Free-running zombie survival extravaganza is 10 years old this year, a fact that my rapidly rotting brain simply refuses to accept. Developer Techland is determined to hammer the news home though, dedicating an entire year to anniversary celebrations. Back in January, the developer. Now, it has given the game a big lick of graphical paint in what it's calling the "Retouched" update.
These changes are fairly extensive, including higher resolution textures, improved clouds and skyboxes, higher quality shadows, and a fully remastered soundtrack. While Techland only provided a basic summary in its, the studio went into greater detail.
"Over the past couple of years, we've added a lot, customized a lot, and learned [[link]] how to squeeze more from the tech we already have," wrote technical game director Grzegorz Świstowski. "One day, someone just started applying those learnings to some old assets—and it just clicked that we could do that across the whole game."
Techland is keen to stress that the Retouched edition is not a remaster, even though I've seen remasters that do less.
"Back in January, when we celebrated the 10th anniversary of Dying Light, I announced that we are working on a new update," writes franchise director Tymon Smektała. "When I looked online the day after the video, my heart skipped a beat. Quite a few of you were expecting a full remaster of some sort. So, let's set the record straight: the Retouched update is about squeezing out even more from the Dying Light you already love. It’s not a complete overhaul or remaster."
Fair enough, I suppose. That said, I sincerely hope "retouched" doesn't become part of the lexicon for describing updating old [[link]] games. I already have enough trouble delineating between reboots, remakes, and remasters.
In any case, the Retouched update is now live. Among this and the broader 10th anniversary celebrations, let's not forget there's a new Dying Light coming in just a couple of months. brings back the original game's protagonist Kyle Crane, now imbued with monstrous superpowers, and aims to be a bit more like that first game after the mixed reception to Dying Light 2. While I am beyond weary of zombie games at this point, the Dying Light series has always tried to do a bit more than bashing undead humans on the noggin, so I'm intrigued to see how this latest game turns out.