Dying Light

Dying Light is an open world first person survival horror action-adventure video game developed by the Polish game studio Techland and published by Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment. Announced in May 2013, it was released in January 2015 for Microsoft Windows, Linux, PlayStation 4, and Xbox One. The game was once planned to be released on PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360, but was later cancelled due to hardware limitations.

Dying Light
Developer(s)Techland
Publisher(s)
  • WB Games
  • Techland Publishing (PC)[1]
Director(s)
  • Paweł Marchewka
  • Adrian Ciszewski
Programmer(s)Michał Nowak
Artist(s)Paweł Selinger
Composer(s)Paweł Błaszczak
EngineChrome Engine 6[2]
Platform(s)
Release
  • Linux, PC, PS4, XONE
  • 28 January 2015
  • OS X
  • 15 December 2016
Genre(s)Survival horror, action-adventure
Mode(s)Single-player, multiplayer

The game revolves around an undercover agent named Kyle Crane who is sent to infiltrate a quarantine zone in a city called Harran. It features an enemy-infested, open-world city with a dynamic day and night cycle, with climbable structures that support a fluid parkour system. The day-night cycle changes the game drastically, as the zombies become more aggressive and more difficult to deal with during night time. The gameplay is focused on weapons-based combat and parkour. The game also features an asymmetrical multiplayer mode (originally set to be a pre-order bonus), and a four-player co-operative multiplayer mode.

The development of the game began in early 2012. Prior to the game's official announcement, several reports claimed that Dying Light was a sequel to Dead Island, another franchise created by Techland, but that rumor was later denied. The game's parkour system puts emphasis on natural movement. To implement that, Techland had to abandon most of the story elements and build them again from scratch. The music development was handled by Paweł Błaszczak. According to him, the soundtrack was inspired by movie soundtracks of the 1970s and 1980s.

At release, Dying Light received positive reviews from critics, with praise mainly directed at the combat, graphics, co-operative multiplayer, navigation and the day-night cycle, while receiving criticism regarding the story, difficulty, and technical issues. The game was the best-selling title for the month of January 2015 and broke the record for the first month sales for a new survival horror intellectual property. Techland announced that they would be committed to the game after its release. As a result, in May 2015, they put another project on hold to concentrate on the post-release development of Dying Light. The team released numerous updates, and two downloadable content (DLC) packages, namely Cuisine & Cargo and The Bozak Horde. An expansion, titled Dying Light: The Following, was announced as well and was released on February 9, 2016.

Gameplay

The free running mechanics in Dying Light allow players to travel via climbable objects such as buildings.

Dying Light is a first-person zombie apocalypse-themed game set in an open world. Players traverse an expansive urban environment overrun by a vicious epidemic, scavenging the world for supplies and crafting weapons to defend against the growing infected population with a heavy focus on parkour mechanics, allowing players to perform actions such as climbing ledges, leaping off from edges, sliding, jumping from roofs to roofs and zip-lining.[3][4] Parkour mechanics also apply to combat. Players can perform actions such as drop-kicking when engaging in combat with enemies.[5] A grappling hook is also featured in the game, allowing players to climb up buildings and travel between places quickly.[6]

The game is mostly melee-based with the majority of fighting using melee weapons. There are more than 100 weapons that can be used and more than 1000 weapon possibilities when players begin crafting new weapons.[7][8] The melee-weapons have a limited lifespan and will be degraded and eventually broken if the player uses them for combat for a long time. Players can repair a weapon a limited number of times. Crafting weapons requires crafting ingredients such as gauze and metal parts, and a blueprint, which can be scavenged or purchased from a shop. Guns are also featured in the game (two types of assault rifle, and a variety of small firearms and shotguns), but players only gain access to them in the latter half of the game. Guns do not break or degrade; however, ammunition is generally very scarce.[9] However, it is also possible to buy gun ammunition from the various traders located in safe houses around the map.

