

The mechanisms are very intuitive: as usual you have your health bar and mana bar for magical purposes and various other trigger buttons that you can program for either physical or magical attacks, or potion intake shortcuts. Without much orientation, I was left by myself (and my dog buddy) to figure out the controls and capabilities my character had. Yet after this, the story took off quickly, throwing you into the ruined landscape with enemies approaching from every direction.

The moment after creation, Torchlight IIgives a quick explanation for your adventure and motivation, however I felt it lacked a clear narrative if you have not played the previous Torchlight game. Do I want a fantastical rainbow unicorn, a sleepy panda bear, or the classical loyal wolf? (Hint: I chose the cute wolf). There is also a section to choose your companion animal, which I must say was one of the most difficult decisions I’ve ever had to make as a gamer (and I’ve played Detroit: Become Human). For those more interested in getting to the gameplay of Torchlight II, there is an option to randomize everything and move on. Pretty much your basic character creation options.

In the beginning, a semi-interactive and personalized character creation section is available for players to make decisions about what they want their dungeon crawler experience to be.įour choices for class, two for gender, and many different face/hair style choices. In the wake of the destruction, you become a character trying to make sense of what is happening and in the end, attempt to defeat the evil that is corrupting your world. Torchlight II, the sequel to Torchlight, developed by Runic Games releases is now available on the Nintendo Switch system, PlayStation 4 computer entertainment system, and Xbox One.Ī fantasy RPG game, Torchlight II takes off after the previously playable character The Alchemist goes on a rampage after being unable to be taken down by powerful adversaries.
