Platforms: PC (Windows, macOS), PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X/S, Google Stadia, Nintendo Switch (Ultimate Edition)
Unique Feature: Bazillions of procedurally generated guns, four distinct Vault Hunter classes with deep skill trees, signature cel-shaded art style and humor, multi-planet exploration, robust co-op gameplay.
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Gameplay & Mechanics
Companions/Followers
Co-op Players (Online): Up to two other players can join the host's game in online co-op, choosing from the roster of six Slayers (duplicates allowed). Teammates can revive each other, combine combat efforts using different Slayer abilities and weapon loadouts, and assist in completing quests and exploring HELL-A. Loot is generally instanced or shared fairly.
Human (Other Players' Slayers)
Story-Specific AI Allies (Temporary & Contextual): During certain main story missions or side quests, key NPC characters like Sam B or other survivors might temporarily fight alongside the player or provide support. Their presence and combat abilities are scripted for those specific mission segments. They are not persistent, commandable companions.
Human (e.g., Sam B, Emma Jaunt, other survivors)
FL4K's Pets (Skag, Spiderant, Jabber): FL4K, the Beastmaster, can choose one of three loyal pets to fight alongside them. Each pet has unique abilities, attacks, and can be upgraded through FL4K's skill trees. Pets can draw aggro, deal damage, and provide buffs. They are a core part of FL4K's gameplay.
Various alien creatures
Moze's Iron Bear: Moze, the Gunner, can summon her bipedal Iron Bear mech as an Action Skill. Iron Bear is equipped with customizable heavy weapons on each arm (e.g., miniguns, grenade launchers, railguns, flamethrowers, melee fists) and provides significant firepower and protection for a limited time.
Mech Suit
Zane's SNTNL Drone & Digi-Clone: Zane, the Operative, can deploy a SNTNL combat drone that flies around attacking enemies with machine guns or rockets. He can also deploy a Digi-Clone of himself that distracts enemies and fires at them; Zane can swap places with his clone. These are Action Skills with cooldowns.
Robotic Drone / Holographic Clone
Co-op Player Characters (Vault Hunters): In co-operative multiplayer, other players join as their chosen Vault Hunters, each with their own unique skills and abilities, acting as active companions.
Human/Siren/Robot
Key Collectibles
Skill Cards: Found throughout HELL-A in specific locations, dropped by certain powerful zombies, or awarded for completing quests. These are essential for character progression, unlocking new active abilities, passive buffs, and Autophage skills for the equipped Slayer.
Journals (Audio Logs, Text Files, Data Discs): Various readable or listenable lore items scattered across all districts. They provide backstory on the LA outbreak, the wider world events, personal stories of survivors and victims, information on different zombie types, and insights into key characters or organizations like the mysterious KONNI group.
Blueprints (Weapon Mods & Curveballs): Recipes required to craft weapon modifications (e.g., elemental damage, increased impact, durability) at workbenches, and to craft different types of Curveballs (throwable items). Found in hidden locations, as quest rewards, or purchased from traders.
Lockboxes & Keys: Secure containers that require a specific key to open, often dropped by a named zombie in the vicinity or hidden nearby. Lockboxes usually contain high-quality weapons, valuable resources, or blueprints.
Lost & Found Quests (Weapon/Journal Based): A series of collectible quests initiated by finding a specific weapon or journal entry. Following the chain of clues (often across multiple journal entries) leads to a powerful unique weapon or other significant reward.
Fuse Boxes & Fuses: Locked rooms or areas often require finding a fuse and inserting it into a fuse box to restore power and gain access. Fuses are consumable items that can be bought or found.
Unique Weapons (Named Legendary/Epic Weapons): Special, often named, versions of standard weapon types with unique appearances, pre-set powerful mods, and sometimes special properties. Acquired as quest rewards, from specific powerful enemies, or found in well-hidden locations/lockboxes.
Typhon Logs & Dead Drops: Audio logs left by the first Vault Hunter, Typhon DeLeon, detailing his adventures and discoveries. Finding all three logs in a zone reveals the location of a Typhon Dead Drop, a hidden loot cache.
Eridian Writings: Ancient alien texts scattered across the planets. After acquiring an Eridian Analyzer, players can decipher these writings to gain XP and Eridium, and uncover more lore about the Eridians and Vaults.
Dead Claptraps: Parts from deceased Claptrap units that can be salvaged to help Claptrap build a new friend. Each part provides Eridium.
Crew Challenges (Various Types): A category of collectibles and repeatable activities specific to different NPCs and planets. Includes:
- **Legendary Hunts:** (Sir Hammerlock) Defeating unique, powerful creatures.
- **Targets of Opportunity:** (Zer0) Assassinating specific high-value targets.
- **Crimson Radio:** (Moxxi) Sabotaging Children of the Vault propaganda towers.
- **Hijack Target:** (Ellie) Stealing specific vehicle parts to unlock them for the Catch-A-Ride system.
Red Chests: Special chests containing higher-quality loot, often found in hidden areas or at the end of dungeons/challenges.
Vault Symbols & Eridium Piles: Hidden Vault symbols that can be found, and destructible Eridium crystal piles that yield Eridium currency (used for cosmetics and end-game purchases).
The primary combat tools. Vast array of improvised and conventional melee weapons found throughout HELL-A. Categorized by type (e.g., Headhunter, Maiming, Frenzy, Bulldozer). Can be modified at workbenches with elemental mods (fire, shock, caustic), status effect mods (bleed, impact), and stat-boosting mods. Weapons have rarity tiers and durability.
Firearms are present but ammunition is generally scarcer than melee options. Includes various pistols, revolvers, submachine guns, assault rifles, shotguns, and unique weapons like nail guns. Can also be modified with perks and elemental effects.
