Daft however good curation sim Two Level Museum is grabbing its D20s and venturing into the world of medieval fantasy for its first paid DLC launch, which guarantees magical reveals (and ensuing curses for unsuspecting company), RPG-inspired expeditions, and extra this July.
Fantasy Finds, as developer Two Level Studios is asking its DLC, introduces a complete of 40 mysterious and magically inclined reveals. You’ve got obtained your Flying Carpet, your Teanie Kettle, your Novel Wardrobe, and extra, all granting helpful blessings to company. Except, that’s, you fail to maintain them well-maintained – by which case you will be coping with cursed patrons as an alternative.
As within the base sport, all these curios are acquired out on expeditions, which is the place Fantasy Finds’ RPG-style twist is available in. With the intention to observe down or preserve the DLC’s new reveals, you will want to rent new Fantasy Consultants. These are available in a spread of acquainted courses – barbarian, wizard, rogue, and bard – every with their very own stats. “Does your staff have sufficient mixed Power and Dexterity to counter a dragon assault?”, Two Factors Studios teases. “Maybe you want the proper mixture of Intelligence and Luck to beat a Picked Lock shortcut.”
Fantasy Finds additionally consists of three new visitor archetypes, 26 decorations and utility gadgets, a brand new medieval-themed paint job on your expedition chopper, Legendary Gear buffs for employees, plus new interactive shows, banners, wallpapers, flooring, and extra. All this arrives for PlayStation, Xbox, and PC on seventeenth July, and whereas there isn’t any phrase of a value but, a week-long 10 % launch low cost is confirmed. And if you have not performed Two Level Museum but (which it’s best to if you happen to’re a administration sim fan, as a result of it is nice and simply one of the best entry within the sequence to this point) you may presently choose it up with 20 % off as a part of the Steam Summer season Sale.
“Come for the clowns and cavemen,” Eurogamer contributing editor Christian Donlan wrote in his 4 star assessment of Two Level Museum, “keep for the zombie capitalism.”