Compara los precios de The Darkness II en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Digital Extremes. Publicado por 2K. Lanzado el 9/2/2012. Disponible en PC. Géneros: Action. Puntuación Metacritic: 77/100.

Quad-wielding guns and demon arms in a neo-noir crime horror package that runs short but hits hard, worth every minute it lasts.

I didn't expect a 2012 licensed shooter to stick with me the way The Darkness II does, but here we are. Digital Extremes took the comic book property and built something that feels genuinely distinct from the glut of cover shooters that surrounded it at launch. You play Jackie Estacado, Don of the Franchetti crime family and reluctant host to a supernatural entity called the Darkness, a pair of writhing demon arms that sprout over your shoulders and absolutely refuse to behave. The opening restaurant ambush gets the Darkness "out" in the worst way, and from there the game never really lets you stop moving. The central mechanical hook is quad-wielding: two conventional firearms in Jackie's hands (pistols, uzis, shotguns, assault rifles, your pick) running simultaneously with the two demon arms, each mapped to a separate button. The right arm slashes and tears; the left grabs environmental objects, car doors, parking meters, loose pipes, to use as shields or improvised projectiles. Chain a grab into a finisher and you're wishboning a Brotherhood cultist for a health refill, or wrapping an enemy into the anaconda move for an ammo drop. The skill tree, split across Hitman, Execution, Darkness Powers, and Demon Arm branches, lets you lean into whatever feel suits you, surgical gunplay, pure tentacle carnage, or a mix that keeps earning you dark essence for the next upgrade. Powers like Swarm (demon arms vomit green fire that freezes enemies in place) and Black Hole (a vortex that sucks enemies into a kill zone) give combat real flavour as the campaign progresses. The "Graphic Noir" art style deserves credit too. The team hand-painted the majority of the game's assets, resulting in something that reads like a moving comic book rather than a straight cel-shade job. Light is an active mechanic, step into it and Jackie's powers vanish, which means every encounter involves scanning for light sources to shoot out before the demon arms come back online. It gives the arenas a tactical layer the AI rarely earns on its own. The enemy intelligence is notably weak, and on PC especially you can string together the same brutal combos without much pushback. The story, though, earns genuine attention: Jackie's grief over his dead girlfriend Jenny, the recurring asylum sequences that blur fantasy and reality, and Brian Bloom's voice performance as Jackie all land harder than expected from this kind of game. The real complaint, and it's a fair one, is length. A competent player finishes the campaign in around five hours, six or seven on harder difficulties. The levels are linear from entrance to exit with almost no deviation. The Vendettas co-op mode, where up to four players pick from a roster of Darkness-tainted assassins with their own unique weapon and power trees, runs parallel to Jackie's story and adds replayability, but it lacks the narrative pull of the main campaign, and the Hit List mode is essentially a mission-replay wrapper. The ending also fumbles what came before it, landing in cliffhanger territory that a sequel has never resolved. For players who haven't touched this since 2012, or who missed it entirely, the short runtime is genuinely less of a problem now than it was at full launch price. What's here is tight, violent, and consistently fun on its own terms. It does one thing, kinetic, grotesque, quad-wield mayhem with an emotional core underneath, exceptionally well. Anyone who wants a story-driven shooter that isn't trying to be a military sim will find a lot to like in the few hours it gives you. Alex, Scout Team

The Darkness II

The Darkness II

9 feb 2012Digital Extremes2K
GamerScout opina

Quad-wielding guns and demon arms in a neo-noir crime horror package that runs short but hits hard, worth every minute it lasts.

