Far Cry 6 Lost Between Worlds (DLC)
Far Cry 6's standalone DLC drops Dani into 15 survival trials inside a fractured alien dimension. It's a sharp left turn from Yara's open world.
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About Far Cry 6 Lost Between Worlds (DLC)
Lost Between Worlds is Far Cry 6's most experimental piece of post-launch content, and it earns that label honestly. Rather than extending the main game's guerrilla-warfare sandbox, it pulls protagonist Dani Rojas out of Yara entirely and drops them into a splintered, otherworldly dimension where the rules of Far Cry's usual playground no longer apply. The structure is built around 15 discrete trials - self-contained combat and traversal challenges - that you clear one by one. Think of it less as open-world Far Cry and more as a greatest-hits remix of the shooting mechanics wrapped in a sci-fi fever dream. The trials themselves vary enough to stay interesting across the runtime. Some lean heavily on combat, asking you to hold out or push through enemy waves with the guns and gear you have earned. Others are more movement-focused, playing with verticality and the eerie geometry of the fractured dimension setting. The alien visual language is a genuine highlight: broken architecture floating in void-like space, strange lighting, and a palette that has nothing in common with Yara's lush tropics. If the base game's open world ever felt too familiar, this DLC at least looks and feels like something different. Where Lost Between Worlds earns skepticism is in depth. The trial format is fun in short bursts but it strips away the systems - base-building, vehicle chaos, faction relationships - that gave Far Cry 6 its texture. What's left is essentially a shooting gallery with a weird coat of paint, and while the shooting is still competent and occasionally satisfying, there isn't much mechanical invention underneath the new art direction. The story framing is thin too: an alien entity, a deal, a way home. It serves the structure rather than adding anything you'll remember past the credits. Who is this actually for? Players who already completed Far Cry 6 and want a contained, tightly-scoped challenge to return for will find enough here for a few solid hours. It's a better fit for that audience than for anyone hoping this DLC expands the world in a meaningful way. The co-op option is a genuine plus - running the trials with a friend smooths over the thinner moments and adds coordination decisions that the solo experience can't replicate. Partial controller support on PC works well enough, though keyboard and mouse remains the sharper option for the more precise trial sections. As a piece of DLC it is competent, visually distinct, and over relatively quickly. It does one thing well - it gives Far Cry 6's gunplay a weird, pressure-cooker context it never had in the base game. Whether that's worth your time depends entirely on how much more Far Cry 6 shooting you actually want. Alex, Scout Team
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Game Info
- Developer
- Ubisoft Toronto, Ubisoft Montreal, Ubisoft Kyiv, Ubisoft Shanghai, Ubisoft Berlin
- Publisher
- Ubisoft
- Release Date
- May 11, 2023