Dying Light 2 Stay Human

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Dying Light 2 Stay Human
Dying Light 2 cover art.jpg
Developer(s)Techland
Publisher(s)Techland
Director(s)
  • Adrian Ciszewski
  • Marc Albinet
Producer(s)
  • Paweł Marchewka
  • Eugen Harton
  • Adrian Sikora
Designer(s)Tymon Smektała
Programmer(s)Grzegorz Świstowski
Artist(s)
  • Katarzyna Tarnacka-Polito
  • Eric Cochonneau
  • Paweł Selinger
Writer(s)Piotr Szymanek
Composer(s)Olivier Deriviere
Platform(s)
Release
  • PC, PS4, PS5, XONE, XSXS
  • February 4, 2022
  • Switch
  • Q2 2022
Genre(s)Action role-playing, survival horror
Mode(s)Single-player, multiplayer

Dying Light 2 Stay Human is a 2022 action role-playing game developed and published by Techland. The sequel to Dying Light (2015), the game was released on February 4, 2022 for Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Xbox One, and Xbox Series X/S. A Nintendo Switch version for the cloud is currently in development.[1]

Gameplay[]

Dying Light 2 Stay Human is an action role-playing survival horror video game, featuring a zombie apocalyptic-themed open world. Set 22 years after Dying Light, it stars a new protagonist named Aiden Caldwell (voiced by Jonah Scott), who is equipped with various parkour skills. Players can perform actions such as climbing ledges, sliding, leaping off from edges, and wall running to quickly navigate the city. It was confirmed that there are over 3000 parkour animations to give a more fluid free running experience. Tools such as a grappling hook and a paraglider also aid traversal in the city. Aiden can also use the undead to break his fall. The game is mostly melee-based with the majority of fighting using melee weapons. The melee weapons have a limited lifespan and will degrade as the player uses them in combat.[2] Long-range weapons such as crossbows, shotguns, and spears can be used as well. Weapons can be upgraded with different blueprints and components which can be found by breaking down weapons for craft parts. Aiden can also utilize superhuman skills due to the infection.[3] New zombies have been added. Like the first game, the zombies are slow when exposed to sunlight, but they become more aggressive and hostile at night.[4]

The game is set in the city of Villedor, a massive urban open world set in Europe that players can explore freely.[5] The map, which is four times bigger than the original game, is broken into seven distinct regions and each has its own landmarks and locations. When exploring the city, players can scavenge different scraps and resources for crafting new items and weapons.[6] In the game, players meet different factions and settlements and have to make different decisions that would fundamentally change the state of the game's world and how non-playable characters view Aiden. The consequences are far-reaching, with the player being able to bring prosperity to a faction while completely destroying another settlement. Making certain decisions will open up or seal-off areas in the city, encouraging players to complete multiple playthroughs.[7] Like its predecessor, the game features four-player cooperative multiplayer.[8]

Story[]

Setting[]

The zombie outbreak in Harran ended with the death of all of the city's citizens, with no reported survivors. However, the Global Relief Effort (GRE) is able to develop a vaccine for "The Harran Virus" (THV), ending the threat of the zombie pandemic. Unfortunately, despite promises to cease all research on THV, the GRE continued experimenting on the virus in secret. In 2021, a mutated variant of THV escapes a GRE lab and starts a second pandemic that spreads even faster than the first, quickly sweeping across the entire world in an event called "The Fall". The vaccine and Antizen are ineffective against the new strain of THV, but its effects can be suppressed with ultraviolet light.

Fifteen years after the Fall, human civilization has been reduced to a handful of scattered human settlements, with walled European city of Villedor being the last known remaining city on Earth. Originally quarantined by the GRE, Villedor was spared the worst of the pandemic thanks to its quarantine walls also keeping the hordes of infected out of the city. However, control of the city is split between several factions, including the militaristic Peacekeepers, the independent survivors of the Bazaar, and the violent Renegades.

