

Okay, maybe there is: all the DLC is here, so if you never bothered to play through the challenge maps for either installment, or missed out on the additional story content for Arkham City, including a Catwoman-playable campaign and the post-main story Harley Quinn’s Revenge, then this is your opportunity to do so. Still.So much fun.Īll this stated, if you’ve already played through Arkham Asylum and Arkham City, there’s really nothing new here for you. All these factors and so much more coalesce into making these experiences so much fun.and they are. Everything we loved about the franchise is still here: the amazing voice work by Kevin Conroy as Batman, Mark Hamill’s classic and perfectly nuanced performance as the Joker, the richly detailed maps rife with blinthem references to Batman’s rich history, and of course the deeply satisfying combat system that rewards advanced players for timing, variation, and strategy over simple button mashing. At this point if the rumors are true then we won't be seeing the Dark Knight battling through the Arkham Asylum or Arkham City until this November.What can be said about these games that hasn’t already been said in the slew of positive reviews written at the time’s of their respective releases? Batman: Arkham Asylum and Batman: Arkham City can inarguably be counted as instant classics on last gen consoles, and the nostalgia factor was high as I dove back into the Caped Crusader’s world. The company had previously sent out word that the title would be missing its June date but they didn't specify when it would be releasing. While the publisher's answer to some of these problems has been to cancel or forgo the release of their newer games on PC altogether, that still hasn't stopped the problems of porting issues, as evidence with Batman: Return To Arkham's delay. High Voltage was in charge of porting over NetherRealm Studios' premiere eighth-gen fighter from the Xbox One and PS4 to PC, and the results were less than canny. especially following up on the fact that their PC release of Mortal Kombat X was received with less than stellar user reviews as well. It was a harsh lesson that Warner Bros., had to learn. Six months after the game released they still couldn't get the PC version working properly, forcing Warner Bros., to enable PC gamers to get refunds on the game all throughout the end of 2015, even if they had purchased the game back in June.
