Compare Dying Light - Harran Inmate Bundle (DLC) prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Techland. Published by Techland Publishing. Released on 1/26/2015. Available on PC. Genres: Action, RPG. Metacritic score: 87/100.

Cosmetic inmate-themed gear for Dying Light's open-world zombie parkour. Pure vanity content - no gameplay changes, just a fresh prison-break look for your survivor.

Let's be honest about what this is: a cosmetic DLC bundle for Dying Light, Techland's first-person parkour-survival game set in the quarantine zone of Harran. If you were hoping for new story content, fresh weapons with actual stats, or anything that changes how you vault over infected heads at 2am, this is not that. The Harran Inmate Bundle drops a thematic costume set onto your survivor, dressing them up in prison-issue gear that fits the lawless, society-has-collapsed aesthetic of the base game. That's the whole pitch. Dying Light itself earns its Overwhelmingly Positive reputation through a combination of genuinely satisfying parkour movement, brutal melee combat with a deep crafting and weapon upgrade system, and a day-night cycle that actually creates tension. The night sequences, where Volatiles hunt you by sound and movement, remain some of the most effective horror-adjacent design in the genre. The RPG skeleton underneath - skill trees split across Survivor, Agility, and Power disciplines - gives you enough build room to feel like your playstyle is your own, whether you're a grappling-hook abuser or a slow methodical crafter stacking elemental damage mods. But back to this bundle. Cosmetic DLC lives and dies on two questions: does it look good, and does it fit the world? The inmate aesthetic is coherent with Harran's desperate, scavenged-everything tone. Prisoners would absolutely be part of this population, and the visual design doesn't clash with the grim urban environment. Whether that justifies a separate purchase depends entirely on how much time you're putting into the base game and how much you care about what your character looks like in first-person (hint: you mostly see your own arms and whatever absurd weapon you've duct-taped a blade to). For RPG-focused players who pick up Dying Light expecting meaningful choice architecture, branching dialogue, or narrative weight: the base game is lighter on those fronts than the genre label suggests. It's closer to a very good action game with RPG progression than a true CRPG. The story gets the job done, Kyle Crane is a functional protagonist, and there are side quests worth your time - but do not come in expecting faction consequences or dialogue trees with teeth. The systems depth lives in the combat and crafting, not the writing. If you already own Dying Light and have sunk serious hours into it, the Inmate Bundle is a fine cosmetic pick-up if the prison survivor look appeals to you. If you're new and evaluating the base game, prioritize that first - the DLC content that actually adds gameplay, like The Following expansion, is where your attention should go before anything cosmetic. Monika, Scout Team

Dying Light - Harran Inmate Bundle (DLC)
ActionRPG

Dying Light - Harran Inmate Bundle (DLC)

Jan 26, 2015TechlandTechland Publishing
GamerScout Says

Cosmetic inmate-themed gear for Dying Light's open-world zombie parkour. Pure vanity content - no gameplay changes, just a fresh prison-break look for your survivor.

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About Dying Light - Harran Inmate Bundle (DLC)

Let's be honest about what this is: a cosmetic DLC bundle for Dying Light, Techland's first-person parkour-survival game set in the quarantine zone of Harran. If you were hoping for new story content, fresh weapons with actual stats, or anything that changes how you vault over infected heads at 2am, this is not that. The Harran Inmate Bundle drops a thematic costume set onto your survivor, dressing them up in prison-issue gear that fits the lawless, society-has-collapsed aesthetic of the base game. That's the whole pitch. Dying Light itself earns its Overwhelmingly Positive reputation through a combination of genuinely satisfying parkour movement, brutal melee combat with a deep crafting and weapon upgrade system, and a day-night cycle that actually creates tension. The night sequences, where Volatiles hunt you by sound and movement, remain some of the most effective horror-adjacent design in the genre. The RPG skeleton underneath - skill trees split across Survivor, Agility, and Power disciplines - gives you enough build room to feel like your playstyle is your own, whether you're a grappling-hook abuser or a slow methodical crafter stacking elemental damage mods. But back to this bundle. Cosmetic DLC lives and dies on two questions: does it look good, and does it fit the world? The inmate aesthetic is coherent with Harran's desperate, scavenged-everything tone. Prisoners would absolutely be part of this population, and the visual design doesn't clash with the grim urban environment. Whether that justifies a separate purchase depends entirely on how much time you're putting into the base game and how much you care about what your character looks like in first-person (hint: you mostly see your own arms and whatever absurd weapon you've duct-taped a blade to). For RPG-focused players who pick up Dying Light expecting meaningful choice architecture, branching dialogue, or narrative weight: the base game is lighter on those fronts than the genre label suggests. It's closer to a very good action game with RPG progression than a true CRPG. The story gets the job done, Kyle Crane is a functional protagonist, and there are side quests worth your time - but do not come in expecting faction consequences or dialogue trees with teeth. The systems depth lives in the combat and crafting, not the writing. If you already own Dying Light and have sunk serious hours into it, the Inmate Bundle is a fine cosmetic pick-up if the prison survivor look appeals to you. If you're new and evaluating the base game, prioritize that first - the DLC content that actually adds gameplay, like The Following expansion, is where your attention should go before anything cosmetic. Monika, Scout Team

Tags

steamCosmetic DLCCharacter CustomizationZombie SurvivalParkourFirst-Person MeleeCrafting SystemOpen World Survival

System Requirements

System requirements for Dying Light - Harran Inmate Bundle (DLC) aren't listed yet. Check the store page for the latest specs.

Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
87
Steam
95%(486,646)

Game Info

Developer
Techland
Publisher
Techland Publishing
Release Date
Jan 26, 2015

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