General Overview and Tips
Lana lands on a clean ledge, one path jumps out, and it is easy to sprint straight into a drop because Mui was supposed to start the solve. That happens a lot in Planet of Lana II: Children of the Leaf. Before you move, scan the whole screen once. Check what Lana can reach, what Mui can trigger, and what changes after one of you acts.

For movement, think in chains, not single jumps. Lana has more agility here, including wall jumps and slides, so it helps to read the route backward from the safe landing. Pick where you want to end up, then trace the steps back to the setup. That makes jumps, slides, and quick turnarounds feel way cleaner. If a section keeps almost working, back off for a second, reset your angle, and try again with a fresh view. One small reposition can fix a whole string of near-misses.
Stealth is calmer than it looks at first. Let patrols finish a full loop before you commit, then move on the clean opening instead of panic-running at the first gap you see. If a sneaking section keeps falling apart, use the last failure as a clue. Where did the camera pull? Which enemy changed direction? What path or object did you ignore on the way in? For secrets and side nooks, do a quick left-right sweep whenever you enter a new screen, especially before drop-downs, climbs, or big story beats. The game usually gives you just enough to make you suspicious, but it will not always wave a flag at the extra path.

Tip: when a puzzle turns into soup, split the jobs. Ask what Lana must physically do and what Mui must trigger, then test those jobs one at a time. That one habit clears up a lot of early confusion and keeps one missed idea from snowballing into ten wasted minutes.
