It’s icing on top of an already complex layered cake and, if like me, you’ve not played it recently, it makes for an intimidating experience from the get-go. As you would expect from the final expansion, there’s no shortage of powerful gear and your party can ascend to level 16, unlocking new tiers of active and passive abilities. Now four chapters may not sound like much but each chapter in Back to the Futon is easily over four hours of content if you explore thoroughly, follow the primary quest, tackle all side quests, and try to solve every riddle for the bonus loot and experience. This kicks off a four-chapter arc that has you traveling through time, meeting significant figures responsible for designing the dreaded dungeon, and going up against the “cult of Dlul” – followers of the God of Sleep, after your beloved statue, and intent on plunging the world into an “Eternal Nap”. One short teleport later and they find themselves in the distant past, during the initial construction of the dungeon. They’re offered their gear back and a chance at freedom – but only if they’re willing to team up with “Agent X” (who replaces your unlucky thief) on a mission to find several missing teams and discover why the titular dungeon is trapped in a temporal anomaly. They were imprisoned for their shameless looting and the collateral damage from their actions. Regarding Back to the Futon – events pick up right where we left off in the second DLC the “Ruins of Limis” chapter and the party finds themselves in the Dungeon Fund’s dungeon. Naturally, each hero archetype is based around min-maxing pair of attributes and each possesses a unique skill tree encompassing both active abilities and passive buffs that include synergies with other party members. The Elf is kind-hearted but socially inept and incredibly dense The Dwarf is self-centered, snarky, and constantly mocks the Elf The Barbarian only knows enough words to get into a fight the Orc chef just mumbles incoherently and laughs at the misfortunes of others while the Mage thinks she’s smarter than everyone else. The Ranger is desperate to play the leader and impress others but is cripplingly insecure. It’s also an expansion designed exclusively for long-time fans that have completed all the base game, the first two DLC chapters, and have a max-level / well-equipped party ready for a challenge.Īs in the base game and the two previous DLCs, humor is always at the forefront of this unbelievable series, but what else sets The Dungeon of Naheulbeuk apart for me is the quality of the writing, frequent party interactions, combat quips, and the absurd situations that make it impossible to predict how your narrative choices play out. It is packed with more entertaining dialogue, more riddles, traps, new character skill tiers, high-quality loot, and an abundance of tough-as-nails battles. The Dungeon of Naheulbeuk: Back to the Futon is the 3rd and final expansion to this amazing conclusion to The Dungeon of Naheulbeuk story.
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