PCWorld

Destiny 2: Gaming junk food that we can’t put down

f0076-01

This weekend I finished Destiny 2’s campaign for the third time. I’ve hit the (soft) level cap with all three classes, collected around a dozen exotic weapons, completed most of the Strikes, played some player-versus-player Crucible matches, shot thousands of enemies, killed off Emperor Calus to complete the raid (twice), and even spent two hours running up and down a hallway to exploit some bad code on Bungie’s part.

I’m still not sure why Destiny 2 keeps me coming back for more, the digital equivalent of an irresistible bag of chips. But I’ve officially run out of reasons to procrastinate writing this review—just in time for the first expansion to drop next week.

STARTING OVER FROM ZERO

Yes, next week. Despite Destiny 2 only releasing a month ago on PC, the Curse of Osiris DLC will soon be upon us as part of a simultaneous release with the longer-lived console versions of the game. It’s timed alongside an update for the base game in which Bungie’s basically promised the world.

It’s tricky sometimes to review video games nowadays. No sooner have you pinned down their structure than everything changes. But even in that is a bit like trying to hit a moving target while riding a train in the opposite direction. Making the whole endeavor doubly intimidating is ’s reliance on jargon—if you understood even half the opening paragraph, chances are you already played . It’s that type of game.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from PCWorld

PCWorld5 min read
Be Safe! How I Set Up A ‘Paranoid PC’ To Surf The Risky Web
In the 1990s, a colleague took me to “Snake Alley,” Taipei’s red-light district, for a night of drinking with “entertainers” and some of their very muscled, serious friends. A good time was had by all, fortunately. Still, I was young, dumb, and very
PCWorld3 min read
The Nightmare Is Real: HP Makes Printing A Monthly Subscription
HP said in January that it hoped and dreamed to make printing a subscription. Now the company has done just that, with the All-In Plan that allows HP customers a limited number of printed pages per month for a monthly fee, with a two-year commitment
PCWorld2 min read
Intel’s New Core I9-14900KS Shatters CPU Clock Speed Records
Intel continued its climb up the clock-speed ladder by launching the Core i9-14900KS, a “special edition” desktop chip that offers the very fastest clock speed of any current PC processor, at 6.2GHz. As expected, though, you’ll pay for it, at a price

Related