GT:
While Dragon Age: Inquisition’s latest DLC “The Descent” is full of content, new equipment, and more time with the wonderful members of its titular organization, whether the add-on is worth your time and money is largely dependent on how invested you are in a certain aspect of the series’ expansive universe.
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The Dragon Age: Inquisition Game of the Year Edition hits in October, and will include every DLC and add-on ever released for the game.
My biggest disappointment of last year yet not a bad game. Just don't try to play it after you played Witcher 3...it's problems will become way too obvious.
I loved this but all I need is that Trespasser DLC so I'll opt to just get that especially since I just got the main game a couple months ago.
Gamespot:
One thing that everyone can agree upon when it comes to Dragon Age: Inquisition is that the game is big. Like, crazy big. The Hinterlands alone is approximately the size of North Dakota. So, when The Descent DLC came along and promised to scale things down to a dungeon crawl, you had to wonder how it was going to play out. I figured it was going to go one of two ways. I assumed the adventure would be either a nice change of pace via an old-school D&D-flavoured romp through underground caverns, or a mundane corridor creep, making the fantastic original game mundane and predictable. But I clearly underestimated BioWare, as the developer covered all the bases here and created an add-on that offers both some interesting new settings and an occasionally monotonous trudge through caves.