Login
June 19, 2018
+1

Darkest Dungeon: The Color of Madness

Darkest Dungeon: The Color of Madness
7.6
metacritic
Based on 4 Reviews
81
Release date
June 19, 2018
Developer
Publisher
Genre
RPG
Web-site

Summary

Some hateful shard of alien origin has streaked through the night sky, crashing into the old Miller’s farm on the outskirts of the Hamlet! Those unfortunate enough to witness the Comet’s arrival have been blinded by what they can only describe as a shifting, ephemeral hue of damnably abrasive intensity. There has been no word from the farm in a fortnight, save for the unearthly groaning that echoes from the ruin of the mill…

Darkest Dungeon: The Color of Madness System Requirements

🤏 Minimum Requirements

OS:
Windows XP
RAM:
2 GB RAM
GPU:
Open GL 3.2+ Compliant
HDD:
2 GB available space

👍 Recommended Specs

OS:
Windows 7+
RAM:
4 GB RAM
GPU:
Open GL 3.2+ Compliant
HDD:
2 GB available space

Darkest Dungeon: The Color of Madness Trailer

Darkest Dungeon: The Color of Madness Screenshots12

Critic Reviews4

The Color of Madness is another welcome addition to Red Hook’s tough-as-nails Lovecraftian horror RPG, and in contrast to the way the previous DLC,The Crimson Court, was implemented, this new content is mostly self-contained and doesn’t bleed out into the main campaign — a plus for newcomers who aren’t ready for it. While the add-ons in other titles can often feel superfluous or like a grab for cash, The Color of Madness delivers a strongly-realized idea that improves the core content while also adding to it.
July 30, 2018
Darkest Dungeon: The Color of Madness is a fine addition to an already great game. The Endless Harvest mode adds perpetual, challenging content fit for veterans, and builds up across a playthrough well enough to entice novices as well. While the comet’s presence doesn’t loom quite as large over the Hamlet as the Crimson Court vampires did, there’s more than enough reason to traverse the tainted soil of the Farmstead, seeking gold and glory.
July 12, 2018
Dark, terrifying, and endlessly aggravating in the best possible way. While the Thing that came from the stars doesn’t quite reach the horrifying peaks of the Shambler, or the *shudder* body horror of those damned mosquito vampires, any reason to revisit the homestead and check in on the poor, unfortunate souls who answered the call is good one.
July 6, 2018

Users Reviews0

No reviews have been posted yet