Compare Dying Light - Retrowave 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.

Neon-soaked cosmetic DLC for Dying Light that swaps grimy post-apocalypse for synthwave aesthetics. Pure style, zero survival impact.

Let me be upfront: this is a cosmetic bundle for Dying Light, not the base game itself. The Retrowave Bundle drops a set of synthwave-themed skins into a first-person open-world parkour survival game that already has one of the better action loops of its generation. You get visual reskins, presumably for weapons or gear, layered on top of Dying Light's core formula of scavenging, crafting, and outrunning infected hordes across a crumbling city called Harran. Dying Light as a foundation is genuinely worth talking about. The parkour movement system still holds up, rewarding players who learn rooftop routes and verticality rather than ground-level sprinting past shambling threats. Combat mixes melee weapon crafting with stamina management, and the day-night cycle changes the threat level dramatically once volatiles start hunting you after dark. It is more action game than RPG despite the genre tags, with skill trees across Agility, Power, and Survivor branches that let you specialize toward a playstyle over time. The writing is functional rather than inspired, and the main quest occasionally leans on filler errands, but the open world gives you enough freedom to mostly ignore the padding. The Retrowave Bundle specifically is for players who want their zombie apocalypse drenched in hot pink and electric blue. If you already own Dying Light and have a soft spot for 80s synthwave aesthetics, this is a low-friction cosmetic pickup. It does not add quests, weapons with new stats, story beats, or mechanical systems. The base game's narrative, which involves a covert operative trapped in a quarantine zone and slowly entangled with local factions, remains completely unchanged. Same city, same infected, same parkour, different visual flavor on your gear. From an RPG-lens perspective, the bundle has essentially nothing to evaluate on character arcs or choice consequences. Dying Light itself is light on branching narrative, heavier on emergent moment-to-moment tension. The character you play is competent and fairly blank, more a vessel for parkour spectacle than a richly written protagonist. If you came here hoping for Disco Elysium-level introspection in your zombie game, lower those expectations considerably. What Dying Light does offer is solid build progression and co-op play that can genuinely change how you approach the world. Bottom line on the bundle itself: judge it as a cosmetic add-on, nothing more. It is for committed fans of the base game who want to customize their experience visually. If you do not yet own Dying Light and landed here by accident, the base game with its 95 percent positive Steam rating is the more interesting purchase decision. Monika, Scout Team

Dying Light - Retrowave Bundle (DLC)
ActionRPG

Dying Light - Retrowave Bundle (DLC)

Jan 26, 2015TechlandTechland Publishing
GamerScout Says

Neon-soaked cosmetic DLC for Dying Light that swaps grimy post-apocalypse for synthwave aesthetics. Pure style, zero survival impact.

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About Dying Light - Retrowave Bundle (DLC)

Let me be upfront: this is a cosmetic bundle for Dying Light, not the base game itself. The Retrowave Bundle drops a set of synthwave-themed skins into a first-person open-world parkour survival game that already has one of the better action loops of its generation. You get visual reskins, presumably for weapons or gear, layered on top of Dying Light's core formula of scavenging, crafting, and outrunning infected hordes across a crumbling city called Harran. Dying Light as a foundation is genuinely worth talking about. The parkour movement system still holds up, rewarding players who learn rooftop routes and verticality rather than ground-level sprinting past shambling threats. Combat mixes melee weapon crafting with stamina management, and the day-night cycle changes the threat level dramatically once volatiles start hunting you after dark. It is more action game than RPG despite the genre tags, with skill trees across Agility, Power, and Survivor branches that let you specialize toward a playstyle over time. The writing is functional rather than inspired, and the main quest occasionally leans on filler errands, but the open world gives you enough freedom to mostly ignore the padding. The Retrowave Bundle specifically is for players who want their zombie apocalypse drenched in hot pink and electric blue. If you already own Dying Light and have a soft spot for 80s synthwave aesthetics, this is a low-friction cosmetic pickup. It does not add quests, weapons with new stats, story beats, or mechanical systems. The base game's narrative, which involves a covert operative trapped in a quarantine zone and slowly entangled with local factions, remains completely unchanged. Same city, same infected, same parkour, different visual flavor on your gear. From an RPG-lens perspective, the bundle has essentially nothing to evaluate on character arcs or choice consequences. Dying Light itself is light on branching narrative, heavier on emergent moment-to-moment tension. The character you play is competent and fairly blank, more a vessel for parkour spectacle than a richly written protagonist. If you came here hoping for Disco Elysium-level introspection in your zombie game, lower those expectations considerably. What Dying Light does offer is solid build progression and co-op play that can genuinely change how you approach the world. Bottom line on the bundle itself: judge it as a cosmetic add-on, nothing more. It is for committed fans of the base game who want to customize their experience visually. If you do not yet own Dying Light and landed here by accident, the base game with its 95 percent positive Steam rating is the more interesting purchase decision. Monika, Scout Team

Tags

steamCosmetic DLCSynthwave AestheticFirst-Person ParkourZombie SurvivalCraftingSkill TreeOpen WorldCo-op Compatible

System Requirements

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

Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
87
Steam
95%(486,640)

Game Info

Developer
Techland
Publisher
Techland Publishing
Release Date
Jan 26, 2015

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