Better With Wii U? - Batman: Arkham City Armored Edition
This isn’t the game Nintendo deserves, but it’s the one it needs.
Posted By Shaun K. about 1 year, 1 month ago
To say Batman: Arkham City was well received upon being released last year is something of an understatement. The title ended up on countless lists of the Top Games of 2011 (including several times on our own), won numerous awards, and sold over two million copies in its first week alone. Arkham City even beat out Modern Warfare 3 as the most requested game of 2011 according to the popular online game rental service Gamefly. Now one last piece of DLC content has been announced for B:AC, but unlike previous DLC releases for the title (which, as with its predecessor Arkham Asylum, were all focused on adding levels and playable characters to the game’s non-story challenge mode), this time around the content will be story driven.
Titled Harley Quinn’s Revenge, the DLC sees Batman returning to Arkham City to deal with one last threat and this time being fully joined by none other than Robin himself. The official description of the DLC, along with several screenshots, follows:
While Robin was made available for use in B:AC‘s challenge mode via previously released DLC, this marks the first time the character has actually been playable in story content and its interesting that Rocksteady has apparently chosen to close out the Arkham series (for now at least) by bringing the Dynamic Duo together. Presumably players will alternate between controlling the two characters in a similar manner to the way the Catwoman missions were incorporated into Arkham City‘s main story mode but time will tell.
In addition to revealing the new DLC, a new ‘Game of the Year’ edition of Arkham City was also announced. This version of the game will include all previously released DLC (which consists of the Catwoman Pack, Nightwing Bundle Pack, Robin Bundle Pack, Challenge Map Pack and Arkham City Skins Pack) along with the forthcoming Harley Quinn DLC. Additionally, US and Canadian purchasers of the B:AC GOTY edition will also receive a free copy of the Batman: Year One animated movie released last year with their purchase. Check out a trailer for the GOTY edition, including a brief glimpse of the new Harley Quinn DLC, below:
The Harley Quinn’s Revenge Pack DLC will be released worldwide to PSN on May 29 and XBLA on May 30 for ten dollars and 800 MS points respectively. Batman: Arkham City Game of the Year Edition will be released for PS3 and Xbox 360 on May 29 in North America and on September 7 in the UK and Europe. A PC version of the new DLC and the new edition of the B:AC has yet to be announced. Stay tuned to Blistered Thumbs for continuing coverage of all Batman related video game news and be sure to share your thoughts and opinions in the comments section below.
Source(s): Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment.
This isn’t the game Nintendo deserves, but it’s the one it needs.
With the fate of Harley Quinn left up in the air at the end of Arkham City, this DLC has got fans excited to find out more. If you haven’t found the Easter Egg in the Joker’s office and don’t wish for spoilers from the original campaign, do not read this review and get away from the internet!
The final piece of DLC for Batman: Arkham City is only a few weeks away from release and now a new trailer has been released for players to enjoy.
One final mission awaits the Dynamic Duo in Arkham City and BT has all the details you need to know.
In the dark night, the dark knight got light effects to run tight in spite of slight setbacks to OSes of lower bytes. Will this affect you? It might. How trite.
Excited PC players cranked their DX11 settings up this week to look at Arkham City in all its dark knight glory, only to discover the in-game camera to suffer from a condition that induced small seizures every few seconds. Rocksteady has acknowledged the problem, and is on the case! *theme song*
The Robin DLC is finally out for those who didn’t pre-order the game through Best Buy or didn’t buy a code from someone who hocked it on Ebay.
In surely the best year for games we’ve seen in a long time, the increasingly common trend of PC version delays rears its unpleasantly ubiquitous head. Arkham City now also delayed, but not for much longer.
I can’t believe that Robin was actually Harley Quinn the WHOLE TIME! All this and the ACTUAL plot twists in our Arkham City Long Haul conclusion!
Once he was an acrobat, then a sidekick, and then he became his own man. Now, you can play as him in Batman: Arkham City.
Posted By Shaun K. about 1 year ago
The final piece of DLC for Batman: Arkham City is only a few weeks away from release and now a new trailer has been released for players to enjoy.
Posted By Shaun K. about 1 year, 1 month ago
One final mission awaits the Dynamic Duo in Arkham City and BT has all the details you need to know.
