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Yes, I’m alone 2

Yes, I’m alone 2

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Yes, I’m alone 2
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You already went through the transformation by the time Yes, I’m alone 2 picks up — the first game’s good ending, where you accepted becoming one of them, is where this one starts, and the question now is what you do with the person you’ve become while Victor watches to see if you’ll actually follow through.

Picking Up After Yes, I’m alone 2’s Predecessor

This is confirmed as a direct continuation, not a soft reboot — it follows specifically from the good ending of the first “Yes, I’m alone,” where the protagonist chooses to go along with the change rather than resist it. Everything that happens in the sequel assumes that choice was already made, which is why the tone leans less on “will this happen to you” and more on “now that it has, what do you do.”

It is built as a fangame set inside the world of “No, I’m Not a Human,” using that game’s characters and premise while being entirely original in its art, writing, and music. The developer, who goes by Mourner, has been explicit that this is a fan project and not a substitute for or theft of the source material — the characters and setting are borrowed, everything else was made from scratch by one person.

Victor and Wireface

Victor, referred to as the Pale Man, is the figure whose deal set the transformation in motion, and much of the sequel is about how much control he still holds over what you become next. Wireface also returns from the source material, carrying over into a story that otherwise stands on its own once the transformation has already happened.

Nineteen Ways It Can End

The scale of the branching is the thing most people mention first: nineteen total endings, split into nine bad endings, seven good endings, two described as “brutal,” and one unmarked “???” ending that the game does not explain up front. That is down from an original plan of twenty-seven — the developer scaled back specifically to keep the file size manageable, which is a real trade-off for a one-person project built on this much hand-drawn art.

Players on itch.io have openly struggled to track down specific ones, with endings numbered around 12, 13, 19, and the “???” ending coming up repeatedly in the comments as the ones people can’t locate on their own. Mourner has acknowledged those questions without spelling out solutions in the replies, which keeps some of the nineteen endings functioning as genuine secrets rather than a checklist.

424 Drawings Behind Yes, I’m alone 2

The hand-drawn art is the other thing that comes up constantly in the comments, and the number behind it is concrete: 424 individual illustrations, all done by Mourner alone, alongside music built in Beepbox. For a single-person project running on Ren’Py, that volume of original art is unusual, and it shows in how consistently players single out the animation quality specifically rather than just praising “the art” in general.

A full playthrough runs about three hours, and the file itself is large as a result — close to 950MB per platform, covering Windows, macOS, and Linux. The content warning attached is for ages 16 and up, covering violence, death, blood, jump scares, and sudden camera shifts, which places this closer to the horror side of visual novel than the romance side, even with romantic threads running through some of the branch paths.

Bugs, a Translation, and What’s Still Rough

English and Spanish are both supported, and Russian was the single most requested addition in the comments. Mourner confirmed a Russian version was on the way with help from a community member, but also had to explain a bug where the translation files were present yet not displaying, leaving some players staring at invisible text. The workaround Mourner gave directly was to open the options menu blind and switch the language setting, which would force the text to render properly again.

There’s also talk, still framed as speculative by Mourner rather than confirmed, of a possible third entry told from Victor’s side of the transformation rather than the player’s. Nothing beyond that hint exists yet, but it fits the pattern of a project that keeps growing past its original scope, the same way the ending count and the art total both did.

Currently rated 4.9 out of 5 across 71 reviews on itch.io, Yes, I’m alone 2 has clearly found an audience willing to sit through all three hours and chase down all nineteen endings, brutal ones included.

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