Compara los precios de Darkest Dungeon - The Color Of Madness (DLC) en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Red Hook Studios. Publicado por Red Hook Studios. Lanzado el 19/1/2016. Disponible en PC. Géneros: Indie, RPG, Strategy. Puntuación Metacritic: 84/100.

If the base game broke you and you kept coming back anyway, the Farmstead will finish the job - and you will love it for that.

I have a complicated relationship with Darkest Dungeon's idea of generosity, and The Color of Madness is the purest expression of that tension the series has ever produced. Where the base game asks you to endure dungeon after dungeon with some thin sliver of narrative purpose dangling ahead, this DLC strips the pretense away entirely and presents a single, honest proposition: a comet crashed into Miller's Farm, turned everyone nearby into crystalline husks, and now your party is going to stand in a field and fight until they can't anymore. That's it. Red Hook isn't hiding anything. The headline addition is the Endless Harvest, a wave-based survival mode set on the turquoise-saturated Farmstead. The whole environment has been drowned in alien color - enemy designs lean into the horror of ordinary farmers and draft horses twisted into something wrong, and the new Husk faction floods the field with numbers rather than raw threat, which flips the tactical math the base game teaches you. Surviving longer rewards comet shards, a new currency you spend at the Jeweler in the Nomad Wagon on crystalline trinkets that can meaningfully shift builds. The Prismatic Quirks, earnable only by defeating the Thing From the Stars, are genuinely coveted and give veterans a concrete target to grind toward. Three new bosses round out the threat roster: the Miller, the Thing From the Stars, and a direct confrontation with the Comet itself. From loop four onward, the game starts pulling in familiar nightmare fuel from the base campaign - the Collector, the Shambling Horror - which rewards players who have internalized those fight patterns and punishes everyone else in the best possible way. The structural change that matters most, though, is a surprisingly compassionate one: dying in Endless mode doesn't mean permanent loss. Your party gets trapped in temporal limbo but keeps items and progress. For a series built on the theology of loss, that single adjustment transforms the Farmstead into something you can iterate on rather than just mourn. Party composition becomes the real puzzle. You need stress management, position discipline, and enough healing throughput to sustain across consecutive waves without resupply rooms between them - tactics that the main dungeons never forced quite this hard. The four new hamlet Districts and the shard economy tie back into your broader campaign, which gives the endless grind at least a sense of outward purpose. The legitimate criticism is that this DLC is narrow by design. There is no new playable hero. The narrative thread - a comet that competes with the dark progenitor for dominion over the world - is compelling on paper, but you never actually influence that conflict in gameplay terms. Wayne June delivers fresh Ancestor lines over the Farmstead with the usual measured dread, and Stuart Chatwood's new tracks push the combat into a relentless rhythm that suits the mode, but the storytelling stays decorative. Players who wanted the DLC to interrogate the lore the way the Crimson Court's vampiric infection crawled into every corner of a campaign will find the Farmstead comparatively self-contained. That self-containment is also precisely why it works as an add-on: you can engage with it on your own schedule without it poisoning an unprepared run. This is a DLC for veterans who want a proving ground, not an expansion for people still learning why the Jester belongs in row two. If the endless loop of push-your-luck tension is what you come to Darkest Dungeon for, the Farmstead is the most honest distillation of that feeling Red Hook ever built. Monika, Scout Team

Darkest Dungeon - The Color Of Madness (DLC)

Darkest Dungeon - The Color Of Madness (DLC)

Complemento / DLC de Darkest Dungeon® — ver juego completo
19 ene 2016Red Hook Studios
GamerScout opina

If the base game broke you and you kept coming back anyway, the Farmstead will finish the job - and you will love it for that.