The main protagonist Aiden Caldwall is a Pilgrim, an individual brave enough to travel between human settlements. He decides to make the journey to Villedor in order to search for his lost sister, Mia.

Plot[]

Aiden makes his way to the city of Villedor after being notified that there is an informant that knows the whereabouts of Dr. Waltz, a doctor who experimented on Aiden and Mia when there were children, in hopes that Dr. Waltz knows Mia's location. Aiden meets the informant, but is bitten by a volatile and infected. The informant gives Aiden a working GRE electronic key, warning him that if Waltz gets his hands on it, Villedor is doomed. He also instructs Aiden to take the key to the "Fish Eye" and hand it to a woman named Lawan. The informant is then captured and executed by Waltz while Aiden flees, making his way into Villedor proper.

Due to lacking a bio-marker, which tracks the progress of a person's infection, Aiden is nearly executed by fearful citizens but is saved by Hakon, one of the locals. Hakon explains tensions in Villedor are high due to a Peacekeeper officer, Lucas, having been recently murdered, and the Peacekeepers believe the survivors of the Bazaar are responsible, risking the outbreak of war between the two factions. Hakon helps Aiden obtain a bio-marker and tries to smuggle him into Villedor's Central district, where the Fish Eye is located. Aiden is captured by the Peacekeepers, and the local officer, Aitor, is willing to help Aiden get into the Central district if he finds Lucas' killer. Aiden then approaches the Bazaar's leaders, Carl and Sophie and helps them to earn their trust. However, Sophie finds out about Aiden's collaboration with Aitor, and gives a counteroffer that if Aiden help secure the Bazaar's water supply, she will smuggle him into the central district. At this point, it is up to Aiden to decide whether he will side with the Peacekeepers or the Bazaar as both sides go to war.

Regardless of who Aiden sides with, he discovers that Hakon killed Lucas on Waltz's orders. Waltz confronts Aiden, demonstrating superhuman abilities as he steals the GRE key from him. Aiden pursues Waltz to an abandoned car factory, where he attempts to use the key to activate a machine before Lawan intervenes, incapacitating Waltz long enough for Aiden to recover the key and escape. Lawan reveals that she was also one of Waltz's test subjects and seeks revenge against him, and that Lucas was murdered by Waltz after originally finding the GRE key. With the key, Aiden and Lawan are able to enter the Central district, where they see electricity suddenly be restored to the city. Aiden then meets with the commander of the Peacekeepers, Jack Matt, and the former leader of the now defunct Nightrunner group, Frank. They both task Aiden with reactivating the radio antenna atop Villedor's highest skyscraper so that they can broadcast messages to all of Villedor and the settlements beyond, and in return they can help Aiden with finding a surviving GRE doctor so that he can access the GRE database.

After reactivating the tower, Aiden spends the night with Lawan, who confides that her hate for Hakon stems from his betrayal of the Nightrunners, leading to the entire group being wiped out. Aiden then learns that the GRE doctor's identity is Dr. Veronika Ryan, a Bazaar resident. Aiden returns to the Bazaar and finds Veronika, who is on the run from the Renegades. Together, they head to a GRE facility called the Observatory, where the GRE database is located. Aiden accesses the database, but doesn't find any helpful data to find Mia and inadvertently reactivates a GRE failsafe protocol calling missile strikes to destroy Villedor. Waltz arrives to take the key, and while fighting him, Aiden loses control of his infection and kills Veronika just as missile destroys the Observatory and Waltz escapes with the key.

Lawan pulls Aiden from the debris, and he warns her that Waltz's experiments on him means he will inevitably turn. However, he can't stop Lawan from going after the leader of the Renegades, Colonel Williams. Williams claims he originally stopped the missile strikes, but Waltz has resumed him. Not wanting to see Villedor destroyed, Williams tells Aiden to head for the X13 lab to confront Waltz and stop the missiles before committing suicide. Aiden and Lawan enter the complex and are shocked to find that X13 was supposed to be a survival shelter for GRE officials, with massive stockpiles of supplies. Lawan rescues Hakon after he tries to protect them from the Renegades, leaving Aiden to continue alone. As he journeys through X13, he realizes it is the same facility he was experimented on.

