There are many sewers in games, but few are as pretty as the pixelly  catacombs of Dead Cells' $5 The Bad Seed expansion. I was so busy  admiring the depths of the new Arboretum zone that I didn't notice a  giant mushroom man throwing one of his mushroom children at my face.  With a hissing flurry of blows I disintegrated the kid with my lightning  whip. Moments later, once I'd leapt the gap down to his platform, Dad  of the Year was dead too. I have missed this game.
The Arboretum  is one of two new zones (and a boss room for the new boss). They look  beautiful, and they are swarming with five new enemies types designed to  delight you and then destroy you. In the Arboretum you will find those  big mushroom, called Yeeters. They can detect you from quite a distance,  and there always seem to be a few little Jerkshrooms nearby to throw at  you. If you're lucky a Jerkshroom will drop 'Mushroom Boi!'—a power  that lets you deploy a Jerkshroom of your own to charge enemies.
The  other zone is the gloomy but gorgeous Morass of the Banished. In both  zones the devs have included particularly detailed layered backgrounds  that hint at much wider landscapes beyond. The Morass of the Banished is  set in a swamp between the roots of enormous trees that stretch into  the distance. The villages there are inhabited by blowgun enemies that  can hop through walls away from you. The Banished lurk on the ceilings,  waiting to drop and combo you with their spears.
Dead Cells' procedurally generated zones are shuffled like a deck of  cards before each run, offering you varied routes to the end. The Bad  Seed expansion shuffles both new biomes into the deck very early.
For  veterans that spices up replays, but I think the DLC will seem even  more novel if you're an entirely new player taking your first swipe at  this fantastic combat roguelike. You need a couple of runes—permanent  character upgrades that give you traversal powers—but you can find them  in the first few areas, if you explore thoroughly. Even this unlock  process feels good. Dead Cells' mazes are full of secrets these days,  and the more hidden extras the developers add, the richer the world  seems.
 New weapons and a new boss fight complete the package. I'm still  battling towards the monster lurking in The Nest, accessible from the  Morass of the Banished, and I have yet to discover most of the weapons  myself, but I'm looking forward to the introduction of a new archetype: a  double handed weapon. You equip the Scythe Claws to both weapon slots,  and combo between them to generate critical hits.
The Scythe  suggests that Evil Empire and Motion Twin still have plenty of new ideas  for Dead Cells. Since launch the Rise of the Giant DLC added a similar  amount of new features for free, but the price for Bad Seed seems  reasonable to me given how much the game has expanded since leaving  Early Access. Plus you can get it in a bundle if you're buying the game new.
 


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