81
CRITIK
In Dishonored: The Knife of Dunwall take on the role of Daud, the legendary assassin who killed the Empress. This second add-on pack for the award-winning first person action game from Arkane Studios gives you a new perspective on Daud, and access to his weapons, gadgets, allies and supernatural abilities.
Critik
Scorecard
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Reviews
21 reviews found93
Gamingtrend.com
Apr 23, 2013
If you enjoyed Dishonored you know exactly what you are in for here. Much of it is the same, but it is the exemplary gameplay mechanics and fascinating world that drew us in the first time.
90
Incgamers.com
Apr 18, 2013
Summary and quote unavailable.
89
Pelit (Finland)
May 13, 2013
Summary and quote unavailable.
88
Cheatcc.com
Apr 19, 2013
Summary and quote unavailable.
86
3djuegos.com
Apr 18, 2013
Summary and quote unavailable.
85
It.ign.com
Apr 17, 2013
Summary and quote unavailable.
85
Gamespot.com
Apr 22, 2013
The Knife of Dunwall is clever and exciting, an enticing invitation to dive back into the engrossing world of Dishonored. The opening cutscene of The Knife of Dunwall chronicles an event anyone who played Dishonored will remember: the assassination of Empress Kaldwin.
85
Gamerlimit.com
Apr 18, 2013
Summary and quote unavailable.
84
Ausgamers.com
Apr 19, 2013
These missions don’t quite reach the same heights as the main campaign’s best moments, and we miss Corvo’s abilities more than we appreciate Daud’s (the constant companionship of that creepy heart Corvo carried around meant more to us than we realised), but there’s more effort, imagination and fun across these levels than plenty of big releases manage across their entire lengths.
80
Strategyinformer.com
Apr 24, 2013
Fortunately by being just generally being more challenging for both stealth and action gamers Knife of Dunwall is a decent piece of DLC no matter how it’s sliced. There may be only two real missions over five levels but there’s so much packed in those levels that I spend a good few days exploring them, and was left fully satisfied. In terms of complaints the fifth level being a retread of one from the main game is a little disappointing, as are the ‘Possession’ power and Heart being AWOL, but it’s the abrupt mid-point end to the story that has me the most upset. Nevertheless it’s a story that definitely has me intrigued (which I couldn’t say about Dishonored’s plot, another failing of the main game that Knife of Dunwall seems to be correcting) and anyone hankering for more Dishonored will be utterly satisfied – I certainly hope this is how Bioshock Infinite’s DLC will go.