Posted By Johnny Maloney about 1 year, 5 months ago
In the dark night, the dark knight got light effects to run tight in spite of slight setbacks to OSes of lower bytes. Will this affect you? It might. How trite.
Posted By Johnny Maloney about 1 year, 5 months ago
Excited PC players cranked their DX11 settings up this week to look at Arkham City in all its dark knight glory, only to discover the in-game camera to suffer from a condition that induced small seizures every few seconds. Rocksteady has acknowledged the problem, and is on the case! *theme song*
Posted By Micah C. about 1 year, 6 months ago
The Robin DLC is finally out for those who didn’t pre-order the game through Best Buy or didn’t buy a code from someone who hocked it on Ebay.
Posted By Johnny Maloney about 1 year, 6 months ago
In surely the best year for games we’ve seen in a long time, the increasingly common trend of PC version delays rears its unpleasantly ubiquitous head. Arkham City now also delayed, but not for much longer.
Posted By Fraser about 1 year, 6 months ago
I can’t believe that Robin was actually Harley Quinn the WHOLE TIME! All this and the ACTUAL plot twists in our Arkham City Long Haul conclusion!
Posted By Micah C. about 1 year, 6 months ago
Once he was an acrobat, then a sidekick, and then he became his own man. Now, you can play as him in Batman: Arkham City.
Posted By AngryJoe about 1 year, 6 months ago
Batman encounters a mysterious new villain as Angry Joe reviews Arkham City. Can Rocksteady and the Dark Knight live up to all the hype in this highly anticipated sequel? And just who is this new villain’s true identity? Find out!
Posted By Taylor Hoyt about 1 year, 6 months ago
With expectations now sky high, Arkham City doesn’t have the luxury of flying under the radar. This only makes what Rocksteady has created that much more impressive.
Posted By Austin Yorski about 6 months ago
The Wii U is launching with roughly half a billion games. You don’t have the time to read that many full reviews (and we can’t write that many), so instead we’ll be bringing you a series of mini-reviews entitled “Better With Wii U?” We’ll still be publishing full write-ups for brand new titles, but these pieces will let you know the Who, What, When, Where, Why, and How of every port/re-release for Nintendo’s newest console.
HOW WAS THE ORIGINAL?
“I can confidently say that if you can only afford a few games this season, Batman: Arkham City absolutely has to be one of them. The fantastic story, robust amount of content, and fun factor all mesh together to make, without question, one of the finest games of the year.”- Taylor H.
We loved Arkham City here at Blistered Thumbs. Our official write-up and all three video reviews were highly positive, and the game made the “Best of 2011″ list for many a site writer. The only complaints any of our producers had with the experience were some niggling control issues and some texture pop-in. Even in a year that saw the release of The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim and Portal 2, Batman held his own.
We scored the game 9 out of 10 with a “Buy it Now!” recommendation. Read the full review right here.
WHAT’S NEW WITH WII U?
The titular armor refers to the new suit worn by Bruce Wayne as he stalks about the open world assaulting thugs and villains alike. As you could probably guess from the header image, the suit’s main feature is adding electricity to punch attacks. This manifests within the game as a meter that charges up while you fight. Once you’ve filled the meter, tapping the associated icon on the GamePad allows you to begin your electro beatdown.
In addition, every gadget and mini-game has been altered in order to utilize the Wii U’s fancy new controller. This means that you’ll be tapping the screen to navigate menus, maneuvering the GamePad to scan for clues, and tilting it in order to aim Batarangs. The controller screen can also be used as your map while you play the game on the television, or you can just play the whole game on the GamePad while someone else watches regular programming on the big screen.
Armored Edition also includes all previously released downloadable game content for Arkham City, including the somewhat controversial Catwoman Pack.
WHERE DOES THAT LEAVE US?
GamePad integration is a mixed bag. The overall effect on the game is minor, as the Battle Armored Tech gimmick is all but standard in third-person action titles. I don’t see DmC: Devil May Cry getting a Wii U port entitled Devil Trigger Edition. However, the addition doesn’t interfere with the quality of the original release.
The same cannot be said for some of the other new features. On one hand, using the GamePad to plant explosive gel is fine, but when it asks you to swipe, poke, and tilt every few minutes the experience stops being novel and starts becoming annoying. It is natural for launch titles to feel like tech demos, but when such features are shoe-horned into a game that was awesome to begin with, it becomes all the more egregious. With that said, you can disable some of the motion controls from the options menu if you are so inclined, although much of the functionality is irrevocably intertwined with the game in this version.
