If only the beings along the way weren’t so demanding about fetching them this or that dead lord or this or that piece of an ancient artifact. I am Death, goddamnit. I do not do fetch quests.
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Set during a similar timeline as the first Darksiders game, the sequel plays to the cheap seats with melodramatic, operatic motives and plots, telling a tale of Corruption, doomed souls, and a pantheon of major and minor godlike beings culled from a variety of Western mythologies.
THQ’s Darskiders II is a sprawling epic that ranges across three major worlds: The Tree of Life, The Tree of Death, and Earth. Combine the mechanics of God of War, Prince of Persia, Diablo III with the visual style of Warhammer, World of Warcraft, and the Spawn comics, and you have Darksiders II. Death, the brother of War (the star of the first game), is out to restore humanity to Earth after the brothers allegedly triggered the Apocalypse just a bit too early.
Oops.
Death is sure that War is innocent of this charge and tears through into hordes of demons, skeletons, and monsters to prove it. Yet his travels keep taking him hither and yon on the way to his ultimate goal, the Tree of Life, which he hopes holds the exonerating answers he seeks.
WHAT YOU’LL LIKE
Lots of loot
Darskiders II has a dozens of chests to rip into. Death doesn’t just open them, either. He uses his magical door-opening disembodied arms to tear each and every chest asunder, loot exploding out in all directions. Most of this include gilt, or gold, which Death can use to upgrade weaponry, purchase combo moves and potions, and so on.
The user interface does a great job of letting players know if found loot is better or worse than currently equipped items. Death carries scythes for fast attacks that he can combine into whirling-dervish attack moves that just look fantastic on screen. He also carries a secondary weapon — either hugely damaging slow warhammers or battle axes or gauntlets with a little faster refresh. The armor includes boots, gauntlets, shoulder pads, and cloaks, each adding defense points to help Death stand just a few more hits and take just a little less damage. Half the fun here is in keeping Death’s equipment upgraded, his weapons causing the most damage as possible, and using other items to give you better and better stats.
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Fluid animations, heroic vistas, and distinctive design
Darksiders II is gorgeous. As players will be staring at it for 20 hours to 40 hours, easy, it’s great that the levels, characters, and combat animations are lush and beautiful. The color palette for Death is browns and shades of gray, with bright, shiny greens and purples for the magical effects he carries around on his wrists. The Maker’s realm is lush greens and browns, natural earth tones, while the Land of the Dead is all lifeless grays and browns. Skulls cover the doors in this second realm, with eyes that light up green as Death approaches.
Minuscule loading times
See? It totally is possible to create a game that feels huge without separate between-environment loading screens. On very few occasions, between larger environments, a loading icon comes up. And then it goes away, superfast. I was never waiting for the game to get back to the action, not once. However they did it, the developers deserve credit for this, because it really added to my enjoyment.
The small touches
You know those Continue screens in most games? They look like a slash screen, may include some camera panning around, focusing on a generic environment or prerendered character model, and are rather disconnected from the gameplay. In Darksiders II, the Continue screen looks very similar. Death stands there, full of menace, plasma swirling around his fists. Yes, he does look like he’s wearing his most current outfit. And, yes, that is the same environment you last left him. And, wow, when I hit the button, the camera pans around behind him, and there we are, in the very spot we left. It’s a subtle, well-designed way to get players back into the action as soon as possible.
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Fast travel is another well-implemented and subtle touch. You can easily access it from the map. It allowed me to play the way I always play games like this first time through: rushing through to the end, not stopping for the scenery along the way, aiming for the main quest goals like some sort of demented bulldog with a tug-of-war toy in its mouth.
The voice work and soundtrack
Michael Wincott (The Crow, Alien Ressurection) voices main character, Death. The voice is as gruff and gravelly as we’d all expect from the incarnation of Death, but Wincott plays him full of different tones and auditory colors, helping players connect with the main character. How do you make one of the scariest Horsemen of the Apocalypse sympathetic? Get a fantastic actor to play him.
Even the supporting characters and voices are extremely well done. The disembodied voices in the Gilded Arena are scary; pitched higher and raspier than any other voices, it gives them a quality of madness that feels especially creepy. I hear these voices in my nightmares.
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Jesper Kyd‘s (Assassin’s Creed, Borderlands, Hitman) soundtrack is as lush and gorgeous as the artwork, bringing to mind the better film and television soundtracks of late, such as Game of Thrones. I might even go so far as to recommend the soundtrack to folks who aren’t actually playing through the game – it’s that good.
