Side Missions are the sidequests of Gravity Rush 2. These missions offer the player a chance to increase Kat's power level, meet new characters, and obtain collectibles.
Missions
Banga Settlement
- Dream Doll, Angel Doll
- Fly Me to the Storm
Jirga Para Lhao
- The Machineries of Joy
- Oh, Sweet Little Lady
- Something This Way Flies
- If I Had Just One Wish
- The Spoils of War
- Diabolically Yours
- Shadows on Shadows
- Dream of the Sky
- Prodigal Son
- An Author's Discreet Charm
- Dream of the Sky II
- Together, So Strange
- Finding You
- An Author's Discreet Charm II
- Something This Way Flies II
- The Wages of Fear
- Forgetful Bodyguard
- Shifter's Choice
- Things I Like, Things I Hate
- I Have a Rendezvous with You
- Bridge to Tomorrow
- Dream of the Sky III
- Dangerous Delivery
Hekseville
- Anchors Aweigh
- A Legend is Born
- An Angel Named Double-Cross
- Hands Up, Hands Out
- One Day This Crush Will End
- Come One, Come All
- A House in the Blue Sky
- Training Day
- Training Day II
- Forbidden Games
- Find the Idol
- The Grand Illusion
- Anchors Aweigh II
- Thus Spoke the Adventurer
- Do What You Will
- A Legend is Born II
- Wandering Artistry
- Spirit of a Man
- Forbidden Cargo
- The New World
- A Game of Gravity
- Find the Idol II
- Flow My Tears, the Man Said
- Going to Town
Trivia
- Several of the missions' titles may be allusions to other works of fiction or entertainment.
- "Fly Me to the Storm" is likely to be a play on "Fly Me to the Moon," a well-known jazz standard and love song popularized by Frank Sinatra.
- "The Machineries of Joy" takes its title from a 1964 collection of short stories by science fiction author Ray Bradbury.
- "Something This Way Flies" may be an oblique reference to "something wicked this way comes," a line from Shakespeare's Macbeth and the title of another work by Ray Bradbury.
- "The Wages of Fear" is the name of a well-known 1953 French-Italian drama film.
- "Flow My Tears, the Man Said" is a possible reference to Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said, a 1974 science fiction novel by author Philip K. Dick, which tells the story of a singer and TV star who awakens in a world where he has never existed.
- "Training Day" is a reference to the 2001 crime movie of the same name.