
It's up to the player whether they want to complete objectives using violence or peace, although combat is usually unavoidable. Paradise Lost offers players an open world to explore, with a few objectives to accomplish each day. In terms of narrative quality, Postal 2: Paradise Lost isn't exactly high-brow storytelling, but it's entertaining and offbeat in its own unique way.

If you played the original Postal 2, none of this will come as a surprise and is an expected part of the package. The story is often tongue-in-cheek and purposefully offensive, packed with off-color jokes and shocking content. Spread over the course of five days, you'll explore Paradise and the surrounding area, checking off objectives on your short errand list. Awakening over a decade later, the Postal Dude treks into the unrecognizable Paradise and begins to look for his dog. Not long after, due to his previously sustained head wound, the Postal Dude passes out behind the wheel, crashing and succumbing to a coma.


After seeing a cat trotting down the road, Champ runs off after it, forcing the Postal Dude to give chase. Paradise Lost takes picks up shortly after the events of Apocalypse Weekend, with the Postal Dude and his dog Champ narrowly escaping death from a nuclear explosion.