Curveballs (Throwables): Tactical/Explosive/Utility (e.g., Meat Bait, Pipe Bomb, Molotov Cocktail, Shuriken, Electric Star, Chem Bomb, Nail Bomb)
Reusable throwable items with cooldowns. Essential for crowd control, distraction, applying elemental effects, or dealing AoE damage. New curveball types are found or earned.
Legendary Weapons: Unique Named Variants (Various Melee & Ranged)
Special, named versions of existing weapon types with unique appearances, pre-set powerful mods, and often special properties or effects. Typically acquired as quest rewards or found in hidden, high-level locations.
Slayer Abilities (Fury Mode & Autophage Skills): Innate Character Powers
Each of the six playable Slayers has unique innate skills. All Slayers can enter 'Fury Mode,' a temporary super state with powerful melee attacks. Autophage skills (unlocked via skill cards) tap into their infected nature, often providing high-risk, high-reward abilities that might consume health or have other trade-offs.
The core of Borderlands: 'bazillions' of guns with randomly generated parts, stats, elemental effects (Incendiary, Shock, Corrosive, Cryo, Radiation), and special properties. Guns come in different rarities (Common to Legendary/Pearlescent). Anointed gear grants powerful bonuses tied to Action Skill usage.
Each manufacturer has unique traits: **Jakobs** (high critical damage, ricocheting bullets, old-west aesthetic), **Maliwan** (elemental damage focus, charge-up times, dual elements), **Tediore** (guns are thrown like grenades when reloaded, then digistruct a new one), **Hyperion** (accuracy increases with sustained fire, deployable weapon shields when aiming), **Torgue** (explosive projectiles, sticky mode), **Dahl** (alternate fire modes - burst, full-auto, semi-auto), **Vladof** (high fire rate, under-barrel attachments like rockets/shotguns), **Atlas** (tracker tags for homing bullets), **COV (Children of the Vault)** ('infinite' ammo with overheat mechanic instead of traditional reloads).
Grenade Mods: Throwable Explosive/Utility
Various grenade mods with diverse effects, including singularities, MIRVs (multiple explosions), transfusions (health stealing), elemental damage, and utility effects like teleportation or enemy grouping.
Shields: Defensive Gear
Provide a regenerating energy shield that absorbs damage before health is affected. Shields have various capacities, recharge rates, recharge delays, and can have special properties like elemental resistance/nova bursts, damage boosting, or health regeneration.
Class Mods: Character Augment Gear
Equippable items specific to each Vault Hunter class. They provide boosts to specific skills (even allowing skills to be over-leveled) and often grant passive stat increases or unique class-specific perks.
Artifacts: Utility Gear
Provide powerful passive bonuses, often affecting movement (like enabling slam or slide anointments), elemental damage, melee damage, or providing unique utility effects like health regeneration or loot quality improvements.
Armor / Gear Sets
No Equipable Armor System: Players do not equip traditional armor pieces (helmets, chest plates, etc.) for direct stat increases. A Slayer's resilience is primarily determined by their base Health (which can be increased via some Skill Cards or temporary Numen Autophage skills), their chosen Slayer's innate toughness stats, and player skill in dodging, blocking, and parrying.
Skill Cards (Defensive Perks): Many Skill Cards in the 'Survivor' or Slayer-specific categories provide defensive perks, such as damage reduction, increased health regeneration, improved blocking effectiveness, or resistance to specific status effects. These are the primary way to enhance a Slayer's survivability.
Cosmetic Outfits: Players can unlock and equip various cosmetic outfits for their chosen Slayer. These are purely visual and do not provide any gameplay advantages or stat bonuses. Outfits are often rewards for completing quests, challenges, or part of DLC/Special Editions.
Shields: Primary defensive gear. Shields have varying capacities, recharge rates, recharge delays, and can possess special properties from different manufacturers (e.g., Pangolin - high capacity; Anshin - elemental resistance; Hyperion - amp damage on depletion). Legendary and unique shields offer powerful, build-defining effects.
Class Mods: Class-specific items that grant points to skills in the Vault Hunter's skill trees (potentially pushing them beyond their normal maximum) and provide additional passive stat bonuses or unique perks that synergize with specific builds.
Artifacts: Equippable Eridian artifacts that provide significant passive bonuses and unique effects. These can include elemental damage boosts, improved slide/slam mechanics, increased luck, health regeneration effects, or anointments that trigger on action skill use or other conditions.
Outfits/Customization
Slayer Outfits (Default & Unlockable): Each of the six playable Slayers has a unique default outfit reflecting their personality and backstory. Additional cosmetic outfits can be unlocked through game progression (e.g., completing challenges, specific quests), as part of DLC packs (e.g., Character Packs from Deluxe/Gold Editions), or through special promotions. These outfits are purely visual and do not affect gameplay stats.
Weapon Skins (Limited): Some special editions or DLC packs include unique cosmetic skins for certain weapons (e.g., Golden Weapons Pack). These change the appearance of the weapon but not its performance.
Vault Hunter Heads: Unlockable and purchasable cosmetic heads that change the appearance of the player character's head. A wide variety of styles are available, from serious to outlandish.
Vault Hunter Skins: Cosmetic skins that alter the color scheme and patterns of the Vault Hunter's default outfit. Can be unlocked through gameplay, purchased, or obtained via special events and DLCs (e.g., Multiverse Final Form & Disciples of the Vault Cosmetic Packs).
Weapon Skins: Cosmetic skins that can be applied to weapons to change their appearance without affecting stats. Examples include the Butt Stallion weapon skin or Gold Weapon Skins Pack (pre-order/deluxe bonuses).
Weapon Trinkets: Small cosmetic charms that can be attached to weapons for personalization.
ECHO Device Skins: Cosmetic skins to change the appearance of the player's ECHO communication device.
Room Decorations (Sanctuary III): Players can find and place various decorations in their personal quarters aboard the Sanctuary III spaceship.
