Compare MK1: Conan the Barbarian prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by NetherRealm Studios. Published by Warner Bros. Games. Released on 1/28/2025. Available on Xbox Series X, Xbox One, Xbox. Genres: Action.

Arnie's Cimmerian finally gets his MK slot, and if sword-heavy mid-range pressure with genuinely film-faithful Fatalities is your thing, this DLC punches above its weight.

I'll be upfront: my expectations for a guest-character DLC pack are usually modest. NetherRealm has a habit of dressing up crossover fighters in flash while leaving them mechanically hollow. Conan the Barbarian, the fifth DLC character in Mortal Kombat 1's Kombat Pack 2, mostly bucks that trend, and the reason is simple - the moveset actually fits the source material rather than fighting against it. Conan's entire kit is built around his iconic Atlantean Sword, and the design team clearly did their homework on the 1982 film. His normals chain into mid-range sword pokes and slashes with a grounded, deliberate rhythm that feels distinct from the air-combo-heavy meta that surrounds him on the roster. Sword spinning and a punishing overhead chop headline his special moves, while his more brutal tool - embedding the blade into an opponent's shoulder before wrenching it free - gives him a brutal presence at close range. He is not an aerial character. Air play is minimal and that is by design: Conan is a straight-line brawler, and forcing yourself to play that way actually feels thematically correct. If you prefer rushdown or zoning archetypes, you will bounce off him fast. If you like controlled, deliberate pressure and landing a big overhead, he rewards that. The Fatalities are where the licensed fantasy really pays off. The "Secret Ingredient" finisher - kicking a downed opponent into a cauldron, removing a limb, and fishing their skull out with a sword - has exactly the medieval grimness the film trades in. The second Fatality mirrors Conan's climactic kill of Thulsa Doom from the 1982 movie almost beat for beat, which is a smart piece of fan service that will land hard if you know the film. His Animality, where he transforms into a bull and gores his opponent, ties into the broader Animality system added in the Khaos Reigns update and slots in cleanly. Voice actor Chris Cox does solid impression work in place of Schwarzenegger himself, and the likeness capture is close enough to sell the fantasy without feeling like a cheap caricature. The honest caveat is context: this is a single DLC fighter, not a standalone product, and its value is entirely contingent on whether you are already invested in Mortal Kombat 1. The base game has improved considerably since launch - patches have addressed performance and balance issues - and Kombat Pack 2 owners got Conan a week early, which tells you how NetherRealm values its season pass holders. Community reception sits at a solid majority positive, with most criticism directed at MK1 as a whole rather than Conan specifically. Some players find his fighting style on the slower side compared to flashier roster options; that is a legitimate concern if you play competitively, since he offers limited air pressure and minimal long-range options outside of a kameo toss. For casual and story-focused players, those same qualities make him feel coherent and satisfying to pick up. Bottom line: if you own MK1 and have any fondness for the Schwarzenegger era of sword-and-sorcery cinema, Conan delivers one of the better-realized guest character packages NetherRealm has put out. The moveset has a genuine identity, the Fatalities are film-literate, and the overall package respects the source material in ways that matter. Alex, Scout Team

MK1: Conan the Barbarian
Action

MK1: Conan the Barbarian

Jan 28, 2025NetherRealm StudiosWarner Bros. Games
GamerScout Says

Arnie's Cimmerian finally gets his MK slot, and if sword-heavy mid-range pressure with genuinely film-faithful Fatalities is your thing, this DLC punches above its weight.

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About MK1: Conan the Barbarian

I'll be upfront: my expectations for a guest-character DLC pack are usually modest. NetherRealm has a habit of dressing up crossover fighters in flash while leaving them mechanically hollow. Conan the Barbarian, the fifth DLC character in Mortal Kombat 1's Kombat Pack 2, mostly bucks that trend, and the reason is simple - the moveset actually fits the source material rather than fighting against it. Conan's entire kit is built around his iconic Atlantean Sword, and the design team clearly did their homework on the 1982 film. His normals chain into mid-range sword pokes and slashes with a grounded, deliberate rhythm that feels distinct from the air-combo-heavy meta that surrounds him on the roster. Sword spinning and a punishing overhead chop headline his special moves, while his more brutal tool - embedding the blade into an opponent's shoulder before wrenching it free - gives him a brutal presence at close range. He is not an aerial character. Air play is minimal and that is by design: Conan is a straight-line brawler, and forcing yourself to play that way actually feels thematically correct. If you prefer rushdown or zoning archetypes, you will bounce off him fast. If you like controlled, deliberate pressure and landing a big overhead, he rewards that. The Fatalities are where the licensed fantasy really pays off. The "Secret Ingredient" finisher - kicking a downed opponent into a cauldron, removing a limb, and fishing their skull out with a sword - has exactly the medieval grimness the film trades in. The second Fatality mirrors Conan's climactic kill of Thulsa Doom from the 1982 movie almost beat for beat, which is a smart piece of fan service that will land hard if you know the film. His Animality, where he transforms into a bull and gores his opponent, ties into the broader Animality system added in the Khaos Reigns update and slots in cleanly. Voice actor Chris Cox does solid impression work in place of Schwarzenegger himself, and the likeness capture is close enough to sell the fantasy without feeling like a cheap caricature. The honest caveat is context: this is a single DLC fighter, not a standalone product, and its value is entirely contingent on whether you are already invested in Mortal Kombat 1. The base game has improved considerably since launch - patches have addressed performance and balance issues - and Kombat Pack 2 owners got Conan a week early, which tells you how NetherRealm values its season pass holders. Community reception sits at a solid majority positive, with most criticism directed at MK1 as a whole rather than Conan specifically. Some players find his fighting style on the slower side compared to flashier roster options; that is a legitimate concern if you play competitively, since he offers limited air pressure and minimal long-range options outside of a kameo toss. For casual and story-focused players, those same qualities make him feel coherent and satisfying to pick up. Bottom line: if you own MK1 and have any fondness for the Schwarzenegger era of sword-and-sorcery cinema, Conan delivers one of the better-realized guest character packages NetherRealm has put out. The moveset has a genuine identity, the Fatalities are film-literate, and the overall package respects the source material in ways that matter. Alex, Scout Team

Tags

xboxGuest Character DLCSword FighterMid-Range PressureFilm-Licensed CharacterKombat Pack 2Fatality DepthSingle-Purchase DLC

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Reviews & Ratings

Steam
83%(35)

Game Info

Developer
NetherRealm Studios
Publisher
Warner Bros. Games
Release Date
Jan 28, 2025

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