You cannot pick any color combinations and you can only upgrade one piece of cosmetic on a hero without paying any real money. That has all changed with Dungeon Defenders II. In the first game you were able to pick different colors for your heroes and you were able to unlock costumes by beating certain levels and challenges. Not everything is an improvement from the first game and maybe some of these points are more opinion-based but I’ll let you be the judge of that. Normal mode provides enough challenge to keep things interesting and fun, especially when playing with others! I haven’t had to go into hard mode though quite yet. There is a hard mode but it doesn’t increase your loot or anything like that which is kind of a bummer but at least the increased challenge is there. I can’t quite recall how well the scaling worked in the first game but I know that this one is a bit more challenging.įrom harder bosses to increased levels of enemies depending on the level of your hero and other heroes from other players, there is a good challenge to be had with most levels.įor obvious reasons, the first few levels aren’t going to be extremely hard even when soloing. Scaling is important and it’s done pretty well in Dungeon Defenders II. No more sharing, everyone has their own loot! This is also true for pickups such as coins and gear. In the second one, the chests are client side meaning that everyone will have their own mana. In the first game, everyone shared the same chests so you had to make sure to keep it fair as far as getting mana from chests. Blue mana is for your heroes abilities and green mana is for your towers.īlue mana regenerates overtime and green mana you collect from chests and enemies. This wasn’t as much of the case in the first game.Ībilities and towers use separate types of mana this time around. You need to really know the angle and placement as the towers are complete game changers. This makes tower placement a lot more important than it was in the first game. That and the maps are a bit more complex as you move forward through the campaign. Maps are improved by adding in different traps that you can activate and it’s a bit easier to tell where enemies are going to be coming from and what not. The maps, how abilities/towers are built and the importance of tower placement are some of the mechanics that have been changed and, in my opinion, improved upon. They don’t seem like these big headed heroes, cartoonish heroes anymore. The characters for example are a lot “thinner” in comparison. In your journey, you'll visit ancient forests, massive castles, haunted temples, active volcanoes, and a surprisingly small number of dungeons for a game named Dungeon Defenders II.ĭungeons aren’t meant to be defended alone! Invite your friends to join you in Etheria for four-player online co-op.There are plenty of changes that have been made from the original Dungeon Defenders that I’m pretty happy about!Īlthough I didn’t mind the overall art style of the original game, they have heavily improved upon the graphics and animations in this one.įrom the characters, movement, the different levels and weapon graphics – you can tell that the developers really wanted to focus on improving the look and feel from the original. As much as you scrub, the smell never goes away. As you play, you'll find loot and Shards to equip and customize your heroes with. Leap into battle and get your hands dirty! Grab a sword, a bow or a laser shotgun to blast through hordes of enemies. A wide variety of defenses are at your disposal, and you'll need them all to protect the Eternia Crystals from the Old Ones' army. Build a wall of flamethrowers and watch the world burn, you sicko. Swap between your heroes on the fly to use all of their tools - even in combat!Ĭonstruct a deadly grid of laser beams. Each hero brings unique abilities and defenses to the battlefield. Wizards! Robots! Thieves! Recruit a cast of characters to join you on your quest to save Etheria. Etheria is under attack! Build mighty defenses to freeze, burn and disintegrate your foes - then grab a sword and jump into the action! Level up a team of heroes, deck them out in loot, and destroy the hordes by yourself or in four-player online co-op!
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