovating with a whole new concept while keeping its core structure intact, it absolutely doesn’t disappoint.
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Feb 25, 2025Two Point Museum is, for me, the best amalgam of Two Point Studios' business management and mechanics yet. The road to five-star museums is paved with fun challenges and customization that will likely have empty spaces looking like your personal dream attraction hours in. Even when I reached one-star at Wailon Lodge, I was so proud of the haunted house maze of supernatural fascinations that I couldn’t help but stare at my work for a while before moving to the next thing. This game may have a few frustrations in waiting and free design, but it’s also full of warm moments to be proud of what you put together as the visitors enjoy your assembly, and that’s exactly what I want out of a Two Point game.
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Feb 25, 2025Two Point Museum is a fantastic addition to the Two Point management sim title list. It lives up to the studios' past games but never feels derivative. Everything about the game feels special, providing a blended experience that is accessible to new players at first before it begins to layer new systems into the game, building depth for the more seasoned management sim fan.
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Feb 25, 2025Two Point Museum is not surprising, but it is convincing all the same. The developers have been working on this series for many years now, and the results are visible, especially in a campaign that manages to keep players interested, avoiding the risk of tying us into a too rigid cycle of identical levels. The theme of museums is less entertaining than hospitals and university campuses, but otherwise this iteration of the franchise also enjoys a granite solidity with regards to the room and workforce management mechanics.
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Apr 20, 2025Two Point Museum is a success, it follows in the footsteps of the studio's two previous games. If only it weren't frustrating because of its expeditions! It's a great mechanic that would have been perfect if it hadn't required so much "farming". But you just have to zoom out and observe our beautiful museum, well decorated, filled with numerous and diverse works, with employees working where they should be and happy customers... And we congratulate ourselves on having worked hard, and having enjoyed it.
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Apr 15, 2025If you enjoyed Two Point Hospital and Two Point Campus, then Two Point Museum is a fantastic game you can grab without hesitation. If you haven’t tried this type of game before, it’s a great opportunity to start.
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Mar 20, 2025Full of deep systems with a wonderful sense of humour drizzled on top. Two Point Museum drags a little when our museums are big, but getting there is wonderfully entertaining.
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Feb 26, 2025As it is, this is a great, relaxing, and yes, very fun game. I love the look and the intuitive design. The addition of expeditions is a great idea that works. It’s an easy game to pick up and just start having fun from the first moment to the 50th hour. It might not be perfect but Two Point Museum is another example of why Two Point Studios is the standard for sim games.
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Feb 25, 2025Two Point Museum is another great game by Two Point Studios that you have to play.
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Feb 25, 2025Two Point Museum is the coolest, cosiest, and most evolved iteration of the formula to date, even if its more obtuse aspects prevented me from becoming a pro curator.
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Feb 26, 2025Two Point Museum proves that Two Point Studios has found a formula that is both replicable and refreshingly unique. By selecting a new theme for each installment while retaining the core gameplay, they manage to bring just enough new twists to keep things interesting, offering a steady but limited stream of delightful surprises.
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Feb 26, 2025A game like Two Point Museum is a very easy recommendation for those who like management games and enjoyed the last two titles in the series. Considering what the project has to offer in both campaign and sandbox modes, I would say that the price on PC and consoles is also very reasonable compared to other games of this type. However, it may be worth waiting for a sale if you are in doubt or have a tighter budget.
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Feb 25, 2025Two Point Museum is a fun management game, full of options and depth, yet very accessible and player-friendly. It challenges you to manage a museum from a humorous perspective, offering an absorbing and highly entertaining experience. Museum confirms the Two Point saga as one of the most important in the management genre in modern times.
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Feb 26, 2025Two Point Museum takes everything from the series and makes it better. It’s still lacking a bit in the management metrics side, but everything else is exceptional.
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Feb 25, 2025Two Point Museum is a worthy successor to the franchise, with the usual humor and great new game elements. If you've always wanted to explore and exhibit dinosaur bones or extraterrestrial artifacts, this is the game for you. If only you didn't forget the time so quickly while playing.
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Apr 10, 2025Two Point Museum feels somehow both cozy and anxiety-triggering all at once; from its graphics and storytelling to its assorted puns and fake ads, this is a deeply unserious game, in the best way. But there is SO MUCH to do, so many things to keep track of, to tweak, to… well, to manage. It's certainly more than Blathers ever asked of me in Animal Crossing. As the announcer drones, "If something looks familiar, you've probably been here before," so fans of Two Point Hospital and Campus should know what's coming. It's also a ton of fun, though, for folks who just love getting lost in museums and want to see what it might be like to put together their own gallery show.
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Mar 25, 2025Two Point Museum is presented as a fun and accessible proposal, with an extremely familiar gameplay loop and some novelties up its sleeve that make Two Point Studios' work a devourer of free time.