Dying Light contains a dynamic day and night cycle. During the day, the player has to scavenge for supplies to send back to the safe zones. They can set up traps, save random survivors, and make their way to airdrops. The infected are slow, apathetic, and easily visible, allowing the player to simply avoid them, but their danger grows in numbers.[10] Players can also use environmental traps, such as spikes and electrified fences to kill the infected.[11] Lead game designer Maciej Binkowski stated that day time will last for approximately 64 minutes, while night time will last for approximately 7 minutes.[12] The game also features a physics-based lighting system and a dynamic weather system, which includes a variety of conditions such as fog, rain, and wind.[13]

At night the infected transform to become much more dangerous. Without daylight, the senses of the infected become more acute and accurate. They gain the ability to sprint after the player and inflict more damage, as well as the ability to jump and climb buildings like the player. In order for players to avoid contact, they need to use their 'Survivor Sense' to locate the infected in the dark to stay out of their way.[14] If spotted and trying to escape their pursuers, players can use distractions and traps to lower their numbers. Players can use sound to lure the enemies. The player's main defense against the infected is ultraviolet light, which slows them down.[15]

A variety of actions in Dying Light can help players to earn experience points. Engaging in combat with enemies will help players to earn Power points, while performing parkour movement can earn Agility points. Completing missions, challenges and quests will help players to earn Survival points. As the player earns experience, they can spend skill points on a skill tree and upgrade the playable character with new skills. During daytime, if the player's character is killed, survival points will be deducted. In contrast, no survival point will be deducted if the player's character is killed at night. All experience points will also be boosted if the player explores at night.[9][11]

On 1 October 2014, Techland announced that there will be over 50 hours of gameplay in the full version of the game including all downloadable content.[16]

Multiplayer

Online multiplayer features up to 4 players in the co-op mode.[17] At EGX 2014, lead game designer Maciej Binkowski revealed that there will be challenges throughout the world for players to engage in for experience. Two challenges were showcased with one being a fight to kill as many infected as possible and the other being a race to an airdrop.[18] The game's campaign is also fully playable in the co-op mode.[19] The game offers an asymmetrical multiplayer feature.[20] A multiplayer feature included is a game mode known as "Be the Zombie" that allows the player to play as a particularly strong and fast infected mutant called the "Night Hunter" and invade other players' servers. The players who are playing as humans are tasked with destroying the infected nests and surviving attacks performed by the Night Hunter, while the Night Hunter's goal is to deplete the players' collective life pool and therefore prevent them from attacking the nests.[21]

Synopsis

Setting

Players assume the role of Kyle Crane (Roger Craig Smith), an undercover operative sent to infiltrate the quarantine zone in the Middle-Eastern city of Harran, during his mission to find Kadir "Rais" Suleiman (Jim Pirri), a political figure gone rogue who has a file that could destroy the reputation of his agency.[22] But when he arrives, he must decide between completing his mission or helping the other survivors, who are being led by Harris Brecken (Matthew Wolf).[23]

Plot

In the city of Harran, a mysterious viral outbreak has turned most of the population into hyper-aggressive zombie-like creatures, forcing Harran's Defence Ministry to quarantine parts of the city. The Global Relief Effort (GRE) assists survivors still trapped in the city by regularly airdropping supplies. The GRE hires Kyle Crane to infiltrate Harran in order to retrieve a sensitive file stolen from them by Kadir Suleiman, which he is using as leverage to blackmail them, with the threat of publicizing it if anything were to happen to him. Crane is airdropped into Harran, where he is ambushed by a gang of hostile bandits. As the infected attack, Crane is bitten and infected, but rescued by Jade Aldemir (Nazneen Contractor) and Amir Ghoreyshi (Roy Vongtama). Amir sacrifices himself to buy Jade and Crane time, and Jade takes him to a survivor sanctuary called the Tower. Crane wakes up and is introduced to Rahim Aldemir (Suraj Partha), Jade's younger brother. Rahim teaches Crane some parkour basics and sends him to Spike (Kevin Daniels), who gives him his first task as a Runner of the tower. Crane learns that the Tower, which seeks to help other survivors, is being harassed by a gang of bandits led by a ruthless warlord named Rais who steals and hoards the supplies from the GRE airdrops, including Antizin; a drug that suppresses symptoms of infection and slows down the process of turning into a zombie. After Harris Brecken, leader of the tower is nearly killed by a rival runner in a mission to retrieve an Antizin drop, the need for the drug at the Tower becomes immense. Crane volunteers and manages to reach an airdrop containing Antizin, but despite the dire need of the medicine by the survivors, Crane is instructed by the GRE to destroy the airdrop, instructing him to reach out to Rais in order to buy the drug and possibly confirm his identity. Crane reluctantly complies and lies to the Tower that the supplies have been looted.

