Hyperius in the Captain Scarlett DLC is annoying and only drops around 6-10 “Seraph Crystals”. I have to say, I’m not liking how they’re introducing DLC-specific currencies you you can only get in small amounts by completing challenges. But whether that’s a product of the additional content itself or simply a matter of the base game being so darn fun that all I really need is a proper excuse to revisit it is something I can’t quite put my finger on. That’s not to say that Mr Torgue’s Campaign of Carnage wasn’t fun. It felt more like someone gave me a hitlist and I assassinated my way through it. That there are other fighters out there apparently attempting to win the belt same as you. So you’re meant to believe that this is some sort of championship. She and Mr Torgue make allusions to other fighters vying for the badass title to open the vault for all its shiny loot. Mad Moxxi officially becomes your “sponsor” during this tournament. Then, after you’ve defeated each individual up the badass ladder by tracking them down across the Badass Crater, you’re back in the arena, fighting for the last win. You start off in an arena, fighting off waves of enemies and proving yourself worthy enough to enter the ranks of badassery. Even the main mission in Mr Torgue’s Campaign of Carnage is a fairly fast adventure, something I killed in about four hours. There aren’t a ton of side quests to plough through. This isn’t like Captain Scarlett and Her Pirate’s Booty, the last campaign DLC that graced Gearbox’s FPS/RPG sequel. “‘What are you buying on Amazon, Tina?’ ‘A f**king motorbike. ![]() Then maybe she’d stop saying I cuss too much. “I should really introduce my mum to Mr Torgue.Memorable moments are few and far between.I don’t get to ride that sweet motorbike?!.What I played: roughly 4 hours to finish the main campaign, and about an hour or so of side quests. It’s an excuse to play more Borderlands 2. They’re nowhere near as beautiful or expansive as the last campaign add-on we got for Borderlands 2.īorderlands 2: Mr Torgue’s Campaign of Carnage ![]() It’s neat, but there really isn’t a lot to dig up in these new areas. Others still are hazardous walks through lava-laden hideouts. Others are dark, up and downhill paths around buildings, giving the impression of an elaborate city (which would be awesome, and I would love to see this idea fully realised in future DLCs). They’re all centred around the large, gladiatorial arena. ![]() There’s an entire new area for you to explore while bloodily making your way through the ranks of badasses. Which means, of course, that you’ll be introduced to several new characters, each equipped to fight you in their very particular style, whether that’s atop a buzzard or on a road bike. Have you ever played the Wii’s No More Heroes? Where the protagonist faces off against the next rank of assassins to become the number one assassin (and I suppose the only one even alive)? The plot in Mr Torgue’s Campaign of Carnage is precisely about that kind of competitive killing. Still with me? Mr Torgue’s Campaign of Carnage is all about proving you’re the baddest dude or dudette in Pandora, because only the baddliest of baddasses will be allowed access to the vault that requires the blood of a coward to be opened. It’s also a set of questlines in a campaign mission to become the biggest, baddest badass of the Badass Crater of Badassery. The newest Borderlands 2 DLC is an arena-based battle.
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