What Episode 2 does exceptionally well is transform a simple zombie premise into a meditation on identity, community, and the horror of losing your self. By the time the credits roll on "The Garden of Forking Paths," you will no longer ask, "How do I survive the island?" Instead, you will ask: "If paradise is eating you from the inside out, do you really want to leave?"

Episode 2 opens on this exact note of paranoia and uncertainty. The second episode, subtitled "The Garden of Forking Paths" (a clear nod to Borges), wastes no time in dismantling any remaining sense of safety. Kaito and Yuki take refuge in an abandoned coastal lighthouse, but Yuki’s condition worsens. She begins sleepwalking and whispering ancient incantations in a language Kaito does not recognize. For the first time, the game introduces a trust meter —a new mechanic in Episode 2—forcing players to decide between medicating Yuki (which risks side effects) or listening to her feverish ramblings (which reveals lore but accelerates her transformation).

praised the moral ambiguity, the haunting Memory Echo sequences, and the bold decision to make the protagonist increasingly unreliable. IGN Japan called it “a sophomore chapter that surpasses its predecessor in psychological depth,” while RPGamer highlighted the trust meter as “an ingenious way to merge narrative and mechanics.”