Upset, Brecken tasks Crane with the job of making a deal with Rais. Upon meeting Rais, Crane is able to confirm that he is indeed Suleiman. He carries out a series of unethical tasks for Rais under the assumption that he will be rewarded with two crates of Antizin. Crane is unable to locate the file, and is later betrayed by Rais, who only gives him five vials of Antizin. He later breaks off business with the GRE when they halt the supply drops and refuse to help the Tower. The situation in the tower worsens, and a whole floor is sealed off when an outbreak occurs which leads to many deaths, including several children. In desperate hopes to find Antizin, Crane and Jade pull a raid on a supply storage facility run by Rais, which was formerly a school. They find no Antizin, but rather plastic explosives, which they choose to confiscate to prevent Rais from using them in the future. While doing an errand, Rahim tells Crane that he and Omar (Emmerson Brooks) were planning to bomb a Volatile nest with the explosives found at the school. Crane is opposed to this plan, but after discovering that Rahim went outside the Tower to plant the explosives anyway, he chases after him. Upon catching up to him, he finds that Omar is dead, while Rahim has been wounded. He then executes Rahim's plans, resulting in the destruction of all the infected in the nest. When he gets back to Rahim he discovers that he was actually bitten and had turned while Crane was gone, forcing Crane to snap Rahim's neck when he attacks Crane. Crane returns to the tower to inform Brecken of the news; Jade overhears them and, visibly upset, takes off.

Meanwhile, a scientist at the Tower named Dr. Imran Zere (Roger Aaron Brown), who was attempting to develop a cure for the virus, is kidnapped by Rais, prompting Crane to attempt a rescue mission. Crane is also captured by Rais, who forces Crane to fight in an makeshift arena against groups of infected, before revealing that the file he stole contains proof that the GRE intends to weaponize the virus rather than develop a cure and releases the file to the public. Crane manages to escape before being executed, and in the process, cuts off Rais' hand. Dr. Zere is killed in the rescue attempt, but manages to tell Crane that he had entrusted his research to Jade, who is tasked with delivering it to another scientist named Dr. Allen Camden (Dan Gilvezan). As Crane goes to look for Jade, he finds out that the Defence Ministry is planning to bomb Harran in an effort to completely eradicate the outbreak, claiming that there are no survivors left in the city. Working with Troy and Michael from the Embers, another survivor group in Old Town, Crane tries to enact a plan to alert the outside world there are survivors in Harran by setting off bombs in an apartment building in a specific pattern of a sad face. The plan fails as a jet flies by the building and fires a missile at the pattern to hide proof of survivors. Troy then tells Crane about the possibility of reactivating a radio tower and broadcasting a message to the outside world. Crane is able to climb the radio tower and broadcast their message of survivors being alive inside Harran, thwarting the Ministry's plan.