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World & Exploration
World & Level Design
Dead Island 2 features a semi-open world structure, divided into several distinct, large districts of Los Angeles rather than one single seamless map. These districts unlock progressively and are connected by loading screens. Iconic locations include Bel-Air, Beverly Hills, The Halperin Hotel, Monarch Studios, Venice Beach, Santa Monica Pier, Ocean Avenue, and Hollywood Boulevard. Each district is densely packed with detail, interiors to explore, and environmental storytelling.
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Playable Vehicles
No Player-Controlled Vehicles (Generally)
Dead Island 2 primarily focuses on on-foot traversal and exploration through its dense urban environments. While vehicles (cars, trucks, buses) are abundantly present in the ruined streets of Los Angeles as environmental objects and obstacles, players cannot commandeer and drive them freely like in the original Dead Island or some other open-world games. Some can explode or be used as cover.
Fast Travel (District Maps): Map Traversal Mechanic
Once certain story progression points are reached or specific safe houses/locations are unlocked within a district, players can use a map interface to fast travel between these discovered points within the current district, and also to travel between different major LA districts (which involves a loading screen).
Traversal on Foot (Walking, Running, Sprinting, Kicking, Sliding, Dodging): Player Locomotion
Primary mode of movement. Slayers can walk, run, sprint (limited by stamina), perform jump kicks, slide, and utilize a dodge mechanic to evade enemy attacks. While not as parkour-focused as Dying Light, environmental navigation (climbing, mantling) is present.
Outrunner: Light Buggy / All-Terrain Vehicle
A fast and versatile two-seater buggy, a staple of the Borderlands series. Customizable with different chassis, weapons (machine guns, rockets), armor, wheels, and paint jobs via the Catch-A-Ride system.
Technical: Armed Truck / Utility Vehicle
A heavier, more durable vehicle often equipped with a rear-mounted turret. Can carry more passengers. Also customizable with various weapons and parts.
Cyclone: Monowheel Combat Vehicle
A fast, agile single-wheel vehicle capable of strafing and high speeds. Offers unique offensive capabilities and maneuverability. Customizable with different weapon systems and mods.
Vehicles used by enemy factions like the Children of the Vault. Often ramshackle, heavily armed, and can be commandeered by the player. Some can be scanned at a Catch-A-Ride to unlock their parts for player vehicle customization.
Unique hover-capable wheels found in 'Moxxi's Heist of the Handsome Jackpot' DLC, allowing vehicles to float over certain surfaces.
Jetbeast (DLC - Bounty of Blood): Customizable Hoverbike
A heavily armed and customizable hoverbike introduced in the 'Bounty of Blood' DLC, used for traversing the plains of Gehenna.
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Story & Characters
Main Characters
Amy: Playable Slayer (The Sprinter)
A Paralympian athlete who thrives on adrenaline. Agile and quick-witted, excels at hit-and-run tactics and critical hits against isolated zombies. Innate skills: Relief Pitcher (regains stamina for throwing weapons), Divide and Conquer (damage boost to isolated zombies).
Bruno: Playable Slayer (The Hustler)
A calculating LA native with a talent for deception. Excels at backstabs and exploiting enemy weaknesses. Innate skills: Backstab (damage boost from behind), Rapid Reprisal (agility/heavy attack boost after avoiding attacks).
Carla: Playable Slayer (The Stuntwoman)
A tough and resilient motorcycle stuntwoman. Excels in crowded fights and has high elemental resistance. Innate skills: Dig Deep (toughness boost when health is critical), Mosh Pit (minor damage boost when close to multiple zombies).
Dani: Playable Slayer (The Rockabilly Brawler)
A foul-mouthed Irish retail assistant with a love for roller derby and punk rock. High stamina and explosive heavy attacks. Innate skills: Thunderous (heavy attacks trigger explosions), Bloodlust (regains health for rapid successive kills).
Jacob: Playable Slayer (The Stuntman / Anti-Hero)
A morally ambiguous Londoner with a Shakespearean flair, working as a stuntman. High peak health and critical damage boosts. Innate skills: Feral (stackable damage boost for successive attacks), Critical Gains (critical hits boost critical damage and restore stamina).
Ryan: Playable Slayer (The Firefighter / Tank)
An exotic dancer dressed as a firefighter, surprisingly kind-hearted and determined to find his brother. High toughness and defensive capabilities. Innate skills: Retaliation (force boost when blocking/dodging), Seesaw (regains health when knocking down a zombie).
Sam B: Supporting Character / Immune Survivor / Rapper
A returning character from the original Dead Island. A one-hit-wonder rapper who is also immune to the virus. Acts as a mentor figure and key ally to the player Slayer.
Emma Jaunt: Supporting Character / Actress
A famous actress holed up in her Bel-Air mansion, providing a temporary safe haven for the Slayers.
Dr. Reuben Reed: Key NPC / Scientist
A scientist working on a potential cure or solution to the zombie outbreak, seemingly for a clandestine organization. His motivations and true allegiances are a central mystery.
The enigmatic leader of a bizarre techno-death cult operating out of a luxurious Malibu villa. Central figure in the 'Haus' DLC.
Various other survivors and minor characters: Quest Givers, Traders, Victims
HELL-A is populated by numerous other uninfected survivors who offer quests, trade goods, or become part of the environmental storytelling.
Amara (The Siren): Playable Vault Hunter
A renowned hero from Partali, Amara is a powerful Siren who can summon ethereal fists to pummel her enemies. Her action skills focus on elemental damage, crowd control, and melee combat (Phasegrasp, Phaseslam, Phasecast).
FL4K (The Beastmaster): Playable Vault Hunter
An emergent AI robot on a quest of self-discovery, accompanied by one of three loyal pets (Skag, Spiderant, Jabber) that assist in combat. FL4K excels at critical hits, stealth (Fade Away), and commanding their beasts (Gamma Burst, Rakk Attack!).