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Feb 26, 2025The Two Point series returns with a museum theme. Despite added complexity from research, exploration, and interlinked systems, it retains its signature casual charm, making it a great entry point for management sims. However, the cluttered UI struggles to keep up with the game's expanded depth.
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Feb 26, 2025Two Point Museum is a must-play for fans of business simulation strategy games.
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Feb 26, 2025Two Point Museum combines the Two Point series’ charm with museums to create a simulator experience you won’t forget. Building on a museum theme and making it your own is a true delight. There’s lots of flexibility and you can always challenge yourself to reach greater heights. Creating your dream museum will take lots of time and there is some randomness to it. But the elation of creating and supporting a museum is captured perfectly within this experience.
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Feb 25, 2025Two Point remains witty, fun and true to itself: players can spend hours building the museum of their dreams. While the various themed worlds are always good for a smile, the grind game runs out of steam at the end. The way we know it, the way we love it.
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Feb 25, 2025We could criticise Two Point Museum for not trying to innovate, but that's precisely the principle behind the studio's proposition: a game that's accessible to all, fun, quirky and terribly addictive.
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Feb 25, 2025This new opus from Two Point Studios is a very good title, and above all, we have the impression that it's even more complete than the previous games. It's diversified and offers a variety of experiences, some of which are mind-boggling. It's sure to win you over if you're a fan of management games, but be warned: it can be a bit tricky to get the hang of at first. On the other hand, Two Point Studios' sense of humor and graphic style are back, which is always a pleasure for those who appreciate the studio.
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Feb 25, 2025Two Point Museum succeeds in captivating players with its original setting, full of humor and creativity. Thanks to a management system that is both rich and accessible, engaging expeditions, and a wacky atmosphere, the game offers an experience that is as strategic as it is entertaining. Watching your museum grow, adapt to visitors' demands, and fill up with quirky artifacts is a real pleasure. However, a few small flaws slightly tarnish the experience, such as annoying bugs and a decoration system that feels less impactful than expected. Nothing game-breaking, but some adjustments could further enhance the experience. Despite these minor issues, Two Point Museum remains a delightful surprise for management game fans. With its engaging gameplay, constant humor, and extensive customization options, it promises countless hours of fun. If you enjoy building, optimizing, and laughing at the same time, this game definitely deserves your attention.
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Feb 25, 2025If you find the gameplay loop of the Two Point franchise repetitive, then this title won’t suddenly make you start seeing it from a different lens. However, fans of the genre will feel right at home with Two Point Museum, as it changes just enough of the core features to make it enjoyable and refreshing. Truthfully, Two Point Hospital is still my favourite entry, as you can fully grit your teeth into one stage before moving on to the next. But this is still a delightful experience, and if you’re on the hunt for your next business management title, then be sure to put Two Point Museum on your radar.
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Feb 25, 2025Two Point Museum is a great management sim that takes the Two Point game blueprint and tweaks it to another charming and whimsical setting. There's great strides to allow for more customisation and creativity, a revamped structure to make revisiting levels more rewarding, and great variety in the core disciplines, but there's also a few snags along the way and elements that could improved through updates and DLC.
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Feb 25, 2025Two Point Museum is another fine example of a simulation game done right. It's simple yet packed with complexities, fun yet challenging, silly but sensibly designed, and perhaps most importantly, intuitive and easy to pick-up and enjoy. The Two Point formula continues to stand out game-after-game, and while there will come a time, perhaps in the near future, where true innovation is required, at the moment this concept still works like a charm.
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Feb 25, 2025Two Point Museum is a fantastic addition to a cozy weekend or long-haul flight. The combination of wacky customer animations, tongue-in-cheek exhibits, and well-written narration brilliantly complements the approachable management systems, keeping me entertained as I focused on making my business a success.
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Feb 25, 2025Once you’ve gotten the hang of running a museum, there’s so much to keep you coming back to in Two Point Museum. Even after playing for a few weeks now, I still have more fish to breed, ghosts to accommodate, Places of Interest to explore, and cavemen to stop from messing up my donation stands. My work is far from over. Now that I’m old enough to appreciate this Interactive Display on how to curate a museum that’ll keep them coming back for more, I don’t foresee myself hanging up my name badge anytime soon.
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Feb 25, 2025Alongside this stuff you get all the silliness and cute little extras you could hope for. This is a game for zooming in close. A museum curator will be scanning an alien pod with a PKE device. A ghost will be idly checking out the furnishings. A thief will be absconding with a fossil, while a kid then hangs from part of the frame it was once displayed on. In the aquariums, faces press up against the tanks. People clamber on the bigger exhibits and try to climb into them. What's that clown doing? Why are all those people suddenly running?
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Feb 25, 2025Two Point Museum is more of the same we’ve come to expect from Two Point Studios, but its imaginative approach to heritage ensures plenty of museum magic. Boasting a broad thematic range, endless exploration, and more decorative options than you can shake a dinosaur’s femur at, you’ll end up being the one getting excavated after sinking countless hours of your life into this addictive management sim.
