There are numerous rumblings and grumblings in the
scene these days regarding video game developers’ practices for releasing DLC
as some DLC seems more like key material from the base game released separately
in an attempt to earn more money. Regardless
of opinion, the days of buying a complete game in a cartridge are past us. But if there is anything the community does
agree on, it’s that The Witcher 3 did
DLC right. Releasing two massive
expansions, Hearts of Stone and Blood and Wine, each was reasonably
priced and offered players a tangential rather than imperative experience in
the Witcher world, all with a large amount of content delivered with the same
attention to detail and plot as the original game. The former at roughly 14 hours and the latter
at a whopping 28, they are longer, or at least the same length as a lot of
stand-alone games. It thus makes me glad
that Guerilla Games opted to follow CDProjekt Red’s lead when developing DLC
for Horizon: Zero Dawn.
The Frozen Wilds is everything the player who enjoyed H: ZD could hope for, and, perhaps more. A massive new section of the map is opened up, new machines are unveiled, new weapons are available, new characters appear, and a new thread of story is introduced—a thread that ties into the main storyline of H: ZD while offering something entirely new. Venturing into the snowy northeast, Aloy encounters a Banuk tribe dealing with daemonized machines. The tribe tearing itself apart attempting to deal with the threat, Aloy becomes the key to unraveling the mystery and putting it to rest.
The Frozen Wilds is everything the player who enjoyed H: ZD could hope for, and, perhaps more. A massive new section of the map is opened up, new machines are unveiled, new weapons are available, new characters appear, and a new thread of story is introduced—a thread that ties into the main storyline of H: ZD while offering something entirely new. Venturing into the snowy northeast, Aloy encounters a Banuk tribe dealing with daemonized machines. The tribe tearing itself apart attempting to deal with the threat, Aloy becomes the key to unraveling the mystery and putting it to rest.