Moze (The Gunner): Playable Vault Hunter
A former Vladof soldier who can digistruct and pilot her heavily armed Iron Bear mech. Moze's skill trees allow customization of Iron Bear's weaponry (miniguns, grenade launchers, railguns, etc.) and focus on explosives, shields, or infinite ammo.
Zane Flynt (The Operative): Playable Vault Hunter
A semi-retired corporate hitman from the Flynt family. Zane utilizes various gadgets like a SNTNL drone, a Digi-Clone, and a deployable Barrier. He is unique in his ability to equip two Action Skills simultaneously by sacrificing his grenade slot.
Tyreen Calypso: Main Antagonist / Siren
One of the Calypso Twins and a powerful Siren. She leads the Children of the Vault cult with her brother Troy, seeking to absorb the power of Vaults across the galaxy. Known for her live-streaming persona and ability to leech power.
Troy Calypso: Main Antagonist / 'God-King'
Tyreen's twin brother and co-leader of the Children of the Vault. He was born conjoined to Tyreen and possesses some Siren-like powers by siphoning her energy. He is ambitious and seeks to prove himself.
Lilith (The Firehawk): NPC / Leader of the Crimson Raiders / Siren
A returning character from previous Borderlands games and a powerful Siren. She leads the Crimson Raiders in their fight against the Calypso Twins and commands the starship Sanctuary III.
The famously annoying but occasionally helpful Claptrap unit, a series staple. Provides introductory guidance and comic relief.
Patricia Tannis: NPC / Scientist & Eridian Expert
A brilliant but socially awkward scientist specializing in Eridian technology and Vault lore. She plays a key role in understanding the Vaults and the Calypsos' plans.
Ellie: NPC / Mechanic
Moxxi's daughter and a skilled mechanic responsible for the Catch-A-Ride vehicle system on Sanctuary III and various planets.
Marcus Kincaid: NPC / Arms Dealer
The owner of Marcus Munitions, the primary weapon vending machines throughout the Borderlands universe.
Example Missions
Main Story Quests (Escaping HELL-A & Finding a Cure)
A series of narrative-driven quests following the chosen Slayer's journey to survive the Los Angeles outbreak, understand their immunity and new Autophage powers, search for a way out of the quarantined city, and potentially find a cure or assist key figures like Dr. Reed. Involves progressing through different LA districts and confronting major threats.
Side Quests (Survivor Stories & Requests)
Numerous optional quests given by various NPCs encountered throughout HELL-A. These offer diverse scenarios, from helping fellow survivors with personal problems, scavenging for specific items, investigating strange occurrences, to clearing out zombie infestations. They provide XP, rewards (weapons, blueprints, skill cards), and further insight into the world and its inhabitants.
Lost & Found Quests (Weapon & Journal Chains)
Collectible-driven quests initiated by finding a specific weapon or journal entry. Following a series of clues, often involving environmental puzzles or tracking, leads to a powerful unique weapon, blueprint, or other significant reward. These often tell a small self-contained story.
Apex Variant Hunts / Named Zombie Bounties
Specific side quests or challenges that task the Slayer with hunting down and eliminating particularly strong or unique Apex Infected (e.g., a specific Crusher or Screamer variant). Rewards often include high-quality loot or Skill Cards.
Clearing Infested Areas / Unlocking Safe Houses
Securing specific locations by eliminating all zombies and sometimes a mini-boss. This often unlocks new safe houses with workbenches, traders, or fast travel points within a district.
Challenges (Combat, Exploration, Survival)
An in-game system tracking various gameplay feats (e.g., kill X zombies with a specific weapon type, dismember X limbs, complete X quests). Completing challenges often rewards XP, money, or contributes to unlocking passive stat boosts or cosmetic items.
DLC Story Quests (e.g., Haus, SoLA)
Self-contained narrative campaigns included in the Expansion Pass. 'Haus' involves investigating a mysterious techno-death cult in a Malibu villa. 'SoLA' takes players to a zombie-infested Californian music festival. These add new locations, enemies, weapons, and storylines.
Main Story Campaign
A series of narrative quests following the new Vault Hunters as they join the Crimson Raiders to stop the Calypso Twins and their Children of the Vault cult from opening The Great Vault and gaining ultimate power. This journey spans multiple planets.
Side Missions
Numerous optional quests found on each planet, offered by various NPCs. These often involve unique stories, characters, and rewards, expanding the lore and providing XP and loot.
Crew Challenges
A set of planet-specific collectible and combat challenges issued by various crew members of Sanctuary III (e.g., Sir Hammerlock's Legendary Hunts, Zer0's Targets of Opportunity, Moxxi's Crimson Radio sabotage, Ellie's Hijack Targets, Claptrap's Dead Claptrap parts, Typhon DeLeon's Logs and Dead Drops). Completing these provides Eridium, XP, and contributes to area completion.
Proving Grounds (Eridian Trials)
End-game timed dungeon-like instances unlocked by finding Eridian Writings. Players fight through waves of enemies and a final boss within a time limit to earn high-quality loot. Different Proving Grounds offer unique challenges.
Circles of Slaughter
Wave-based survival arenas where players fight increasingly difficult hordes of enemies. Completing all rounds yields significant XP and loot. Examples include Cistern of Slaughter, Slaughter Shaft, Slaughterstar 3000.
DLC Campaign Missions
Each of the four main story DLCs (Moxxi's Heist of the Handsome Jackpot, Guns, Love, and Tentacles, Bounty of Blood, Psycho Krieg and the Fantastic Fustercluck) features its own new campaign with unique storylines, locations, enemies, and bosses.
