![]() This cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. These cookies ensure basic functionalities and security features of the website, anonymously. Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. It’s a brief experience with very little variety in puzzles or visuals but I found it enjoyable enough to play through and the Abyssal Armor looks pretty sweet, at the very least. If you’ve finished with the main game and deleted it to make space for newer titles then I can’t really recommend you rush back to it for this DLC. If you have the season pass or just need more Darksiders III in your life then Keepers of the Void is probably worth a few hours of your time. ![]() I struggle to think of many DLCs that have got it right this long after release. If it’s not offering a great stand alone experience then the early adopters, the people most likely to buy the DLC probably, don’t have a huge reason to play through it or will get little from it if they do. Obviously new weapons and armour are nice to get, along with all the materials you’ll find lying around as you progress through it, but unless you’re just starting the game now then you’ve probably finished everything and upgraded the weapons you already have, meaning the low level weapons you collect aren’t as good stats-wise. It was easy enough to play through in under three hours, but for £10 it may be a tough ask. The final boss was different (but still made of rocks) and a fun and challenging battle. There are five bosses and four of them look the same and have similar, although not exactly the same, attacks. If this was an area in the main game it’d be pretty forgettable except for the overuse of the same puzzle mechanic throughout. Sometimes the orbs you need are missing but in order to get the orb to place it in the slot you have to, you guessed it, move some other blocks.Ĭombined with the samey environment and enemies (they’re new but just made of rocks and pretty unremarkable) it does feel a little undercooked. Activate a block, change its element so you can glide off it/climb up it/roll along it, rinse and repeat. There aren’t any other types of puzzle throughout and once you’ve seen what you have to do the first time you’ll breeze through most of them without much trouble. Using the right combination of elements to work your way through the rooms will allow you to advance to the boss of that ‘wing’ which will grant you a new sub-weapon upon defeat.Īlthough the puzzles are enjoyable enough they are very one note. You aren’t pushing and pulling them around though, you’ll need to activate orbs using the correct element to change the position and nature of the blocks. The puzzles you face throughout the DLC are block puzzles. If like me you have a save file at the end of the game, or at least have all the powers, then you can play through it all in one go. Because of this you’ll need to have at least collected the Flame Hollow in order to start the DLC, leaving and coming back once you need a new power. There are four areas to the DLC, each focusing on one of the powers you collect in the main game – Fire, Storm, Force and Stasis. There isn’t a whole lot more to the story after that until the very end and then it’s very self contained, like a filler episode of your favourite anime. With the DLC installed upon talking to Vulgrim he will tell you that an ancient evil is interfering with the Serpent Holes and that he wants Fury to go to the Void and sort them out. Keepers of the Void introduces a puzzle heavy area of the game, providing new enemies, bosses, four new sub-weapons and the reward of a unique looking armour once completed, but is it worth coming back to after all this time? Just under eight months after the main game came out the second paid DLC has released for Darksiders III (read our original review here). I was at lvl 22, and there was really no reason to continue to play to lvl 30 as far as I could tell.Jin PS4 tagged abyssal armor / darksiders / dlc / filler episode / keepers of the void / puzzles / stone everywhere by Gareth If you do pick up too much and the game starts freezing, you can jump over to the Argul's Tomb DLC and sell stuff to the goat guy without passing a quicksave point.Īlso, the only thing left to do in the game was to beat the Crucible and get all of the fetch-quest stuff in order to max stats and get the Abyssal armor. It was a huge pain in the ass, but by then I had gotten gear that could not be topped by anything that dropped. I agree though I wouldn't say that it would be worth it if you had to pay any more than that.Īs to the 300K savefile limit glitch, I found that by the time you reach the end of the main campaign and the 3rd DLC pack (between "Argul's Tomb", "Abyssal Forge", and "Demon Lord Belial"), due to all of the non-droppable quest stuff that you acquire along the way, you just have to make sure you keep NOTHING extra in your inventory.
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