There’s no justification for this other than Bungie thinking they can get away with it and they most certainly will. When Forsaken launches in September, Destiny fans will have been waiting for about a year for the game to finally become what it should have been in the first place. If Forsaken turns out to be as good as it looks, then Bungie deserves to be rewarded for it. There’s no excuse for all the scumminess surrounding it, though, especially when there are similar games like Monster Hunter World, Warframe and Rainbow Six: Siege that are all enjoying massive success without dipping into any exploitative business practices.
In addition to the new dungeon, Bungie also upped the rewards on their punishingly difficult Grandmaster Nightfall Ordeals. Players who get to the end of these mega-challenge missions in Destiny 2 Super Enhancements 2 are guaranteed to earn Ascendant Shards, the most coveted currency in the game. Bungie has shown that they want to encourage players to challenge themselves and are finally handing out the loot to justify the eff
Before the shift to this platform expansion model, new content in Destiny 2 usually felt a bit disconnected from the “main” narrative of the story. Each of the different non-mainline expansions, including Curse of Osiris, Black Armory , etc., contained their own well-packaged story that was launched at the beginning of the season and then (sometimes) brought to a relative close near the end. These days, that approach has changed. Seasons are no longer unique stories, but instead more like chapters in a longer narrative. The conclusion of one season quite literally causes the events of the following sea
Guardian Games were the last event to receive its own Triumph seal, and it certainly isn’t an easy one. In fact, one could argue that due to the requirement to participate in Supremacy, the event’s trademark PVP game mode that pits classes against one another, it’s the toughest event-centric Triumph seal to acqu
Despite all the regression with the campaign and monetization and the rehashing of older content, Destiny 2 still looks quite good. The Moon is an atmospheric place to visit and traversing the caverns the Hive call home produces a sense of dread that other locations in the Destiny 2 experience can’t provide. Meanwhile, the short visits into the Black Garden are gorgeous thanks to all the colors and lush jungle mixed with Vex machinery. Destiny 2 may be two years old now, but it’s still looking good.
Destiny 2: Shadowkeep takes the idea of Forsaken’s Annual Pass and splits it up into different chunks. Year 3 of Destiny 2 is spread across four Seasons that players must purchase to enjoy Seasonal Activities, exclusive cosmetics and special Exotic quests. Each season will set you back $9.99, though the first season, Season of the Undying, is free for everyone who purchases Shadowkeep.
In the stream following the reveal of Forsaken, Bungie’s representatives took some time to do fans a “favor” and better explain what exactly will be included in the Annual Pass. Put simply, it will consist of new challenges, new gear, new lore, new challenges and new events. It all sounds good doesn’t it; as if they’ve finally found a way to keep new content coming outside the major expansions? Except that just about all of this is content that, even as recently as this past April, was all offered free of charge. To some this change might not seem like a big deal, their likely reasoning being that Bungie shouldn’t have to work for free. That’s true. They shouldn’t and they never have been. They’ve always been paid for it through the microtransactions offered through the Eververse cash shop. What’s more, acquiring funding for these “free” updates was and is the entire justification for having the Eververse in the first place .
While this approach to franchise expansion is a novel move for Halo and its developers at 343 Industries, it is not new for the industry. In fact, Bungie, the original creators of Halo, have moved towards this platform expansion model for Destiny 2 . In June, Bungie announced that Destiny 2 , already finishing up its third year since launch, still had at least three more years of new expansions on the
Everything you do in Destiny 2 earns progress towards the next tier, though the rewards don’t seem worth it. Asides from the occasional armor piece or weapon, the 100 tiers of rewards are mostly lackluster. Both Battle Passes contain too many modifiers, currencies, and other useless content meant to keep the grind going. Though earning tiers isn’t based off of time-played, progress in the Battle Passes still feels like a grind. As of publication, it’s not possible to buy tiers.
The 30th Anniversary DLC of Destiny 2 introduced the Vidmaster title, which features various triumphs and challenges related to the Dares of Eternity activity . There are a few somewhat challenging triumphs here, including finding and killing Xur’s Chosen during a run of Dares of Eternity, completing the activity on Legend difficulty (which is not matchmade), as well as completing the Grasp of Avarice dung