Jade is then captured by Rais, who also steals Dr. Zere's research. Crane attempts to rescue Jade, however he begins to succumb to the virus while navigating the museum trying to find her. When Crane reaches Jade it is revealed that she has been bitten on the leg hours ago, and she will soon turn. Rais watches from afar and gives Crane an ultimatum: use one bottle of Antizin to save himself or save Jade. Jade sacrifices herself in order to save Crane, saying everyone's life is finite, the only thing we can do is make what happens in between count, "If sacrificing my life means saving everyone in Harran... then that's what I want to do." Jade injects Crane with the Antizin at the last minute, then begins protecting Crane from Rais' men. After the last man is down, Jade succumbs to the wound and turns, forcing Crane to mercifully kill her, by snapping her neck like he did with her brother. After killing Rais' second-in-command, Tahir (Michael Benyaer) with his own machete, Crane delivers the tissue samples to Dr. Camden, who believes that he is very close to the cure, but needs the rest of Dr. Zere's data.

Crane then finds out that Rais has cut a deal with the GRE, in which he will hand over Dr. Zere's research data to them in return for extraction from Harran. Crane then assaults Rais' headquarters (filled with infected) and battles him atop a skyscraper, just as a GRE helicopter shows up, eventually stabbing Rais in the neck and throwing him off the building. He narrowly recovers the research data and decides to turn it over to Dr. Camden instead of the GRE, intending to stay in Harran to help the remaining survivors.

Development

"We always wanted to make a survival game. But in the end, Dead Island was hack-and-slash, killing lots of zombies, and all about making killing fun. With Dying Light, we wanted to create a survival experience. Zombies are a serious threat. We couldn't ever achieve it in Dead Island, because we didn't establish it from the beginning, but it was there at the start of development on Dying Light".[24]

Adrian Ciszewski, Director of Dying Light

The development of Dying Light started in early 2012 by the core team of Techland, which developed Dead Island in 2011.[25] Reports claimed that Dying Light was originally a Dead Island sequel, but members from Techland later confirmed that the game is "an original title from its very beginning.", and that the team would like to create "something bigger and better" with no relation to any existing IP.[25][26] Techland's director Adrian Ciszewski also responded that there is a great difference in terms of creative vision between the studio and the Dead Island publisher Deep Silver and they considered themselves "not in a very good business position" with Dead Island. Therefore, Techland decided to split with publisher Deep Silver and start developing a new IP.[27][28] Ciszewski also revealed that developing a new game can bring the team more freedom than developing Dead Island 2 and they are free to bring the elements originally planned for Dead Island, such as new types of enemies, combat, skills and day-night cycle which was not implemented due to limited team size and time, to a new project.[24]

The new project was later revealed to be Dying Light on 23 May 2013, and the first trailer of the game debuted in Electronic Entertainment Expo 2013.[29][30] Techland promised that Dying Light would be of better quality than Dead Island due to its complex gameplay, extensive story as well as its more serious and mature tone. The development team also considered Dying Light an opportunity "to prove to people that we (Techland) have made a AAA game".[31] Part way through development, the parkour system received an overhaul. Originally aiming to feature a system similar to that of Mirror's Edge, in which players climb up rooftops or walls by interacting with the interactive element, the development team later shifted to put more emphasis on "Natural Movement", in which players can determine what parkour movement can be performed and when to perform them. The overhaul aimed at giving players more freedom in environmental navigation, and it resulted in major changes in animations and artificial intelligence (AI). The studio also abandoned most ideas for story and quests and created them again from scratch.[32] The story of the game was designed to suit the taste of North American audiences. Therefore, Techland invited Dan Jolley, who had written a few comics for DC Comic, to write the story of the game.[33] Inspiration for the story was also drawn from novels such as The Plague as well as Heart of Darkness.[34]