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Acerca de Darkest Dungeon - The Color Of Madness (DLC)

I have a complicated relationship with Darkest Dungeon's idea of generosity, and The Color of Madness is the purest expression of that tension the series has ever produced. Where the base game asks you to endure dungeon after dungeon with some thin sliver of narrative purpose dangling ahead, this DLC strips the pretense away entirely and presents a single, honest proposition: a comet crashed into Miller's Farm, turned everyone nearby into crystalline husks, and now your party is going to stand in a field and fight until they can't anymore. That's it. Red Hook isn't hiding anything. The headline addition is the Endless Harvest, a wave-based survival mode set on the turquoise-saturated Farmstead. The whole environment has been drowned in alien color - enemy designs lean into the horror of ordinary farmers and draft horses twisted into something wrong, and the new Husk faction floods the field with numbers rather than raw threat, which flips the tactical math the base game teaches you. Surviving longer rewards comet shards, a new currency you spend at the Jeweler in the Nomad Wagon on crystalline trinkets that can meaningfully shift builds. The Prismatic Quirks, earnable only by defeating the Thing From the Stars, are genuinely coveted and give veterans a concrete target to grind toward. Three new bosses round out the threat roster: the Miller, the Thing From the Stars, and a direct confrontation with the Comet itself. From loop four onward, the game starts pulling in familiar nightmare fuel from the base campaign - the Collector, the Shambling Horror - which rewards players who have internalized those fight patterns and punishes everyone else in the best possible way. The structural change that matters most, though, is a surprisingly compassionate one: dying in Endless mode doesn't mean permanent loss. Your party gets trapped in temporal limbo but keeps items and progress. For a series built on the theology of loss, that single adjustment transforms the Farmstead into something you can iterate on rather than just mourn. Party composition becomes the real puzzle. You need stress management, position discipline, and enough healing throughput to sustain across consecutive waves without resupply rooms between them - tactics that the main dungeons never forced quite this hard. The four new hamlet Districts and the shard economy tie back into your broader campaign, which gives the endless grind at least a sense of outward purpose. The legitimate criticism is that this DLC is narrow by design. There is no new playable hero. The narrative thread - a comet that competes with the dark progenitor for dominion over the world - is compelling on paper, but you never actually influence that conflict in gameplay terms. Wayne June delivers fresh Ancestor lines over the Farmstead with the usual measured dread, and Stuart Chatwood's new tracks push the combat into a relentless rhythm that suits the mode, but the storytelling stays decorative. Players who wanted the DLC to interrogate the lore the way the Crimson Court's vampiric infection crawled into every corner of a campaign will find the Farmstead comparatively self-contained. That self-containment is also precisely why it works as an add-on: you can engage with it on your own schedule without it poisoning an unprepared run. This is a DLC for veterans who want a proving ground, not an expansion for people still learning why the Jester belongs in row two. If the endless loop of push-your-luck tension is what you come to Darkest Dungeon for, the Farmstead is the most honest distillation of that feeling Red Hook ever built.

Monika
Monika · Scout Team

RPGs

Etiquetas

steamEndless ModeWave DefenseCosmic HorrorStress ManagementGothic AtmosphereBoss RushParty CompositionHigh DifficultyGothic HorrorStress MechanicsPositional CombatRoguelite RPGParty ManagementLovecraftianPermadeath RiskNarrator-DrivenEndless HarvestHorde SurvivalShard EconomyTurquoise FarmsteadNew Currency LoopVeteran-Tier ChallengeNon-Permadeath ModeBoss Loop ScalingCurio-Based HealingNarrow but Focused

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

Memory
2 GB RAM
Graphics
Open GL 3.2+ Compliant
Storage
2 GB available space

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Memory
4 GB RAM
Graphics
Open GL 3.2+ Compliant
Storage
2 GB available space

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Reseñas y valoraciones

Metacritic
84
Steam
92%(159,310)

Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Red Hook Studios
Distribuidora
Red Hook Studios
Fecha de lanzamiento
19 ene 2016

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible Darkest Dungeon - The Color Of Madness (DLC)?

Darkest Dungeon - The Color Of Madness (DLC) está disponible en PC.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Darkest Dungeon - The Color Of Madness (DLC)?

Darkest Dungeon - The Color Of Madness (DLC) se lanzó el 19 de enero de 2016.

¿Quién desarrolló Darkest Dungeon - The Color Of Madness (DLC)?

Darkest Dungeon - The Color Of Madness (DLC) fue desarrollado por Red Hook Studios.

¿Merece la pena comprar Darkest Dungeon - The Color Of Madness (DLC)?

Darkest Dungeon - The Color Of Madness (DLC) tiene una puntuación Metacritic de 84/100, lo que lo convierte en uno de los títulos destacados de Indie. Mira las reseñas completas, las valoraciones y los tiempos de duración en esta página para decidir.