Arms Race (Designer's Cut DLC)
A roguelike game mode where players start with no gear in a new zone (Stormblind Complex), scavenge for weapons, and fight to extract high-quality loot before being killed by enemies or an encroaching storm (Murdercane).
Ava's Murder Mysteries (Director's Cut DLC)
A series of story-driven side missions where players help Ava investigate potentially paranormal happenings and uncover a conspiracy across multiple planets.
Hemovorous the Invincible (Director's Cut DLC)
A challenging end-game raid boss encounter, requiring Eridium to access. Defeating this massive Varkid offers some of the best loot in the game.
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Multiplayer
Multiplayer Details
Features a drop-in/drop-out online cooperative mode for up to 3 players. Players can team up to play through the main story campaign and side quests together. Loot and progression are handled on an individual basis for most items, while quest progression is tied to the host. There are no competitive multiplayer modes.
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Editions & DLC
Available Editions
Available in Standard Edition, Deluxe Edition (Golden Weapons Pack, Character Pack 1 & 2 - unique costumes/weapons), Gold Edition (Deluxe content + Expansion Pass for two major post-launch story expansions), and HELL-A Edition (physical collector's edition with Gold Edition content, SteelBook, Venice Beach travel map, character pins, patches, weapon pack).
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Post-Launch Content / DLC
An Expansion Pass is available, promising two major post-launch story expansions: 'Haus' (released October 2023, set in a Malibu techno-death cult billionaire's villa) and 'SoLA' (released April 2024, set during a Californian music festival). Various cosmetic packs and weapon packs have also been released.
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FAQ
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Is Dead Island 2 a direct sequel to the previous Dead Island games? A: Yes, Dead Island 2 is set in the same universe, approximately 10 years after the events of Dead Island and Dead Island: Riptide. It features a new outbreak in a new location (Los Angeles) and new playable characters, but a few characters from the original games, like Sam B, make a return.
Q: How many playable characters are there, and are they different? A: There are six playable Slayers: Amy, Bruno, Carla, Dani, Jacob, and Ryan. Each Slayer has two unique innate skills from the start, influencing their preferred playstyle (e.g., agility, heavy attacks, defense, critical hits). They also have unique voice lines and personalities, but the main story progression is the same for all.
Q: What is the FLESH system? A: FLESH (Fully Locational Evisceration System for Humanoids) is Dead Island 2's proprietary procedural dismemberment technology. It allows for incredibly detailed and realistic gore, where zombies can be dismembered layer by layer (skin, muscle, bone) depending on where and how they are hit with different weapons.
Q: Is Dead Island 2 an open-world game? A: Dead Island 2 features a semi-open world structure. Los Angeles is divided into several large, distinct districts (e.g., Bel-Air, Beverly Hills, Venice Beach) that players explore. These zones are self-contained and connected by loading screens, rather than one single seamless map.
Q: How does co-op multiplayer work? A: Players can team up with up to two other friends (for a total of 3 players) in online co-op to play through the entire main story and most side content. Players can choose any of the Slayers. Progress is generally tied to the host, but individual players retain their character progression and loot.
Q: Are there firearms in Dead Island 2? A: Yes, while melee combat is heavily emphasized, Dead Island 2 does feature a variety of firearms, including pistols, rifles, and shotguns. However, ammunition is generally more limited than melee weapon durability, encouraging a mix of combat styles.
Q: When was Borderlands 3 released? A: Borderlands 3 was initially released on September 13, 2019, for PlayStation 4, Xbox One, and PC (via Epic Games Store), with a Steam release for PC on March 13, 2020. It later came to other platforms like Stadia, PS5, Xbox Series X/S, and Nintendo Switch.
Q: Who are the playable characters in Borderlands 3? A: There are four playable Vault Hunters: Amara the Siren, FL4K the Beastmaster, Moze the Gunner, and Zane the Operative. Each has three unique skill trees and multiple Action Skills.
Q: Who are the main villains in Borderlands 3? A: The main antagonists are the Calypso Twins, Troy and Tyreen, who lead the Children of the Vault (COV) cult and seek to harness the power of the Great Vault.
Q: Does Borderlands 3 have multiplayer? A: Yes, Borderlands 3 supports up to 4-player online co-operative multiplayer. It also features local split-screen co-op on consoles. Cross-platform play is supported across PC (Steam/Epic), Xbox, PlayStation, and Mac.
Q: What is Mayhem Mode in Borderlands 3? A: Mayhem Mode is an end-game feature that significantly increases game difficulty by applying random modifiers to enemies and gameplay, while also increasing loot quality and XP gain. There are multiple Mayhem levels (1-11 with Mayhem 2.0 update).
Q: How many planets can you visit in Borderlands 3? A: Players can travel to multiple planets beyond Pandora, including Promethea, Athenas, Eden-6, and Nekrotafeyo, using the Sanctuary III starship as a mobile base.
Q: What kind of DLC does Borderlands 3 have? A: Borderlands 3 has two Season Passes. Season Pass 1 includes four major story campaign add-ons. Season Pass 2 includes the Designer's Cut (Arms Race mode, 4th skill tree for each Vault Hunter) and the Director's Cut (new raid boss, Ava's murder mystery quests, behind-the-scenes content, Vault Cards).
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Technical Details
Graphics & Visual Fidelity
Developed on Unreal Engine 4, Dead Island 2 showcases a vibrant and gore-filled depiction of Los Angeles. It features detailed environments, realistic character models, and the proprietary 'FLESH' system, which allows for highly detailed and procedural dismemberment of zombies. The game balances sunny California aesthetics with gruesome horror elements.
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Audio & Soundtrack
Features a dynamic soundtrack that blends intense action cues with atmospheric horror themes, often with a pulpy, B-movie vibe. Licensed tracks sometimes feature. Sound design emphasizes visceral gore effects (FLESH system), distinct zombie vocalizations, impactful weapon sounds, and the ambient sounds of a ruined Los Angeles.
