Compare theHunter: Call of the Wild - Rancho del Arroyo (DLC) prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Expansive Worlds. Published by Expansive Worlds. Released on 2/16/2017. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Adventure, Simulation, Sports.

A sprawling Southwest US hunting reserve for theHunter: Call of the Wild, adding new terrain, species, and missions to one of PC's most grounded hunting sims.

Rancho del Arroyo is a paid DLC reserve for theHunter: Call of the Wild, dropping you into a sun-baked Southwestern landscape modeled on the high desert and canyon country of the American Southwest. If the base game's European and African maps felt lush and green, this one flips the palette entirely - dry arroyos, scrubland, mesas, and sparse brush that forces you to think much harder about concealment and wind direction. It is a different kind of hunting puzzle, and that shift in environment is the real reason to pick this up. From a systems perspective, the reserve layers cleanly onto the base game's existing mechanics. You are still managing caller timing, scent control, and shot placement with the same satisfying ballistics model, but the open sightlines here reward long-range rifle builds more than any of the denser forest maps. Species introduced or heavily featured in Rancho del Arroyo include pronghorn, Rio Grande turkey, and coyote alongside mule deer, which means your loadout planning actually changes. Pronghorn in particular demand a different approach - they are fast, skittish, and do not forgive a poor stalk. If you have been coasting on close-range shotgun setups in the base game, this map will retrain your habits. The mission structure follows the same format as the base game: a series of guided hunts that introduce the terrain and species, with optional side objectives for completionists. There is nothing here that reinvents the wheel, and veteran players will breeze through the narrative side in a few sessions. The real longevity, as always in theHunter, comes from the sandbox - chasing trophy scores, completing species logs, and running co-op sessions with friends who want to split up across the map and call targets toward each other. The co-op flow on a wide-open desert reserve like this one is genuinely different from forested maps, with more visibility and longer coordination distances. Where Rancho del Arroyo falls short is largely a structural critique of how theHunter handles DLC in general. Reserve packs are priced as standalone additions, and if you are building a full map library, the costs stack up. The reserve itself has no unique gameplay mechanics - no new weapon types, no new core systems. What you are paying for is geography and species variety, which is a legitimate value if you have already sunk serious hours into the base game and want fresh terrain. If you are newer to theHunter, the base game maps give you more than enough to work with before considering this purchase. For a hunting sim that sits at 89% positive across a massive review pool, theHunter has clearly found its audience, and Rancho del Arroyo is a well-executed piece of that ecosystem. The map is detailed, the species selection is thoughtful, and the desert atmosphere is distinct enough to justify its existence. Just know you are buying scenery and fauna, not a mechanical expansion. Diego, Scout Team

theHunter: Call of the Wild - Rancho del Arroyo (DLC)
AdventureSimulationSports

theHunter: Call of the Wild - Rancho del Arroyo (DLC)

Feb 16, 2017Expansive Worlds
GamerScout Says

A sprawling Southwest US hunting reserve for theHunter: Call of the Wild, adding new terrain, species, and missions to one of PC's most grounded hunting sims.

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About theHunter: Call of the Wild - Rancho del Arroyo (DLC)

Rancho del Arroyo is a paid DLC reserve for theHunter: Call of the Wild, dropping you into a sun-baked Southwestern landscape modeled on the high desert and canyon country of the American Southwest. If the base game's European and African maps felt lush and green, this one flips the palette entirely - dry arroyos, scrubland, mesas, and sparse brush that forces you to think much harder about concealment and wind direction. It is a different kind of hunting puzzle, and that shift in environment is the real reason to pick this up. From a systems perspective, the reserve layers cleanly onto the base game's existing mechanics. You are still managing caller timing, scent control, and shot placement with the same satisfying ballistics model, but the open sightlines here reward long-range rifle builds more than any of the denser forest maps. Species introduced or heavily featured in Rancho del Arroyo include pronghorn, Rio Grande turkey, and coyote alongside mule deer, which means your loadout planning actually changes. Pronghorn in particular demand a different approach - they are fast, skittish, and do not forgive a poor stalk. If you have been coasting on close-range shotgun setups in the base game, this map will retrain your habits. The mission structure follows the same format as the base game: a series of guided hunts that introduce the terrain and species, with optional side objectives for completionists. There is nothing here that reinvents the wheel, and veteran players will breeze through the narrative side in a few sessions. The real longevity, as always in theHunter, comes from the sandbox - chasing trophy scores, completing species logs, and running co-op sessions with friends who want to split up across the map and call targets toward each other. The co-op flow on a wide-open desert reserve like this one is genuinely different from forested maps, with more visibility and longer coordination distances. Where Rancho del Arroyo falls short is largely a structural critique of how theHunter handles DLC in general. Reserve packs are priced as standalone additions, and if you are building a full map library, the costs stack up. The reserve itself has no unique gameplay mechanics - no new weapon types, no new core systems. What you are paying for is geography and species variety, which is a legitimate value if you have already sunk serious hours into the base game and want fresh terrain. If you are newer to theHunter, the base game maps give you more than enough to work with before considering this purchase. For a hunting sim that sits at 89% positive across a massive review pool, theHunter has clearly found its audience, and Rancho del Arroyo is a well-executed piece of that ecosystem. The map is detailed, the species selection is thoughtful, and the desert atmosphere is distinct enough to justify its existence. Just know you are buying scenery and fauna, not a mechanical expansion. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

steamHunting SimOpen World ReserveLong-Range GameplayCo-op HuntingWildlife VarietyDesert EnvironmentDLC ContentTrophy Hunting

System Requirements

System requirements for theHunter: Call of the Wild - Rancho del Arroyo (DLC) aren't listed yet. Check the store page for the latest specs.

Reviews & Ratings

Steam
89%(197,260)

Game Info

Developer
Expansive Worlds
Publisher
Expansive Worlds
Release Date
Feb 16, 2017

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