Clone or neighbour? 2
Clone or neighbour? 2 - Play Online
Ever played Papers, Please and thought "I need more paranoia in my life"? Welcome to your new nightmare job as a building janitor where everyone who knocks might be a monster wearing someone's face. Your goal is simple: check documents, spot the fakes, and don't let a single clone slip past your desk for 7 straight days. This is a brutally addictive spot-the-difference game wrapped in agility and attention-testing mechanics that'll have you second-guessing every smile.
Key Features
- 7 Days of Survival: Progress through increasingly difficult shifts where the clones get smarter and the details get nastier.
- Phone Mechanic: Call residents to verify their identity or summon KIC officers when things go sideways—adds real pressure to every decision.
- Achievement System: Unlock unique challenges that track your performance as the world's most paranoid janitor.
- Leaderboard Ranking: Compare your mistake count against other players and prove you've got the sharpest eyes in the building.
How to Play Clone or neighbour? 2
Getting started is dead simple, but by Day 3 you'll be sweating over every eyebrow that looks slightly off.
Inspect Every Visitor Like Your Job Depends On It
You sit at your desk while residents show up at the window. Click on their ID card to examine the photo and personal details. Compare that face to the person standing in front of you. Does the hair match? Is that mole in the right spot? Check their ID number and phone against the master resident list on your desk. One wrong detail and you've got a clone trying to sweet-talk their way inside.
Use Your Phone When Doubt Creeps In
This is where the game gets tense. If something feels off but you can't pinpoint it, you can pick up the phone and call the resident's listed number to confirm. Real people answer. Clones don't. You can also call KIC officers to haul away suspicious visitors. But here's the catch: wrong calls waste time, and the line of people waiting doesn't stop. Every second counts when you're on a timer.
Survive Increasingly Devious Mutations
The clones evolve. Early shifts are easy—maybe a nose is slightly wrong or the ID photo is flipped. By Day 5, you're hunting for microscopic document inconsistencies and subtle facial mutations that'll make you feel like you're going insane. Miss too many and you're fired. Let in a dangerous clone and people die. The pressure ramps up fast, and the only way forward is to sharpen your attention to obsessive levels.
Who is Clone or neighbour? 2 for?
This is for players who loved That's Not My Neighbor or Papers, Please and want more paranoia fuel. It's perfect for detail-obsessed puzzle fans who get a weird satisfaction from catching liars. Not great for young kids—the clone concept and constant tension might be too much. If you panic under time pressure or hate losing because you missed one tiny detail, this will frustrate you. But if you're the type who zooms in on every pixel looking for secrets, you'll be hooked for hours.
The Gameplay Vibe
It feels like a slow-burn thriller where every knock at the window spikes your anxiety. The art style is rough around the edges—hand-drawn sprites with basic shading and that indie-sketchy look that screams "budget production." The UI is cluttered on purpose, mimicking the messy desk of an overworked janitor. There's no fancy music, just ambient tension and the occasional phone ring that makes you jump. It's not pretty, but it nails the paranoid atmosphere. You'll catch yourself leaning closer to the screen, squinting at a document like your real life depends on it.
Technical Check: Saves & Performance
The game auto-saves your progress in your browser cache after each day, so you can close the tab and pick up where you left off. Just don't clear your browsing data or you're starting from Day 1 again. Performance-wise, this runs smooth even on older machines—the simple 2D art and basic logic checks mean you don't need a gaming rig. Mobile works fine too, though the tiny details are harder to spot on smaller screens. If you've got a tablet, that's the sweet spot.
Quick Verdict: Pros & Cons
A solid time-killer that'll test your observation skills and make you paranoid about every face you see.
- ✅ Pro: The phone mechanic adds real strategic depth—do you trust your gut or waste time calling?
- ✅ Pro: Difficulty curve is brutal but fair—you genuinely get better at spotting fakes as you play.
- ❌ Con: It's an obvious clone of That's Not My Neighbor, right down to the window layout and folder system. Zero originality points.
Controls
Simple point-and-click that responds instantly—no input lag to blame when you screw up.
- Desktop: Mouse to click documents, folders, phone buttons, and approval/rejection stamps.
- Mobile: Tap to interact with all desk elements. Pinch to zoom on documents if you need to scrutinize details.
Release Date & Developer
Developed by Bulatov and released on January 16, 2025. It's a sequel that builds on the first game's formula with tougher mechanics and more ways to verify (or doom) your visitors.