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User Interface (UI/UX)
First-person HUD displaying health, stamina, Fury mode meter, equipped weapon/curveball, and objective markers. A compass aids navigation. Inventory, skill cards, crafting, and quest logs are accessed via menus. Weapon wheel for quick selection. Health and status effects are also indicated by screen effects.
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Accessibility Options
Offers a range of accessibility options, including customizable controls (PC), subtitle and caption customization (size, background, speaker names), options for aim assist, options to change QTEs to holds, colorblind modes, options to reduce camera motion/head bob, and various audio/visual cues.
laptop_windowsGPU (L): NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2070 Mobile (8GB) / RTX 3060 Mobile (6GB, High TGP). **An RTX 3070 Mobile or RTX 4060 Mobile (High TGP) is a good target for 1080p High 60FPS.**
laptop_windowsGPU (L): NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1060 Mobile (6GB) / GTX 1650 Ti Mobile (4GB). **An RTX 3050 Mobile would be a much better starting point for a smoother experience.**
CPU: Minimum desktop CPU.
CPU (Laptop): Estimated laptop CPU. Performance depends on specific model's cooling and power limits.
GPU: Minimum desktop GPU with 2GB VRAM.
GPU (Laptop): Targets playable framerates at 720p-1080p Low. **2GB VRAM is an absolute minimum and might struggle; 4GB VRAM is strongly recommended for laptops.** Performance varies greatly by TGP.
RAM: Minimum RAM requirement (dual-channel highly recommended if using 8GB or more).
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memoryCPU: AMD FX-8350 or Intel Core i5-3570
developer_boardGPU: AMD Radeon HD 7970 (2GB) or NVIDIA GeForce GTX 680 (2GB)
laptop_macCPU (L): Intel Core i5-7300HQ / AMD Ryzen 5 2500U or newer equivalent mobile CPUs with at least 4 cores/threads.
laptop_windowsGPU (L): NVIDIA GeForce GTX 960M (2GB/4GB), NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1050 Mobile (2GB/4GB); OR AMD Radeon R9 M385X (4GB). A GTX 1650 Laptop (4GB) would be a more comfortable modern minimum.
layersRAM: 6 GB
saveStorage (Tier): 75 GB available space (SSD Recommended)
1440p (QHD/2K) - High Performance (Estimated 1440p ~60 FPS, Ultra Preset, Upscaling potentially needed)(Ultra Preset (FSR Quality/Balanced may be needed))
CPU: CPU for 1440p/60FPS Ultra.
CPU (Laptop): High-end laptop CPU.
GPU: Desktop GPU for 1440p/60FPS Ultra. Upscaling may be beneficial.
GPU (Laptop): High-end laptop GPUs. 10GB+ VRAM highly recommended.
RAM: 16GB RAM essential, 32GB beneficial for smoother experience.
Storage: NVMe SSD required.
memoryCPU: Intel Core i7-12700K or AMD Ryzen 7 5800X
laptop_windowsGPU (L): NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3080 Mobile (10GB/16GB, Max TGP) / RTX 4070 Mobile (8GB, Max TGP). **An RTX 4080 Mobile would be better for consistent 1440p Ultra performance.**
layersRAM: 16 GB
saveStorage (Tier): 70 GB NVMe SSD
—
1440p (QHD/2K) - Recommended (Target: 1440p High settings OR 1080p Ultra settings, ~60 FPS)(High/Ultra Preset.)
CPU: Recommended desktop CPU.
CPU (Laptop): Recommended laptop CPU for a smooth 1080p Ultra or 1440p High experience.
GPU: Recommended desktop GPU for 1440p High / 1080p Ultra.
GPU (Laptop): Targets ~60 FPS at 1080p Ultra or 1440p High. **Ensure adequate TGP for NVIDIA cards.** 6GB VRAM minimum, 8GB VRAM strongly recommended for laptops at this tier.
RAM: 16GB RAM in dual-channel strongly recommended for optimal performance.
CPU: Flagship CPU for attempting 4K/60FPS Ultimate.
CPU (Laptop): Absolute top-tier laptop CPUs.
GPU: Flagship desktop GPU for 4K Ultimate, heavily reliant on upscaling.
GPU (Laptop): The absolute best laptop GPUs, will be pushed to its limits for 4K Ultra. Upscaling mandatory.
RAM: 32GB RAM highly recommended for 4K Ultimate.
Storage: NVMe SSD required.
memoryCPU: Intel Core i9-12900K or AMD Ryzen 9 5900X/7900X
laptop_windowsGPU (L): NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4090 Mobile (16GB, Max TGP). **Even this will require aggressive FSR settings for playable 4K Ultra at ~60FPS. A hypothetical next-gen flagship (e.g., RTX 5090 Mobile or AMD equivalent) would be needed for a more robust native-like experience. (Highly Speculative)**
layersRAM: 16 GB
saveStorage (Tier): 70 GB NVMe SSD
—
save Overall Storage
Spec: 70 GB available space (SSD Recommended). Note: An SSD is highly recommended for faster loading times and smoother texture streaming. Type: SSD
Spec: 75 GB available space (SSD Recommended) Note: An SSD is recommended for faster load times and smoother overall gameplay experience. Type: SSD
desktop_windows Operating System
Spec: Windows 10 (64-bit) Explanation: 64-bit Windows 10 or Windows 11 is required.
Spec: Windows 7/10 (latest service pack) Explanation: A 64-bit version of Windows 7, 8.1, 10, or 11 with the latest service packs is required.
gamepad DirectX Version
Spec: DirectX 12 Explanation: DirectX 12 API is required.
N/A
info_outline Other Game Notes
Official PC system requirements from Dambuster Studios/Deep Silver. Performance can vary depending on specific hardware, settings, areas in-game (especially with large zombie hordes or detailed environments), and background applications. An SSD is strongly recommended.