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Feb 25, 2025Fans of the Two Point series will already know that Two Point Museum is a silly but compelling simulation which is easy to learn but hides a surprising amount of depth and variety. The new expedition mode, despite feeling a tad lootboxy, nevertheless ensures that this isn't just Two Point Hospital or Campus with a new lick of paint, meaning while we'd heartily recommend it to newcomers, veterans who thoroughly rinsed its predecessors shouldn't worry about this just being more of the same.
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Feb 25, 2025Whether you are a fan of their previous games or you just want a light tycoon-style sim, it’s hard to go wrong with Two Point Museum.
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Feb 25, 2025Two Point Museum is so much more than just a grind to build the best possible museum, it also offers plenty of exciting features, a great deal of customization, and it's all complemented by a good sense of humor that adds an extra layer of depth to the game.
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Feb 25, 2025Two Point Museum delivers the familiar humor and accessible gameplay, with varied museum themes and a fun career mode. Expeditions add a nice twist, though the management system could use more depth. Still, an entertaining choice for fans of the series.
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Feb 25, 2025Two Point Campus is a robust, accessible and unique simulation game that SEGA and Two Point Studios can be proud of. Two Point Museum is definitely recommended for fans of accessible simulation/management games.
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Feb 25, 2025Fun museum construction with funny artifacts and creative ideas, which suffers from the repetitive, random-based expedition mechanic.
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Apr 8, 2025This entry in the Two Point series definitely represents a slight turn towards being (slightly) more serious and (slightly) more demanding – and while that may not be the worst thing in the world, it’s definitely not what I look to the series for, personally.
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Feb 25, 2025After hospitals and university campuses, the citizens of Two Point County now have museums where they can admire fossilized floppy disks, demonic mannequins, and the remains of Atlantis. The management sim created by Two Point Studios is far from a revolution and shares many similarities with its predecessors, including its unique sense of humor and numerous gameplay elements. Fortunately, the few new additions are also the most successful aspects—sending explorers to the far corners of the world to retrieve strange artifacts is both fun and rewarding, as is displaying and showcasing all the unearthed relics.
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Feb 25, 2025Two Point Museum inhabits the same space as the other entries in the series, confidently maintaining approachable levels of depth. Although its campaign comprises fewer stages, they're more involved. Managing staff, finances, and exhibits comes with a good amount of familiarity. Still, I always looked forward to creating the next cultural hellscape that only vaguely resembled an actual museum and still functioned. While expeditions get old much too soon, the six exhibit themes on show alongside the oddball humor of item descriptions and radio shows do the heavy lifting, succeeding to offer enough reasons to see the campaign through and dabble in the sandbox mode. Two Point Museum continues to capture that olden Bullfrog charm expertly, but the series is starting to feel like it's not far away from belonging in a museum.
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Feb 25, 2025A very solid, if not spectacular, entry to the Two Point franchise, and one charming enough to keep you engaged one museum at a time. But it seems Two Point Studios may have missed a trick by not capitalising on what could have been a stand-out mechanic.
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Mar 27, 2025Taking a position on this game has been very difficult, as on one hand I am an unapologetic day one fan of both prior Two Point games, and there is much in this newest entry's foundation that I do appreciate. However, the redoubled severity of the micromanagement required in order to play, in combination with the often-shoddy AI, makes playing a thoroughly unenjoyable experience. I admire the Two Point team's vision for what they likely intended this game to be, while also standing firm in my decision not to recommend it to players at this time. Take the time to instead go back and start a new run of Two Point Campus. It's well worth another go.
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| This publication has not posted a final review score yet. | |
| These unscored reviews do not factor into the Metascore calculation. | |
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May 8, 2025Two Point Museum continues the tradition of offering accessible and fun management games, but this time with a more multifaceted approach. Additionally, one of Museum’s most innovative aspects is the interconnection between museums in sandbox mode, allowing players to share discoveries across different locations. [Recommended]
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Feb 25, 2025I'm left impressed by Two Point Museum more than I actually enjoyed playing it. It's as thematically endearing as ever (sans the above), crammed with detail, and the new design customisation features are brilliant. But I also think it should have slammed the breaks on shoving in so many new, granular systems. It doesn't take long before you're pulled in too many directions and distracted from the stuff that's actually enjoyable. It makes the game feel sludgier and more calculated and tiresome than its novel and bright coating deserves.
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Feb 25, 2025Overall, I really like Two Point Museum, and the game falls somewhere between Campus and Hospital for me. Museum fixes the pacing problems that made Campus often feel like a slog, while not falling into the micromanagement trap of the late game portion of Hospital. At the same time, the game can still be tedious at times, and I do wish there were more levels. Not every part of the title clicks perfectly, but Two Point Museum is a fun, charming game that I absolutely recommend to lovers of management sims. [Recommended]
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