Aiden finally confronts Waltz, who reveals that Aiden's memories were incorrect, and that Mia is actually Waltz's daughter who he has been trying to cure for the past 15 years. Waltz refuses to abort the missiles launches, as that will interrupt the process to cure Mia, forcing Aiden to battle him. Aiden finally manages to defeat Waltz, who succumbs to his wounds. Lawan then tells Aiden she plans to detonate explosives to destroy the missiles before they can launch, which will destroy X13. Aiden must choose to either try and save Mia, or save Lawan.

  • If Aiden goes to save Lawan, he takes her out of X13 while Hakon evacuates Mia. However, Aiden fails to stop the missile strike, which destroys Villedor and kills a majority of the population. Aiden then leaves the city due to his infection, continuing his journey as a Pilgrim.
  • If Aiden goes to save Mia, he takes her out of X13 while Hakon rescues Lawan. X13 is destroyed in the explosion and the city is spared from destruction. Mia dies shortly after due to her weakened condition and is buried by Aiden. Meanwhile, Villedor falls under the control of the faction Aiden supported the most. However, Aiden ultimately decides to leave Villedor due to his infection and continues his journey as a Pilgrim.

Development[]

Dying Light 2 Stay Human is developed and published by Techland. The team intended to invoke a sense of loss and dread. They also show that humanity was on the edge of extinction. To show the fragility of humanity, the team introduced several layers to the City, in which the temporary structures are built on top of the ruins of the old buildings to accommodate humans, whereas permanent structures and concrete ground are occupied by massive hordes of zombies.[3] When creating the City, the team utilized an internal technology named CityBuilder, which can assemble different building parts like ledges and windows with minimal input from the level designers. The technology enabled the team to create and change the city design quickly. The team also created a new engine named C-Engine to power the game.[9]

The game placed a significantly larger emphasis on narrative when compared with its predecessor. The team approached Chris Avellone to help write the game's story which is reactive to players' choices. The team felt that they had developed an open city, but they wanted the narrative to share the same level of agency.[3] The game was described as a "narrative sandbox" in which every choice has "genuine" consequences according to Avellone.[10] After players make certain choices, the game space will also change. The game's story features a more serious tone when compared with the first game. To make the world feel believable and authentic, the team also took inspiration from real-world issues and political ideologies and had to drop gameplay ideas that were deemed too unrealistic.[11] Ciszewski added that in each playthrough, players will "lose at least 25 percent of the content".[3]

The story focuses on a new, modern "Dark Ages" for humanity, which enables the story to convey themes such as betrayal, infidelity, and intrigue. The team was confident about the game's gameplay, though they felt that they needed additional help when designing the game's narrative. Therefore, the team recruited Avellone as well as writers who worked on The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt, a game widely praised for its writing and story. The narrative design also prompts players to care about the non-playable characters and encourages players to be more sensitive about their presence and needs.[9] Zombies, instead of being the main enemy like in the last game, become a narrative device that pressurize other non-playable characters to induce interesting drama and themes.[12] The game features hostile human enemies more heavily when compared with the first game, as the team was inspired by works including The Walking Dead and Game of Thrones, in which living humans are equally dangerous. The team developed a life cycle for zombies in the game. Newly bitten zombies are called Viral, which are fast and dangerous enemies whose humanity still remain. They would then become Biters, which are described as "regular zombies". When Biters are exposed to UV light for a long period of time, they devolved into Degenerates, which are degenerating zombies with flesh falling off from them.[13]