Laptop Performance Note: Laptop models of listed desktop GPUs will require comparable performance, high TGP (Total Graphics Power), and good cooling. **Dead Island 2 can be demanding, particularly at higher settings due to its detailed dismemberment system and environmental effects.**
Laptop Consideration: G P U T G P: Good TGP is important for consistent framerates.
Laptop Consideration: Cooling Thermals: Robust cooling is essential for sustained performance during intense zombie encounters.
Laptop Consideration: C P U Power Limits: A decent CPU is needed for managing numerous AI zombies and physics.
Laptop Consideration: R A M Speed Dual Channel: Fast dual-channel RAM benefits performance.
Laptop Consideration: M U X Switch Optimus: Using a MUX switch or NVIDIA Advanced Optimus is recommended.
Optimization Detail: Upscaling Tech: Supports AMD FSR 2. DLSS support may vary or require specific game versions/patches/mods.
Optimization Detail: Key Settings Impact: Shadow Quality, Texture Quality, View Distance, Effects Quality, Foliage Detail, Anti-Aliasing, and Post Processing Quality heavily impact performance. The FLESH dismemberment system is also a performance factor.
Game Name: Dead Island 2
Official PC system requirements for 'Borderlands 3' (released in 2019). An SSD is recommended for better loading times and texture streaming, especially with higher settings. The game supports DirectX 11 and DirectX 12.
Laptop Performance Note: Borderlands 3 can be played on a variety of gaming laptops. Laptop GPUs and CPUs perform differently than their desktop counterparts due to Total Graphics Power (TGP) and thermal constraints. The estimations below reflect hardware from around the game's release period or slightly newer equivalents for a good experience. **Always check specific laptop model reviews for performance benchmarks, especially TGP and cooling.**
Laptop Consideration: G P U T G P Impact: The TGP of a laptop GPU significantly affects its performance. Higher TGP values for the same GPU model generally lead to better framerates.
Laptop Consideration: Advanced Cooling Thermals: Good cooling is crucial for laptops to sustain performance during long gaming sessions and avoid thermal throttling, which can reduce framerates.
Laptop Consideration: C P U Performance Sustain: A capable mobile CPU is needed to handle the game's demands, especially in busy areas or during intense combat, without bottlenecking the GPU.
Laptop Consideration: R A M Configuration Speed: 6GB is absolute minimum, but 16GB in dual-channel configuration is strongly recommended for a much smoother experience and to prevent stuttering, especially when many enemies or effects are on screen.
Laptop Consideration: Display Panel G P U Pairing: Match your laptop's GPU power to its display resolution (typically 1080p for this era of requirements) and aim for a refresh rate the GPU can consistently support (e.g., 60Hz or higher).
Laptop Consideration: Driver Updates O S Optimization: Using up-to-date GPU drivers and ensuring your OS (Windows) is optimized for gaming can improve stability and performance.
Optimization Detail: A P I Choice: Offers DirectX 11 and DirectX 12 renderers. DX12 may offer better performance on some newer hardware but DX11 can be more stable on older systems.
Optimization Detail: Key Settings Impact: Resolution, Texture Streaming, Material Quality, Shadows, Draw Distance, Volumetric Fog, Screen Space Reflections, and Anti-Aliasing options (FXAA, Temporal AA) are key settings affecting performance.
Game Name: Borderlands 3
build Optimization Details
Upscaling Tech: Supports AMD FSR 2. DLSS support may vary or require specific game versions/patches/mods.
Key Settings Impact: Shadow Quality, Texture Quality, View Distance, Effects Quality, Foliage Detail, Anti-Aliasing, and Post Processing Quality heavily impact performance. The FLESH dismemberment system is also a performance factor.
A P I Choice: Offers DirectX 11 and DirectX 12 renderers. DX12 may offer better performance on some newer hardware but DX11 can be more stable on older systems.
Key Settings Impact: Resolution, Texture Streaming, Material Quality, Shadows, Draw Distance, Volumetric Fog, Screen Space Reflections, and Anti-Aliasing options (FXAA, Temporal AA) are key settings affecting performance.
laptop Laptop Considerations
G P U T G P: Good TGP is important for consistent framerates.
Cooling Thermals: Robust cooling is essential for sustained performance during intense zombie encounters.
C P U Power Limits: A decent CPU is needed for managing numerous AI zombies and physics.
R A M Speed Dual Channel: Fast dual-channel RAM benefits performance.
M U X Switch Optimus: Using a MUX switch or NVIDIA Advanced Optimus is recommended.
G P U T G P Impact: The TGP of a laptop GPU significantly affects its performance. Higher TGP values for the same GPU model generally lead to better framerates.
Advanced Cooling Thermals: Good cooling is crucial for laptops to sustain performance during long gaming sessions and avoid thermal throttling, which can reduce framerates.
C P U Performance Sustain: A capable mobile CPU is needed to handle the game's demands, especially in busy areas or during intense combat, without bottlenecking the GPU.
R A M Configuration Speed: 6GB is absolute minimum, but 16GB in dual-channel configuration is strongly recommended for a much smoother experience and to prevent stuttering, especially when many enemies or effects are on screen.
Display Panel G P U Pairing: Match your laptop's GPU power to its display resolution (typically 1080p for this era of requirements) and aim for a refresh rate the GPU can consistently support (e.g., 60Hz or higher).
Driver Updates O S Optimization: Using up-to-date GPU drivers and ensuring your OS (Windows) is optimized for gaming can improve stability and performance.
check_circle_outline Recommended based on listed requirements for UHD (4K).
