Call of the Wild: The Angler™ – Norway Reserve
Trollsporet Nature Reserve drops you into folklore-soaked Norwegian wilderness for a slow, scenic fishing sim with real geographical variety - peaceful but polarising.
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About Call of the Wild: The Angler™ – Norway Reserve
Call of the Wild: The Angler is a open-world fishing simulation built around reading terrain, matching lures to conditions, and exercising the kind of patience that separates dedicated anglers from people who just want action every thirty seconds. The Norway Reserve - officially named Trollsporet Nature Reserve - is a paid DLC expansion that adds a fresh map steeped in Scandinavian folklore aesthetics: dense pine forests, misty fjord-adjacent waterways, and the kind of quiet that either relaxes you completely or makes you check whether your controller has gone to sleep. If you already own the base game and are comfortable with its systems, this is a straightforward geographical expansion, nothing more and nothing less. From a systems perspective, The Angler's core loop is about locating fish species in the right habitat, selecting appropriate tackle, and managing casting precision and retrieve speed. The Norway Reserve introduces terrain that rewards players who have already internalized those fundamentals. Waterways here tend to feature stronger currents and more structured environments than some earlier maps, which means lure weight and retrieval rhythm matter more than they might in calmer settings. If you are the type of player who genuinely reads up on which rod action suits a fast-moving river versus a still lake, this expansion gives you new terrain to apply that knowledge. If you are still figuring out the base game's fish-finder mechanics, come back to this one later. Where the expansion struggles is in justifying its existence as a premium add-on against the relatively modest amount of new mechanical content it introduces. You get a new map with new visual character, some regional fish species, and the folkloric atmosphere of trolls-and-trails marketing copy. What you do not get is new fishing mechanics, gear systems, or any structural change to how missions and challenges work. For a simulation audience that tracks progression spreadsheet-style, the content-to-cost ratio is the central question, and with only 97 Steam reviews sitting at a Mixed 78%, it is clear the community is split on whether Trollsporet justifies the purchase over simply replaying existing reserves. The AI in fishing sims is less about opponent intelligence and more about ecosystem simulation - do fish behave plausibly given weather, time of day, and water temperature? The Angler's base systems are competent here, and Norway Reserve inherits all of that without regression. Cloudy mornings still produce better surface activity, predators still cluster around structural features, and barometric pressure still nudges behaviour in ways that reward players who track conditions. The reserve's folklore framing does not affect gameplay mechanics at all, so treat it as set dressing rather than a systemic feature. For newcomers considering whether to start here: do not. The Norway Reserve is not a standalone product. Start with the base game, spend time learning the casting and retrieval mechanics, unlock a few rod-and-reel combinations, and then return when you want fresh geography. For veterans of The Angler who have exhausted their current maps and genuinely enjoy the meditative loop, Trollsporet offers a competent change of scenery with enough terrain variety to stay interesting for several sessions. It is a side dish, not a main course, and should be evaluated accordingly. Diego, Scout Team
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Game Info
- Developer
- Expansive Worlds
- Publisher
- Avalanche Studios
- Release Date
- Dec 15, 2022