Once you get your ball onto the green, the game's unique putting mechanic kicks in. You're presented with a large targeting reticle that you can move around, though there's no way to tell where the ball would travel if you were to swing toward the target. Pressing the square button will reveal the projected path of the ball, though moving the target causes that path to disappear. You can adjust the target's position and check the ball's trajectory three times per stroke, and once you're ready to putt, the game goes back to the same analog swing and power meter as when you're on the fairway. Actual putting in real-world golf is an exercise in instinct and guesswork, and it's a nuanced challenge that has proven difficult to re-create in video games. Putting is usually either unreasonably punishing (as in Links 2004) or ridiculously easy (as in Tiger Woods PGA Tour 2005), but the system in place in Outlaw Golf 2 strikes a nice balance between the two.
One of the more unique features in Outlaw Golf 2 is the composure meter. Your golfer's composure is affected by your performance on the links. If you land the ball in the rough or find yourself out of bounds, your composure will degrade. But if you drive a really long shot or sink a birdie, your composure will improve. Your golfer's composure ultimately affects how far he or she will be able to drive the ball, though if you find yourself all the way in the red, all you need to do to eliminate this composure deficit is to beat the tar out of your caddie. Before you take a swing, you can pull up a menu and choose to administer a frustration-relieving beating on your caddie, which basically boils down to a simple, rhythm-based challenge. This succinctly represents the internal struggle that is happening within Outlaw Golf 2. The composure meter itself is a nice, organic way to introduce the human element to the game, but beating your caddie to increase your composure is a move designed for some shock and a cheap laugh.
The original Outlaw Golf was a decent-looking game, and Outlaw Golf 2 makes some good improvements to that game's look, though the graphical fidelity is still a little uneven. The character models look really sharp, and their animations are incredibly naturalistic, both when they're holding clubs and during the interludes in between holes. The courses aren't quite as easy to praise, as they tend to be covered in somewhat blurry, washed-out textures that are subject to occasional seaming and texture bending. The areas surrounding the courses feature some nice detail, which gives them a grounded feel. The game is also apparently incapable of making good-looking shrubs or trees, because they consistently look flat and extremely fake. Though the feature sets on both the Xbox and PlayStation 2 versions of Outlaw Golf 2 are basically identical, it's the presentation each puts on display that really sets it apart from the other. The PS2 version is more aliased, and the textures and special effects don't look quite as good. There are other small details found on the Xbox iteration of the game, such as the nicely rendered grass and the gallery of spectators, that are simply absent on the PlayStation 2.

Online play and a ton of game types for 20 bucks? How do you beat that?
Outlaw Volleyball, as well as the original Outlaw Golf, made rather embarrassing use of Steve Carell, who is probably best known as a correspondent on Comedy Central's The Daily Show. Outlaw Golf 2 replaces him with stand-up comic Dave Attell, who is also the headline star of Comedy Central's Insomniac with Dave Attell. If you're familiar with Attell's consistently crass, whiskey-soaked sense of humor, then it shouldn't be surprising to find that he is a far better fit for the overall tone of Outlaw Golf 2, and though the material he's reading isn't always especially clever, his delivery is consistently sardonic. Worse than some occasionally strained humor, though, is the way that there just isn't enough commentary from Attell, so you'll end up hearing bits repeat much too often. The PlayStation 2 also seems to have a bit of trouble streaming the game's audio on the fly, which results in lots of phrases that are punctuated by noticeable pauses. The music in Outlaw Golf 2 feels kind of bipolar in that it alternates between funky hip-hop instrumentals and straight-ahead modern rock tracks. It's all pretty good music, but it just doesn't mesh that well, though you can customize which songs actually play. If you don't find any of it to your liking, Xbox owners have the option to use a custom soundtrack as well.
Whether or not you think modern men's lifestyle magazines are entertaining and informative should serve as a suitable yardstick for determining how favorably you'll react to the overall attitude of Outlaw Golf 2. It is, undeniably, an integral aspect of the game. But even if the game's sensibilities don't appeal to you, the other positive qualities--like the $19.99 price tag, the online play, and the well-executed gameplay mechanics--may still make Outlaw Golf 2 an attractive package for you.
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Outlaw Golf 2 (PlayStation 2):
