High On Life 2 players seeking the Columbo In Space trophy must determine who killed Larry Pinkstock during the Murder Mystery Party by gathering every piece of evidence and naming the correct suspect.
Insider Gaming's guide by Andrew Highton reports that the murderer is O.B. Oberon, the opera star who wears a rosy perfume, and that players must collect 13 specific clues scattered around the party room to support the accusation.
The guide lists the key items and their locations, including a photo on the cake table, an inhaler in the cake, a hidden portrait under a knocked-over chair, a letter behind a bookcase, a spilled milk carton near the locked door, and a newspaper clipping nearby.
Additional evidence named includes divorce papers on a bookcase, a gold shooting trophy on display behind Admiral Sessions, a check behind O.B. Oberon at the bar, Sessions' military service record behind that bar, urine on Pinkstock's body, Edeline Moss's medical card in a chair, and a detention slip behind the central evidence table.
Once all 13 pieces are collected, Insider Gaming says players should exhaust conversations with Admiral Sessions, O.B. Oberon, Richard Twelfth the Eighth and Edeline Moss, then return to the evidence table and choose O.B. Oberon as the suspect.
The guide specifies selecting the accusation that Pinkstock was responsible for Oberon's brother's death, then citing the perfume, the shooting competition trophy, and that no one else could have fired the shot to complete the interrogation and earn the Columbo In Space trophy.
Platform Strategy Side Missions And Early Humor
Squanch Games chief executive Mike Fridley told TechRadar Gaming that PlayStation remains the studio's lead platform and that releasing High On Life 2 simultaneously on PlayStation and Xbox was an easy business decision based on sales figures from the first game.
Fridley discussed Xbox Game Pass as part of the release plan, noting Game Pass exposure can help establish a franchise even if it might affect direct sales, and he said Steam follows PlayStation closely for unit sales.
A separate report on in‑game side content describes a red button encounter in Circuit Arcadia where pressing the button yields 500 pesos and a brief scene, with no lasting deaths reported, making the button an early source of quick currency.
Another review noted the game's opening contains an adult joke referencing Jeffrey Epstein within the first five minutes, and it connected that gag to ongoing public attention around related files and congressional review, noting the reference remains timely in coverage.