Lenovo Legion Pro 7 16IRX9H with RTX 4090
memoryIntel Core i9-14900HX
developer_boardNVIDIA GeForce RTX 4090
layers32GB DDR5-5600MHz
track_changesTarget GPU: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4090 Mobile (16GB, Max TGP). **Even this will require aggressive FSR settings for playable 4K Ultra at ~60FPS. A hypothetical next-gen flagship (e.g., RTX 5090 Mobile or AMD equivalent) would be needed for a more robust native-like experience. (Highly Speculative)**
track_changesTarget GPU: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4090 Mobile (16GB, Max TGP). **Even this will require aggressive FSR settings for playable 4K Ultra at ~60FPS. A hypothetical next-gen flagship (e.g., RTX 5090 Mobile or AMD equivalent) would be needed for a more robust native-like experience. (Highly Speculative)**
MSI Vector 16 HX AI with RTX 5080 and Intel Ultra 9-275HX
memoryIntel Core Ultra 9-275HX
developer_boardNVIDIA GeForce RTX 5080
layers32GB DDR5-5600MHz
track_changesTarget GPU: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4090 Mobile (16GB, Max TGP). **Even this will require aggressive FSR settings for playable 4K Ultra at ~60FPS. A hypothetical next-gen flagship (e.g., RTX 5090 Mobile or AMD equivalent) would be needed for a more robust native-like experience. (Highly Speculative)**
check_circle_outline Recommended based on listed requirements for UHD (4K).
MSI Vector 16 HX with RTX 5070 Ti
memoryIntel Ultra 7 255HX
developer_boardNVIDIA GeForce RTX 5070 Ti
layers32GB DDR5 5600MHz
track_changesTarget GPU: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4090 Mobile (16GB, Max TGP). **Even this will require aggressive FSR settings for playable 4K Ultra at ~60FPS. A hypothetical next-gen flagship (e.g., RTX 5090 Mobile or AMD equivalent) would be needed for a more robust native-like experience. (Highly Speculative)**
MSI Vector 16 HX AI with RTX 5080 and Intel Ultra 9-275HX
memoryIntel Core Ultra 9-275HX
developer_boardNVIDIA GeForce RTX 5080
layers32GB DDR5-5600MHz
track_changesTarget GPU: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4090 Mobile (16GB, Max TGP). **Even this will require aggressive FSR settings for playable 4K Ultra at ~60FPS. A hypothetical next-gen flagship (e.g., RTX 5090 Mobile or AMD equivalent) would be needed for a more robust native-like experience. (Highly Speculative)**
track_changesTarget GPU: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4090 Mobile (16GB, Max TGP). **Even this will require aggressive FSR settings for playable 4K Ultra at ~60FPS. A hypothetical next-gen flagship (e.g., RTX 5090 Mobile or AMD equivalent) would be needed for a more robust native-like experience. (Highly Speculative)**
track_changesTarget GPU: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4090 Mobile (16GB, Max TGP). **Even this will require aggressive FSR settings for playable 4K Ultra at ~60FPS. A hypothetical next-gen flagship (e.g., RTX 5090 Mobile or AMD equivalent) would be needed for a more robust native-like experience. (Highly Speculative)**
track_changesTarget GPU: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4090 Mobile (16GB, Max TGP). **Even this will require aggressive FSR settings for playable 4K Ultra at ~60FPS. A hypothetical next-gen flagship (e.g., RTX 5090 Mobile or AMD equivalent) would be needed for a more robust native-like experience. (Highly Speculative)**
MSI Raider 18 HX AI with RTX 5090 and Intel U9-285HX
memoryIntel Core Ultra 9 285HX
developer_boardNVIDIA GeForce RTX 5090
layers64GB DDR5-6400MHz
track_changesTarget GPU: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4090 Mobile (16GB, Max TGP). **Even this will require aggressive FSR settings for playable 4K Ultra at ~60FPS. A hypothetical next-gen flagship (e.g., RTX 5090 Mobile or AMD equivalent) would be needed for a more robust native-like experience. (Highly Speculative)**
ASUS Strix Scar 16 (2025) with RTX 5090 and Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX
memoryIntel Core Ultra 9 275HX
developer_boardNVIDIA GeForce RTX 5090
layers32GB DDR5-5600MHz
track_changesTarget GPU: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4090 Mobile (16GB, Max TGP). **Even this will require aggressive FSR settings for playable 4K Ultra at ~60FPS. A hypothetical next-gen flagship (e.g., RTX 5090 Mobile or AMD equivalent) would be needed for a more robust native-like experience. (Highly Speculative)**
track_changesTarget GPU: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4090 Mobile (16GB, Max TGP). **Even this will require aggressive FSR settings for playable 4K Ultra at ~60FPS. A hypothetical next-gen flagship (e.g., RTX 5090 Mobile or AMD equivalent) would be needed for a more robust native-like experience. (Highly Speculative)**
ASUS ROG Strix G18 with RTX 4080 and intel i9 14th Gen
memoryIntel Core i9-14900HX
developer_boardNVIDIA GeForce RTX 4080
layers32GB DDR5-5600MHz
track_changesTarget GPU: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4090 Mobile (16GB, Max TGP). **Even this will require aggressive FSR settings for playable 4K Ultra at ~60FPS. A hypothetical next-gen flagship (e.g., RTX 5090 Mobile or AMD equivalent) would be needed for a more robust native-like experience. (Highly Speculative)**
track_changesTarget GPU: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4090 Mobile (16GB, Max TGP). **Even this will require aggressive FSR settings for playable 4K Ultra at ~60FPS. A hypothetical next-gen flagship (e.g., RTX 5090 Mobile or AMD equivalent) would be needed for a more robust native-like experience. (Highly Speculative)**
info_outline
Laptop recommendations are estimates based on available component benchmarks and game requirements.
Actual performance may vary depending on settings, drivers, cooling, power limits, etc.
Prices and availability subject to change. As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases.