One of the most striking things about Toussaint, the new area where Blood and Wine takes place, is the color pallet on display. Whereas the main game and Hearts of Stone both relied on a relatively muted, grittier set of colors, Toussaint is awash in deep blues and bright greens, vibrant purples and shining golds. Knights errant roam the land and the citizenry extol chivalric virtue. It looks like a much more “traditional” fantasy setting – whatever that means – which is something Geralt himself comments on when he first arrives in the duchy.
Gaming has given birth to some of the best DLCs ever made that enhance the base game significantly. Here are a few top recommendations.
While gamers usually take notice of the mainline missions, these 5 side quests deserve more widespread attention for how entertaining they are.
NoobFeed Editor Joshua Burt writes - It is now a mainstay of gaming that post a title's release, and DLC will accompany the game. Some of the most popular games of the last fifteen years have followed this practice. But there are some DLCs that are better than others. That stands on the shoulders of their base game, and in some cases… Surpass it. These are the 10 expansions that were better than the main game.
Damn, I feel stupid when years ago I played all the dlc for fallout 3 except the pitt. My younger ass looked at it and thought it was boring without trying I believe... Well good reason to fire up the old dusty ps3!
Solid list, I'd add inFamous: Festival of Blood, although it was a standalone download, it still felt like an inFamous 2 expansion.
Blood and Wine might be the best ever though.
I have beaten Bloodborne but though i have the DLC I never played through it. For now I want to wait and see if it gets a Bluepoint remake.
factual rating.