The same goes for unsolvable puzzles, ridiculously impossible objectives such as “blow up the ocean” and more that change constantly as you play. This dynamic continues as indestructible level 100 enemies spawn, raining all kinds of hell on you, that is until someone like Lillith tells Tina to knock it off and it changes to something more reasonable, bringing you back to life in the process. You enter the game world as it is full of sun and rainbows, that is deemed to boring, so the level changes before your eyes to something far more sinister. Yet this one is far more dynamic than ever before, mostly due to the erratic nature of Tiny Tina and her method of telling a story. The world is huge, easily the biggest in terms of real estate for a Borderlands DLC and that is really saying something given the scale of previous expansions. So your playing as normal, but the whole thing is narrated by the other four with extra characters from the Borderlands universe dropping by to take the rolls of other characters within the board game known as Bunkers And Badasses… confused? You should be! Said to be the biggest and most diverse expansion so far in the Borderlands series, Tiny Tina’s new DLC is like nothing that has gone before it, a crazy parody of a game within a game that is set to shake up the games usual mechanics in more ways than one. As you may already know, Tiny Tina is a crazy thirteen year old explosives expert and this DLC is effectively her take on the nerdy culture surrounding titles like Dungeons and Dragons, so expect it to be somewhat skewed from the blatantly ripped off source material, all ripped off in good spirit of course.Įverything has been given a little tweak in way or another, for starters your actually playing as Brick, Lillith, Mordecai and Tiny Tina, who are playing a board game which features the characters your actually controlling. I’m rapidly catching up on that game time with Borderlands 2 and that’s thanks to even more expansive DLC than ever before and now Tiny Tina’s Assault on Dragon Keep is set to keep that flame burning. Personally I’ve already put in over 300 hours of co-op time on the original Borderlands, which was a big game to start with, but it really pushed the boat out in terms of value with some of the most expansive DLC I’ve ever seen. That’s not to say that there aren’t other great co-op titles out there but Borderlands 2 is certainly one of the best ever made. Borderlands 2 is easily one of my all time favourite games and it offers one of the most complete and engrossing multiplayer experiences available on current generation consoles.
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