Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

‘Destiny 2’ hits the reset button, despite growing pains

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feel familiar. Character classes, controls and gear types have been largely untouched, except for some new special abilities.

“Destiny 2” mostly consists of “quality of life” improvemen­ts. All of the areas to explore are new and much more lively and better designed than their predecesso­rs. Worlds feel lived in with less wasted open space, which was the case in the original. There’s finally a map to reference that lays out random public events, treasures, missions and people to talk to. Accessing a map with a push of a button will make players wonder how they playedwith­out one.

“Destiny2” suffers from the problem brought by expectatio­ns. Should “Destiny 2” be compared to “Destiny” in its original form, or should it be compared to the end of the original “Destiny”; a game that benefited from four expansions and updates? Those expansions fixed problems that no longer need to be fixed. So, one should expect the same amount of content that was available at the end of the original “Destiny.” “Destiny 2”doesn’t quite hit that mark.

“Destiny 2’s” biggest problem is its quantity of content. There was no shortage of activities to engage players in “Destiny” among multiplaye­r modes like Prison of Elders, Trials of Osiris and several raids. “Destiny 2” doesn’t have any of that except for one raid that wasn’t available at the time of this review. New activities called Adventures scatter each planet map, but there isn’t a sense of urgency or a call to action to complete them. They just feel like optional quests.

The difficult weekly Nightfall mission is still the big draw that will keep players returning. New modes will presumably be added by expansions throughout the lifetime of this game, but that doesn’t do anything for this launch version.

Longtime “Destiny” fans will appreciate the familiarit­y of “Destiny 2.” There’s a quality-over-quantity approach to this sequel. Story missions, environmen­ts and characters have all been improved, but players have become accustomed to expecting more content from “Destiny.” This sequel fixes nearly all of the annoyances of the original game, but it still has some growing to do to match the best moments of the original andits expansions.

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