Compare Dying Light 2 Stay Human Deluxe Edition prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Techland. Published by Techland Publishing. Released on 2/3/2022. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Adventure, RPG.

Parkour-driven zombie RPG set in a crumbling open world where your faction choices reshape the city. The Deluxe Edition bundles cosmetic extras and a story DLC on top.

Dying Light 2 Stay Human is an open-world action RPG built around two things: fluid first-person parkour and a city that supposedly bends to your decisions. You play as Aiden Caldwell, a wanderer looking for his sister in Villedor, a post-apocalyptic European metropolis where survivors have fractured into rival factions. The Peacekeepers want militarized order, the Survivors want freedom, and you are constantly asked to pick sides by assigning control of facilities across the map. In practice, each faction unlocks different traversal tools and environmental traps, which is a genuinely clever way to tie narrative stakes to movement mechanics. Parkour in Dying Light 2 remains the series' strongest card. Vaulting, wall-running, and grappling through a dense urban environment feels responsive enough that you will voluntarily complicate your route just to feel it. The RPG bones are functional but not deep. There are two separate skill trees, one for combat and one for parkour, and you level them by doing the relevant activity rather than by dumping a shared pool of points. Combat skills unlock through fighting, traversal skills through moving. It is a clean loop that keeps both sides of the game feeling lived-in. Build variety exists at the weapon-crafting layer too, with mods adding elemental effects like fire, shock, and toxic to your melee arsenal, though weapons still degrade and disappear the way they did in the first game, which will continue to irritate players who get attached to a specific pipe bomb. Boss encounters are not particularly inventive, and the enemy roster, while visually varied between human factions and infected, starts to repeat faster than the forty-plus hour runtime can absorb. Where Dying Light 2 struggles is the writing. The main story has the bones of something interesting, family trauma wrapped inside a conspiracy about bioweapons and a pre-fall villain organisation, but the dialogue frequently undercuts its own weight with pacing that rushes past moments that deserved room to breathe. Side quests range from genuinely memorable character vignettes to fetch-quest padding that respects neither your time nor Villedor's lore. The faction choice system, marketed heavily as city-shaping, ends up feeling less like Baldur's Gate 3 and more like a series of binary toggles with cosmetic downstream effects. The city does change visibly, which is worth something, but do not go in expecting the kind of consequence cascade that makes you reload a save to see what you missed. The Deluxe Edition adds the Legendary outfit, weapon skin, weapon charms, and a story DLC released post-launch. The cosmetics are cosmetics: they look fine and do nothing for moment-to-moment play. The story DLC adds hours of content and is worth having if you finish the base game and want more time in Villedor. Co-op for up to four players is available throughout, and it is a legitimate argument for the game. Running rooftops with friends while someone else handles the crafting spreadsheet makes the looter-RPG scaffolding feel far more entertaining than it does in isolation. If you are chasing narrative depth and meaningful branching on the level of classic CRPGs, Dying Light 2 will leave you wanting. If you want a generous, kinetic open-world game where the movement system never gets old and the zombie-clearing loop stays satisfying across dozens of hours, especially in co-op, there is a real game here worth your attention. Monika, Scout Team

Dying Light 2 Stay Human Deluxe Edition
ActionAdventureRPG

Dying Light 2 Stay Human Deluxe Edition

Feb 3, 2022TechlandTechland Publishing
GamerScout Says

Parkour-driven zombie RPG set in a crumbling open world where your faction choices reshape the city. The Deluxe Edition bundles cosmetic extras and a story DLC on top.

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About Dying Light 2 Stay Human Deluxe Edition

Dying Light 2 Stay Human is an open-world action RPG built around two things: fluid first-person parkour and a city that supposedly bends to your decisions. You play as Aiden Caldwell, a wanderer looking for his sister in Villedor, a post-apocalyptic European metropolis where survivors have fractured into rival factions. The Peacekeepers want militarized order, the Survivors want freedom, and you are constantly asked to pick sides by assigning control of facilities across the map. In practice, each faction unlocks different traversal tools and environmental traps, which is a genuinely clever way to tie narrative stakes to movement mechanics. Parkour in Dying Light 2 remains the series' strongest card. Vaulting, wall-running, and grappling through a dense urban environment feels responsive enough that you will voluntarily complicate your route just to feel it. The RPG bones are functional but not deep. There are two separate skill trees, one for combat and one for parkour, and you level them by doing the relevant activity rather than by dumping a shared pool of points. Combat skills unlock through fighting, traversal skills through moving. It is a clean loop that keeps both sides of the game feeling lived-in. Build variety exists at the weapon-crafting layer too, with mods adding elemental effects like fire, shock, and toxic to your melee arsenal, though weapons still degrade and disappear the way they did in the first game, which will continue to irritate players who get attached to a specific pipe bomb. Boss encounters are not particularly inventive, and the enemy roster, while visually varied between human factions and infected, starts to repeat faster than the forty-plus hour runtime can absorb. Where Dying Light 2 struggles is the writing. The main story has the bones of something interesting, family trauma wrapped inside a conspiracy about bioweapons and a pre-fall villain organisation, but the dialogue frequently undercuts its own weight with pacing that rushes past moments that deserved room to breathe. Side quests range from genuinely memorable character vignettes to fetch-quest padding that respects neither your time nor Villedor's lore. The faction choice system, marketed heavily as city-shaping, ends up feeling less like Baldur's Gate 3 and more like a series of binary toggles with cosmetic downstream effects. The city does change visibly, which is worth something, but do not go in expecting the kind of consequence cascade that makes you reload a save to see what you missed. The Deluxe Edition adds the Legendary outfit, weapon skin, weapon charms, and a story DLC released post-launch. The cosmetics are cosmetics: they look fine and do nothing for moment-to-moment play. The story DLC adds hours of content and is worth having if you finish the base game and want more time in Villedor. Co-op for up to four players is available throughout, and it is a legitimate argument for the game. Running rooftops with friends while someone else handles the crafting spreadsheet makes the looter-RPG scaffolding feel far more entertaining than it does in isolation. If you are chasing narrative depth and meaningful branching on the level of classic CRPGs, Dying Light 2 will leave you wanting. If you want a generous, kinetic open-world game where the movement system never gets old and the zombie-clearing loop stays satisfying across dozens of hours, especially in co-op, there is a real game here worth your attention. Monika, Scout Team

Tags

steamParkourFaction ChoicesWeapon CraftingDay-Night CycleZombie SurvivalMelee CombatLooter RPG4-Player Co-opOpen World Traversal

System Requirements

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Game Info

Developer
Techland
Publisher
Techland Publishing
Release Date
Feb 3, 2022

Features

Single-playerMulti-playerCo-opOnline Co-opSteam AchievementsFull controller supportSteam Trading CardsSteam Cloud+2 more

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