A Hat in Time - Seal the Deal (DLC)
Seal the Deal adds a punishing Death Wish mode and a creepy cruise ship chapter to one of the best 3D platformers in recent memory. Compact, confident, worth it.
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About A Hat in Time - Seal the Deal (DLC)
Seal the Deal is a DLC expansion for A Hat in Time, the collectathon 3D platformer from Gears for Breakfast that wore its love of Super Mario Sunshine and Banjo-Kazooie openly and without apology. If you finished the base game and wanted more, this adds two distinct chunks of content: a new chapter called The Arctic Cruise, and Death Wish mode, a brutal challenge layer stapled on top of everything you already played. They feel almost like two separate products bundled together, and that split personality is both the DLC's strength and its most notable quirk. The Arctic Cruise is the gentler half. Hat Kid boards an ocean liner run by a cast of seal characters, and the chapter leans into the series' theatrical, slightly absurdist sense of humor. The environments are bright and well-constructed, the objectives loop through the ship's decks in satisfying ways, and there are a couple of genuinely funny setpiece moments that match the base game's charm. It is shorter than the main chapters, clocking in on the lighter side, but it never overstays itself. Gears for Breakfast clearly understood that a tight, well-paced episode beats a bloated one, and The Arctic Cruise lands that balance. Death Wish is another story entirely, and it is emphatically not for everyone. It recontextualizes existing levels as challenge runs with wildly specific constraints: no hats, no double jump, one hit kills, escort missions where the escort is determined to get itself killed. The difficulty spikes are real and occasionally verge on mean-spirited. For players who wanted A Hat in Time to push back harder, this is a significant amount of content with genuine replay depth. For casual players or anyone who just wants more of the warm, bouncy platforming from the base game, Death Wish can feel like a different game wearing the same costume. What holds both pieces together is the craftsmanship that made the original so appealing. The animation on Hat Kid remains expressive and tactile. The controls still feel precise enough to make failure feel like your fault rather than the game's. The soundtrack, always one of A Hat in Time's quiet superpowers, continues to do heavy lifting here, shifting tone between the cruise ship's breezy lounge energy and the tenser, more anxious soundscape of Death Wish's harder contracts. Small details in the environmental design reward players who slow down and look around, which is classic Gears for Breakfast. If you have not played the base game yet, stop here and start there. Seal the Deal is not an entry point. But if you loved Hat in Time and have been waiting for a reason to go back, the combination of a new chapter and a substantial challenge mode makes this a meaningful addition. Just go in knowing which half of the DLC actually speaks to you, because the gap between The Arctic Cruise's accessibility and Death Wish's severity is wider than the packaging suggests. Kai, Scout Team
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Game Info
- Developer
- Gears for Breakfast
- Publisher
- Gears for Breakfast
- Release Date
- Oct 5, 2017