The game was announced at E3 2018 during the Xbox press conference by Avellone as Dying Light 2.[14] Square Enix will distribute the game and provide marketing efforts in North America.[15][16] On January 20, 2020, Techland announced that the game would be delayed out of its early 2020 window to allow additional development time, with no new release date given at the time.[17] On May 27, 2021, a digital event was held and a December 7, 2021 release date was revealed, alongside the game's title adding the subtitle of Stay Human.[18] Along with the release date, a promotional comic detailing the apocalypse and showcasing a new variant infected was released digitally with a physical release coming in Q4 2021. The game was later delayed to February 4, 2022.[19] The comic received mixed reviews, with praise directed towards the art and criticism aimed at the story and characters. On September 23, 2021, a cloud version of Dying Light 2 Stay Human was confirmed for the Nintendo Switch console during a Nintendo Direct presentation, set to release on the same day as the other platforms.[20] This version of the game, however, was delayed and Techland announced that it would be released "within six months" after its initial launch on other platforms.[21]

Due to sexual misconduct allegations made against Chris Avellone in June 2020, Techland and Avellone agreed to terminate his involvement with Dying Light 2. He has since filed a libel lawsuit and vehemently denied sexual misconduct of any kind calling the allegations malicious and false.[22]

Reception[]

Dying Light 2 Stay Human received "generally favorable" reviews, according to review aggregator Metacritic.[23][24][25]

Kotaku praised the parkour system, writing that it expanded upon its predeccesor in meaningful ways, "Dying Light 2 feels as if Techland realized how the first game’s movement made it stand out from so many other zombie games, and focused on building it up more. The end result is one of the best parkour systems I’ve ever seen in a game".[39] Ars Technica criticized the story, specifically the voice acting and writing, "DL2's voice acting is perhaps the worst I've heard in a video game of this scale... And they're chained to a script that consists of awkwardly translated phrases, along with massive leaps in logic and wartime strategy".[40] While criticizing the narrative's exposition-heavy dialogue, Polygon enjoyed the melee combat, saying that "With a smartly balanced fatigue meter governing attacks and movements, Dying Light 2 makes me think about, and use, all the tactics available to me, especially in boss and sub-boss fights".[41] Eurogamer liked how the open world integrated with the parkour gameplay, "The first-person parkour is simply brilliant, its integration into a vast, dense open world simply astonishing, and the act of getting from A to B is an absolute thrill".[42] Rock Paper Shotgun felt the changes to nightime made it less dangerous and more routine "Come night, you simply avoid the horde by sticking to the rooftops... Interiors are barebones stealth sections, with all too obvious routes to sneak by sleepers... The end result is that you spend a lot of the game being shepherded towards the least interesting place at any given time".[43]

References[]