On the bright side, there are inspired instances in which new features pull their own weight. For example, the ability to search environments while in Detective Mode with the GamePad is probably the most smoothly integrated augment reality yet seen in a mainstream title. It probably helps that the conceit of the controller as part of Batman’s suit interface is relatively believable. Also, Alfred’s voice comes from the controller! That’s pretty awesome.
WHO SHOULD BUY IT? WHY?
If you’ve already beaten Batman: Arkham City then you can safely skip Armored Edition. Some of the GamePad features are cool the first time, but the experience is not improved enough to justify the purchase. In addition, the PC version appears to be superior in just about every technical metric, including textures, load times, and frame rate. Also, the B.A.T. for which the game is named is laughably irrelevant.
However, if you’re a Nintendo fan who missed Rocksteady’s magnum opus the first time, then you should definitely buy a copy. The included DLC is more than enough to make up for the occasional gimmicky misstep, and the rest of the experience holds up remarkably well. Even if this isn’t the definitive version of the game, it is still a port of arguably the best superhero video game of all time.
A copy of the game was provided by the publisher for review purposes and played for about 8 hours. The title was previously completed by the reviewer on the PC.
I told you, Skitch!
While a lot of developers had learned long ago that the touch screen is used best when used minimally, those were all portable developers. Most American companies don’t work on portables at all, except for phones (and most of them still try to make the touchscreen be used like a regular controller, much to everyone’s chagrin). They were bound to do this stupid crap since they never dealt with it in the first place.
I sorta expected that this game would be the example to point to for how to use the Pad well and horribly wrong at the same time. I just hope that the gimmick of making you swipe and slap at the controller screen for tedious stuff is used infrequently in future games.
Also guiding that Baterang gave me horrible flashbacks of Heavenly Sword’s sniper sections. Admittedly, I’m sure Rocksteady is a far, far more competent developer than Ninja Theory. Hell 5 chimps taped to an Apple II would be a better developer than Ninja Theory.
I can’t believe that Robin was actually Harley Quinn the WHOLE TIME! All this and the ACTUAL plot twists in our Arkham City Long Haul conclusion!
Batman encounters a mysterious new villain as Angry Joe reviews Arkham City. Can Rocksteady and the Dark Knight live up to all the hype in this highly anticipated sequel? And just who is this new villain’s true identity? Find out!
ZGR Daniel gives you the scoop on Batman: Arkham City! ZGR – Video Review
What is longer than this cosplay-through? The ICE AGE! Why not CHILL with these COOL bats with some Arkham City… FREEZE PUN!
A 12:00 AM first look at Arkham City makes for one DARK mid-KNIGHT!
This isn’t the game Nintendo deserves, but it’s the one it needs.
Dick Grayson’s out and Tim Drake’s in. Looks like Robin won’t be laying any eggs today.
Music Mondays revisits the band that brought us tunes from Scott Pilgrim vs. the World and Bit.Trip Runner.
Saw this comming…now to wait for it to be on Steam, likely with a sale price. Waiting is a virtue sometimes.. :3
As far as I know, there’s been no mention of this coming to PC. I would be rather annoyed if I didn’t get a chance to play it.
I wonder if this release has anything to do with a certain upcoming movie…
Still, I’m disappointed we won’t be able to fight Mr. Freeze in this DLC
Hope I don’t need to buy Robin to get this.
Finally a reson to return to Arkham City once more.
I’ve completed the game almost 15 times on PC and PS3 combined, but it got old after I used every single costume.
But I will gladly play it again, before this comes out
I still got to finish the game. The GOTY edition sounds fantastic, but I’m not going to gout and buy that just to get all the DLC.
Something else to download I guess. Playing as the Dynamic Duo outside of challenge mode should be pretty sweet.
About time they made a DLC for an Arkham game that’s NOT the challenge mode. The combat and stealth sections of the Arkham games are good but I like it when they’re framed in a story. If it’s just a challenge mode I don’t really care.
Well this is good to hear. I pretty much ignored the other DLC precisely because it was just challenge mode stuff (I got Robin from a pre-order, wasn’t impressed with him). A story mode DLC pack though is something I might well pick up, if I hear good things about it after it comes out.