There are also a handful of new Mongol enemies to contend with. Some new charms and a new set of armor round out the rest of the extra gear you can acquire on Iki Island. You can also unlock special armor for Jin’s horse, which further increases the damage of the horse charge ability, and it has the added bonus of making your horse look like a supreme badass. The first and most notable addition is the horse charge ability, which allows Jin to ride his horse at full speed (at the cost of some resolve) and charge into enemies with tremendous force, dealing heavy damage. Jin’s combat stances, ghost (stealth) weapons, armor sets, cosmetics, are all still here, and there is some more new stuff. Any and all skills and abilities you unlocked for Jin in the main game will be accessible to you in this expansion. Gameplay-wise, in its most basic form, Iki Island is very much the same as the main game. Nevertheless, the suffering Jin goes through thanks to her can truly be felt at times both in the cutscenes and the gameplay when he experiences intense hallucinations. Not counting the many times that Jin will hear her voice in his head throughout his journey thanks to some poison that she makes him drink early on, the Eagle barely appears in this game and ends up being nowhere near as memorable or sinister as Khotun Khan before her. However, I found the main antagonist, the Eagle, to be the somewhat weaker element in the story. Jin’s experience with his father and his time on Iki Island during his childhood and how it affects his current journey on the island are the main focal points of the story, both in the main and side quests, and it’s done very well. Story-wise, Iki Island delves into Jin’s past and focuses more on his relationship with his father, Kazumasa Sakai, which we only got a glimpse of in the main game. Some time after Jin completes his quest to stop Khotun Khan, he hears of a new Mongol tribe causing some trouble in Tsushima, and after defeating a group of them and finding out about their leader, Ankhsar Khatun, a.k.a.: the Eagle, Jin travels to the neighboring island of Iki to deal with this new threat. (Note: This review will solely cover the Iki Island expansion content and will not go over the other visual enhancements and whatnot that come with the Director’s Cut.) More wandering the countryside on horseback and battling enemies in badass samurai/ninja fashion framed in an engaging and personal story? You didn’t even have to ask. Sucker Punch’s samurai epic Ghost of Tsushima was my personal GOTY of 2020, so I was naturally very excited to dive back into the role of Jin Sakai once I heard about the Iki Island DLC.
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