  1. ^ "Dying Light 2 Stay Human release date updated". September 14, 2021. Retrieved October 5, 2021.
  2. ^ Nakamura, Darren (June 20, 2019). "Dying Light 2 lets you destroy entire areas in the city". Destructoid. Retrieved June 25, 2019.
  3. ^ a b c d Hall, Charlie (June 11, 2019). "Dying Light 2's dark age parkour looks solid, but the narrative feels risky". Polygon. Retrieved June 25, 2019.
  4. ^ Avard, Alex (March 11, 2019). "Dying Light 2 new zombie types explained with official concept art". Gamesradar. Retrieved November 1, 2019.
  5. ^ Grubb, Jeff (June 20, 2018). "Techland promises diversity in Dying Light 2 (updated)". VentureBeat. Retrieved March 1, 2021.
  6. ^ Fillari, Alissandro (June 15, 2019). "E3 2019: Dying Light 2's Brutal Combat Punctuates Its New Storytelling". GameSpot. Retrieved June 25, 2019.
  7. ^ Chiodoni, Johnny (June 11, 2019). "Your choices can wipe out entire settlements in Dying Light 2:Stay Human". Eurogamer. Retrieved June 25, 2019.
  8. ^ West, Josh (March 14, 2019). "Why co-op is going to be one of the coolest parts of Dying Light 2". GamesRadar. Retrieved June 25, 2019.
  9. ^ a b Francis, Bryant (June 25, 2019). "Building interesting emergence in Dying Light 2". Gamasutra. Retrieved June 25, 2019.
  10. ^ Faller, Patrick (June 13, 2018). "E3 2018: Dying Light 2 Will Be A "Narrative Sandbox" Where Your Actions Shape Your Environment". GameSpot. Retrieved June 25, 2019.
  11. ^ Avard, Alex (March 14, 2019). "How Dying Light 2 is a culmination of everything Techland has learnt making zombie games so far". GamesRadar. Retrieved June 25, 2019.
  12. ^ Weber, Rachel (March 12, 2019). "How Dying Light 2 is inspired by The Witcher 3 and Game of Thrones". GamesRadar. Retrieved June 25, 2019.
  13. ^ Avard, Alex (March 11, 2019). "Exclusive: Dying Light 2's new zombie types explained with official concept art". GamesRadar. Retrieved June 25, 2019.
  14. ^ Messner, Steven (June 10, 2018). "Dying Light 2 announced and Chris Avellone is designing the story". PC Gamer. Retrieved June 10, 2018.
  15. ^ Khan, Imran (May 31, 2019). "Dying Light 2 Will Be At Square Enix's E3 Presentation". Game Informer. Retrieved June 26, 2019.
  16. ^ Birch, Nathan (July 25, 2019). "Dying Light 2 Interview: You Can be a Joker-like Agent of Chaos, Cross-Gen Confirmed". Wccftech. Retrieved November 20, 2019.
  17. ^ "Dying Light 2 Delayed with No New Release Date - IGN". November 2021.
  18. ^ Ruppert, Liana (May 27, 2021). "New Dying Light 2: Stay Human Gameplay Shows Off More About The Dangers Of Consequences". Game Informer. Retrieved May 27, 2021.
  19. ^ Light, Dying [@DyingLightGame] (September 14, 2021). "Update regarding release date" (Tweet). Retrieved September 14, 2021 – via Twitter.
  20. ^ Whitehead, Thomas (September 23, 2021). "Dying Light Platinum Edition Dated, Dying Light 2: Stay Human - Cloud Version Confirmed". Nintendo Life. Retrieved September 24, 2021.
  21. ^ Wales, Matt (January 19, 2022). "Dying Light 2 delayed on Switch". Eurogamer. Retrieved February 2, 2022.
  22. ^ Kerr, Chris (June 22, 2020). "Dying Light 2 writer Chris Avellone accused of sexual assault and harassment". Gamasutra. Retrieved June 22, 2020.
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  24. ^ a b "Dying Light 2 Stay Human for PlayStation 5 Reviews". Metacritic. Retrieved February 2, 2022.
  25. ^ a b "Dying Light 2 Stay Human for Xbox Series X Reviews". Metacritic. Retrieved February 4, 2022.
  26. ^ Carter, Chris (February 2, 2022). "Review: Dying Light 2". Destructoid. Retrieved February 2, 2022.
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  38. ^ Wise, Josh (February 2, 2022). "Dying Light 2 Stay Human review". VideoGamer.com. Retrieved February 2, 2022.
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  40. ^ Machkovech, Sam (February 2, 2022). "Mini-review: No, I don't want to play Dying Light 2 for 500 hours". Ars Technica. Retrieved February 3, 2022.
  41. ^ Good, Owen S. (February 2, 2022). "Dying Light 2 review: Story or gameplay, which would you save?". Polygon. Retrieved February 3, 2022.
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  43. ^ Castle, Matthew (February 2, 2022). "Dying Light 2: Stay Human review: polished sequel lacks bite". Rock, Paper, Shotgun. Retrieved February 3, 2022.

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