
It’s never quite as silly as Blood Dragon’s neon-soaked cartoon world, but definitely less self-serious, less punishing, more prone to mindless power fantasies. If Dying Light was Far Cry 3 with zombies, then The Following is its Blood Dragon-esque spin-off. If a zombie jumps on your vehicle, punch it in the face. Put a ramming bar on the front of your buggy, drive through the fields, and play bowling with a horde of zombies. You may still pull open your map and groan when you see that the next mission is located on the far side of the map, but gun the engine and indulge yourself a bit. It seems like a gimmick, but it makes Dying Light’s fetch questiness just a little more tolerable. The point is: The buggy makes a difference. All that’s missing is Kyle Crane whooping as he runs over yet another undead Harran farmer, beer in hand. It’s the unholy lovechild of Dukes of Hazzard and Death Race 2000.
DYING LIGHT CODES YE OLD TRUSTY FULL
You discover the countryside is actually curved roads and fences to plow over and stupid “Who built this, anyway?” jump ramps and tight turns and fields full of zombies waiting to be run down. The Following is the opposite-empty stretches, punctuated by the odd highway overpass or farmhouse.īut once you get into your silly little car, those long stretches of nothing take on a different character. Dying Light proper managed to feel bigger than it was because it mostly consisted of winding streets and hidden interiors. The two aren’t truly comparable, regardless. Running across the map is tedious, and for good reason-Techland’s become fond of boasting that The Following takes place in “a region the size of all Dying Light maps combined.” I’m not willing to verify that claim, but it feels truthful. Much of your time is spent traversing the environment, and a lot of the secondary or tertiary missions are indistinguishable from each other.īut the dune buggy.

The Following tells a more intriguing (albeit more ridiculous) story than Dying Light, but it follows the same tedious structure as before and I’m still not thrilled. It’s a familiar set-up: Go here, do a thing, come back. You have to earn their trust by doing odd-jobs for members of the community, working your way up the well-trod ladder from stranger to beloved henchman until The Mother’s servants, the Faceless Ones, see fit to call on you. When you show up, nobody will even speak to you. They’re known as the Children of the Sun, a cult group kept safe by praying to a figure known as “The Mother.” And wouldn’t you know it, he immediately stumbles into a camp of seemingly-immune individuals.

However, if you want to know exactly what happens in each outcome, keep reading below.He escapes the confines of Harran, retreating to the sprawling countryside and farmland around the city. While you can get a unique mission and a unique choice in a later mission if you choose to help Juan, the overall consequences are not worth it. Juan doesn’t seem all that trustworthy on the surface, and it’s best to trust your gut in this scenario. If you just want to know the best choice to make in this scenario, then stick with Jack Matt. Here’s everything you need to know about the Juan choice in Dying Light 2. Juan’s offer is the first chance that you’ll have to go a different route and work against the Peacekeepers, but it might not be the best option. At this point in the story, Aiden is working with Jack Matt and the Peacekeepers because that’s Aiden’s only lead that could potentially help him find his sister.

The factions in Dying Light 2 are all competing for Aiden’s loyalty throughout the story, and at one point, Juan will ask you to betray Jack Matt and make a deal with him instead.
