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Mystery of the Old House: Hidden ObjectsSchoolboy Escape 2: Village
Schoolboy Escape 2: Village - Play Online
Ever played Granny or Hello Neighbor? This is basically that, but you're a kid stuck at home trying to sneak past your angry grandparents. Schoolboy Escape 2: Village is a first-person stealth horror game where your mission is simple: collect the right tools, avoid getting caught, and escape the house to meet your friends. It's all about hiding, sneaking, and solving simple puzzles while grandpa hunts you down through dimly lit hallways.
Key Features
- Village Environment: Explore both the old house interior and the backyard area, each filled with hiding spots and interactive objects.
- Stealth-Based Horror: Every creaky floorboard and rustle matters—get caught and you're toast.
- Item Collection Puzzles: Find screwdrivers, bottles, crowbars, and lightbulbs to unlock your way to freedom.
- No Save System: Each session resets completely, so every playthrough feels fresh (or frustrating, depending on your mood).
How to Play Schoolboy Escape 2: Village
The concept is straightforward—sneak out without getting busted—but execution takes patience and good timing.
Navigate and Collect Essential Items
You move with WASD on PC or the joystick on mobile, scanning every corner for tools. The inventory hotbar at the bottom shows what you're carrying—screwdrivers, crowbars, bottles. You need specific items to unlock doors or solve environmental puzzles. The hint button (a lightbulb icon) is there if you get stuck, though it costs you an ad watch.
Avoid the Angry Grandparents
Grandpa doesn't mess around. He patrols the house and yard, and if he spots you, he'll chase you down hard. You can crouch (press C on PC) to hide behind furniture or slip into closets. Listen for footsteps and watch his patrol pattern. Getting caught means restarting the entire session since nothing saves.
Solve Puzzles to Escape
Doors are locked, gates need specific tools, and you'll need to figure out where each item goes. Place the lightbulb here, use the crowbar there. The game won't hold your hand much—you're exploring an interactive house that rewards careful observation. Once you crack the final puzzle, you're out and reunited with your friends.
Who is Schoolboy Escape 2: Village for?
This one's aimed squarely at kids and young teens who love jump-scare horror games on YouTube. If you've watched Let's Players scream at Granny or Ice Scream, you'll feel right at home. It's not for hardcore stealth fans—the AI is pretty basic and the graphics are rough—but if you want a quick, low-stakes horror thrill on your phone during lunch break, it delivers that specific vibe. Parents: it's cartoony scary, not graphic.
The Gameplay Vibe
Honestly? It's janky but fun in short bursts. The visuals are low-budget Unity—flat lighting, stiff character models, and textures that look like they came from a 2010 asset pack. Grandpa's face is more goofy than genuinely terrifying, with a frozen angry expression that almost breaks the tension. The sound design does most of the heavy lifting: creaky floors, distant footsteps, and sudden chase music that'll make you panic-click the crouch button. It's not atmospheric horror—it's arcade horror. Play it with headphones for the full effect, but don't expect polish.
Technical Check: Saves & Performance
Here's the catch: the game doesn't save your progress at all. Quit mid-session and you're starting from scratch next time. It's designed for quick 10-15 minute runs, so treat it like an arcade game. Performance-wise, it's super lightweight—runs smooth even on older phones and low-spec laptops. The simple graphics mean no lag, which is critical when you're trying to hide from grandpa in real-time.
Quick Verdict: Pros & Cons
A decent time-killer if you're into the creepy neighbor escape formula, but it's clearly riding the coattails of bigger titles.
- ✅ Pro: Runs on anything—your ancient phone will handle it fine.
- ✅ Pro: Simple controls make it easy to jump in and play immediately.
- ❌ Con: No save system is brutal if you actually get invested in a run.
Controls
Responsive enough for what the game demands. Movement feels floaty but functional, and the mouse camera is smooth on PC.
- Desktop: WASD to move, mouse to look around, left-click to interact, P to pause, I for hints, C to crouch.
- Mobile: Virtual joystick on the left, swipe to rotate camera, on-screen buttons for crouching, pausing, and hints.
Release Date & Developer
Developed by CatGame Studio and released on March 5, 2025.