PC
Steam Deck PlayableProtonDB Silver
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Acerca de The Darkness II

I didn't expect a 2012 licensed shooter to stick with me the way The Darkness II does, but here we are. Digital Extremes took the comic book property and built something that feels genuinely distinct from the glut of cover shooters that surrounded it at launch. You play Jackie Estacado, Don of the Franchetti crime family and reluctant host to a supernatural entity called the Darkness, a pair of writhing demon arms that sprout over your shoulders and absolutely refuse to behave. The opening restaurant ambush gets the Darkness "out" in the worst way, and from there the game never really lets you stop moving. The central mechanical hook is quad-wielding: two conventional firearms in Jackie's hands (pistols, uzis, shotguns, assault rifles, your pick) running simultaneously with the two demon arms, each mapped to a separate button. The right arm slashes and tears; the left grabs environmental objects, car doors, parking meters, loose pipes, to use as shields or improvised projectiles. Chain a grab into a finisher and you're wishboning a Brotherhood cultist for a health refill, or wrapping an enemy into the anaconda move for an ammo drop. The skill tree, split across Hitman, Execution, Darkness Powers, and Demon Arm branches, lets you lean into whatever feel suits you, surgical gunplay, pure tentacle carnage, or a mix that keeps earning you dark essence for the next upgrade. Powers like Swarm (demon arms vomit green fire that freezes enemies in place) and Black Hole (a vortex that sucks enemies into a kill zone) give combat real flavour as the campaign progresses. The "Graphic Noir" art style deserves credit too. The team hand-painted the majority of the game's assets, resulting in something that reads like a moving comic book rather than a straight cel-shade job. Light is an active mechanic, step into it and Jackie's powers vanish, which means every encounter involves scanning for light sources to shoot out before the demon arms come back online. It gives the arenas a tactical layer the AI rarely earns on its own. The enemy intelligence is notably weak, and on PC especially you can string together the same brutal combos without much pushback. The story, though, earns genuine attention: Jackie's grief over his dead girlfriend Jenny, the recurring asylum sequences that blur fantasy and reality, and Brian Bloom's voice performance as Jackie all land harder than expected from this kind of game. The real complaint, and it's a fair one, is length. A competent player finishes the campaign in around five hours, six or seven on harder difficulties. The levels are linear from entrance to exit with almost no deviation. The Vendettas co-op mode, where up to four players pick from a roster of Darkness-tainted assassins with their own unique weapon and power trees, runs parallel to Jackie's story and adds replayability, but it lacks the narrative pull of the main campaign, and the Hit List mode is essentially a mission-replay wrapper. The ending also fumbles what came before it, landing in cliffhanger territory that a sequel has never resolved. For players who haven't touched this since 2012, or who missed it entirely, the short runtime is genuinely less of a problem now than it was at full launch price. What's here is tight, violent, and consistently fun on its own terms. It does one thing, kinetic, grotesque, quad-wield mayhem with an emotional core underneath, exceptionally well. Anyone who wants a story-driven shooter that isn't trying to be a military sim will find a lot to like in the few hours it gives you.

Alex
Alex · Scout Team

Catch-all

Etiquetas

steamQuad-WieldingGraphic NoirSupernatural PowersSkill TreeCo-op VendettasGore CombatNeo-Noir StoryLight-Dark Mechanic

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

Processor
Intel Core 2 @ 2GHz / AMD Athlon 64 X2 4200+
Memory
1.5GB RAM Hard Disk Space: 10GB Video Card: 256MB NVIDIA GeForce 8600 / ATI Radeon HD 2600 Sound: DirectX Compatible Additional: Require…

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Processor
2.4 GHz Quad Core processor
Memory
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Reseñas y valoraciones

Metacritic
77
Steam
92%(20,776)

Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Digital Extremes
Distribuidora
2K
Fecha de lanzamiento
9 feb 2012

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible The Darkness II?

The Darkness II está disponible en PC.

¿Cuándo se lanzó The Darkness II?

The Darkness II se lanzó el 9 de febrero de 2012.

¿Quién desarrolló The Darkness II?

The Darkness II fue desarrollado por Digital Extremes y publicado por 2K.

¿Merece la pena comprar The Darkness II?

The Darkness II tiene una puntuación Metacritic de 77/100, lo que lo convierte en uno de los títulos destacados de Action. Mira las reseñas completas, las valoraciones y los tiempos de duración en esta página para decidir.