The story
The story is full of operatic melodrama, brought to life with full comic-book gravitas. Everyone speaks as if the world depends on each of their sentences, and if using the internal logic of the game, it does. The timeline of the events in Darksiders II is apparently the same as the events in the first game, though with a different set of maps and story beats. Each new cutscene tells a little bit more of what’s going on, and the initial start up screens recap the story with an image and a voiceover, similarly to the Final Fantasy XIII recaps. While Darksiders II’s story is far more comprehensible than that of FFXIII, a quick reminder of where we’re at in the story is a nice touch.
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WHAT YOU WON’T LIKE
As the crow flies. Sort of
Death has a crow, Dust, to help him get from one place to another. You can ask the crow to show you the way to the next part of a map. Sometimes, Dust shows a severe lack of intelligence, choosing paths that force Death to backtrack even if he’s just a room or two away from where he wants to go. It’s as if each room or smaller area in each dungeon has a predestined path that Dust can fly, without any context to where Death just came from. I spent a lot of time using this potentially helpful pathfinding tool only to find myself wandering in big, crow-shaped circles.
Unintuitive platforms and puzzles
While many of the earlier dungeons are fairly easy to figure out, the difficulty ramps up fairly quickly once Death enters the Land of the Dead, and the game remains difficult from this point forward. When you reach this area, Death has two different dead lords following him who you can order off through gates to activate switches and pressure plates. These are placed in some seemingly arbitrary places, as are other essential items, like bomb-plants. Hiding sidequest items behind statues and underneath ledges is all very well and good, but key puzzle solutions should be placed more intuitively, or at least consistently within the environments.
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No joy in repetition
By about 20 hours in, a familiar fatigue set in. If I were not reviewing the game, I would have stopped playing. Part of it was the difficulty spike in solving the dungeon puzzles, but mostly it was just plain exhaustion. Plus, what’s with the number three? Need to awaken the Guardian? Find three heart stones. Need the cooperation of the King of Bones? Go find three dead lords. Want to convince one of these dead lords to come along with you? Find three lost souls. Finally make it to the realm of the Angels? Oh, yeah, go find the Rod of Arafel. And guess what you need to do that? Yeah. Three pieces. It’s so tiresome.
And do we really need Boss fights? Sure, figuring out the specifics of each boss monster’s attack pattern along with its weakness points is a challenge, but is this a gaming trope we need to keep forcing? All they really do is force players to die over and over until they figure out the right strategy and apply it successfully. That sounds a lot like school to me.
Thematic confusion
I’m good with suspending disbelief, of course. As a fan of comic books, video games, and science fiction, I’m usually able to just let go of my preconceived notions about the nature of reality and enjoy a good story. My son, however, really nailed it on the head for Darksiders II: Why do all these dead creatures — skeletons, wraiths, and mummies — all have it out for Death? If Death was truly the Master of his job description, wouldn’t the dead things sort of leave him alone?
Also, how is it that Death levels up? When he dies in a fight, you receive a “you’re dead” screen and the option to retry the battle. How does that fit with him actually being Death? It doesn’t. When Death falls from a platform into a pit of sharp sticks, his bodily form swirls and shimmers, and then the game places it back on or near the platform from whence he came. That makes sense. Dying in a fight with some skeletons armed with rusty swords? Not much sense, no. I’m not saying it’d be easy to figure out how to make a superpowerful demigod-like character like Death (or War, for that matter) fit into the common video gaming power-fantasy motifs, but I think it would be a better game if the developers had attempted to do so.
CONCLUSION
Darksiders II is in all respects a fantastic title. The issues I had with it are similar to issues I have with many big-budget games on the market, and they are a problem here. It is, though, mark of how much I enjoyed the game that I only rail against the problems within that I believe most high-end game franchises continue to struggle with, rather than poor camera or bad voice acting. This is a polished, well constructed gaming experience with few glaring errors.
At a good 20 hours to 40 hours for the main storyline, Darksiders II offers quite a lot of gaming for those concerned with spending a premium $60. Add another 20 hours-plus up of sidequests and gamers have plenty of bombastic, illustrated, aural meat to sink their teeth into. The middle section does tend to groan on a bit too long, though that may be more a factor of the tricky puzzle design than any actual storyline length. Overall, this is a title well worth your time, energy, and gaming dollar.
Score: 89/100
Darksiders II was released for the Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, and PC on August 14, 2012. The publisher provided GamesBeat with a copy of the PS3 version for the purpose of this review.