theHunter: Call of the Wild™ - Labrador Retriever (DLC)
A loyal Labrador Retriever companion DLC for theHunter: Call of the Wild, adding a trained retrieval dog to your hunting trips on Xbox.
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About theHunter: Call of the Wild™ - Labrador Retriever (DLC)
Let's be clear about what this is: a single-purpose DLC that drops a Labrador Retriever into your theHunter: Call of the Wild sessions. The dog tracks wounded animals, retrieves downed birds, and follows your lead across the open-world reserves. If you've been playing the base game solo and finding the loop of shoot-track-retrieve a little mechanical, the Labrador genuinely changes the rhythm of a hunt. You send the dog on a track, watch it work the scent trail, and it leads you to a fallen animal you might otherwise have spent ten minutes circling a bush to find. For simulation purists, this matters more than it sounds. Retrieval efficiency affects how many hunts you can run in a session, and for waterfowl-heavy playstyles, a retriever is practically mandatory kit. The Labrador is specifically modelled for that role, so if your preferred reserve and loadout leans toward duck or pheasant hunting, the DLC earns its place in the build. It is less transformative if you are running large-calibre deer or bison setups where the dog's retrieval role is secondary to the stalking phase. The honest caveat here is scope. This is not a new map, not a new weapon class, not a campaign expansion. It is one dog breed doing one job. Expansive Worlds has released numerous DLC packs for this title, and the Labrador sits in the cosmetic-to-functional middle ground. It is functional, but narrowly so. If you are a newer player still learning wind direction, animal behaviour zones, and caller timing, the Labrador will not accelerate that learning curve in any meaningful way. Experienced players who already run the full loop efficiently will notice the quality-of-life gain faster. Multiplayer co-op sessions are where the dog arguably shines most. In a group hunt, assigning one player a retriever role while others manage positioning creates a small but satisfying layer of coordination that the base game lacks. It is not a deep systems addition, but it adds a conversational hook to sessions that might otherwise feel like four people independently hunting in the same zone. Bottom line from a sim-depth perspective: the Labrador DLC is a focused, well-executed accessory for players who have already decided theHunter is their long-term hunting sim of choice. It does not redefine anything, but it does what it says without padding or fuss. Newcomers should buy the base game and at least one reserve expansion before looking here. Diego, Scout Team
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Game Info
- Developer
- Expansive Worlds
- Publisher
- Avalanche Studios
- Release Date
- Feb 16, 2017