Paweł Błaszczak, the audio director of Techland, who has previously composed the music for The Witcher, Dead Island, and Call of Juarez, composed the music for Dying Light. According to Blaszczak, the music of the game was inspired by movie soundtracks in the 1970s and 1980s, as he considered that the noticeably sadder tone of such music is more appropriate for the game's post-apocalyptic setting than typical horror music. Synthesizers are commonly used within the music, so as to "present a feeling of abandonment, emptiness and sadness" to players. When composing music for the night section of the game, he aims to achieve the silence atmosphere of nighttime. The team eventually created a whistling sound, which played during the night section, so as to make enemy encounters at night "more frightening".[35] The album was released digitally on 4 February 2015, approximately a week after the game's release.[36] Upon release, the soundtrack was praised by David Houghton from GamesRadar for straying away from the typical orchestral music, as well as for giving the game "real texture and power". He also stated that the soundtrack played during the game had made the game "an impactful, ambient experience", and that the music of the game had delivered a unique tone and atmosphere that most other games fail to achieve.[37]

Marketing and release

The game was originally planned to release in 2014.[38] However, on 8 May 2014, Techland announced that the game was delayed until February 2015 due to a "desire to innovate", as well as to improve the parkour elements of the game.[39][40] At E3 2014, Techland announced that Dying Light will have a strong emphasis on role-playing. The game's release date was later pushed forward to January 2015.[41][42] On 28 October 2014, Techland announced that the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 versions of the game have been cancelled. The decision was based on "thorough internal testing" that showed that the consoles could not handle the game properly.[43] Techland originally aimed to deliver the game at 60 frames per second (FPS) on both PlayStation 4 and Xbox One. However, according to senior game producer Adrian Ciszewski, Dying Light's frame rate will be locked at 30 FPS on consoles in order to be able to deliver native 1080p graphics, reduce input lag to minimum, as well as to provide a smoother and more gameplay-tailored performance. He considered 1080p/30 FPS "the optimal solution for Dying Light and all its gameplay features on consoles".[44] A season pass for the game was announced on 4 December 2014 offering a range of new content for the game, including missions, weapons and outfits. The first downloadable content (DLC), Cuisine & Cargo will be available first to season pass holders. An Ultimate Edition, which includes both the base game and the season pass was also announced.[45]

On 17 January 2015, Techland announced that physical copies of Dying Light had been delayed to an unspecified date due to a "longer lead time than digital". The delay affected the Middle East, Asia, Australia, and Europe. Techland announced the game would still be available digitally on its scheduled release date.[46] On 24 January 2015, Techland announced that the physical copies of Dying Light for the affected regions will be released on 27 February 2015. "Be the Zombie mode", originally a pre-order bonus, was made free for everyone who purchases the game regardless of platform and territory. Preorders of the physical copies of the game will receive the Cuisine & Cargo DLC and the Ultimate Survivor Bundle DLC packs for free.[47]

On 2 February 2015, patch 1.2.1 disabled mod support for the game. At the same time, a mod that removed film grain from the game was taken down by the Entertainment Software Association (ESA) using the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.[48] Techland later explained that the problem was an accident, caused by a side-effect of the release of a patch, and were developing a new patch to restore modding.[49] The ESA later apologized for issuing the takedown, saying that "the requests were issued erroneously by a third-party vendor on the organization's behalf."[50] On 6 February 2015, Techland announced that they were developing free mod tools for PC. The company stated that "Modders were a massive part of our gaming community since Call of Juarez 2 and Dead Island, and we wish to continue that with Dying Light."[51] On 12 February 2015 Techland announced that they will release a free update to improve the game's difficulty to make it harder, as well as extending the duration of night time[52] after critics complained that it was too easy.[53][54] On 15 February 2015, a patch that restores modding was released.[55]

A "My Apocalypse Collectors Edition", which costs £250,000, roughly $380,000, at release, was announced on 25 February 2015. It includes content such as free parkour lessons, a custom shelter, night vision goggles and a trip to Poland.[56] On 4 March 2015, Techland announced the "Ultimate Survivor Bundle" DLC for release on 10 March 2015. The DLC includes three new skins and four new weapon blueprints. The DLC is free to season pass holders.[57] On 14 April 2015, Techland released a Developer Tool pack on Steam, allowing players to create custom content such as new maps, story and challenges.[58] The last DLC, titled The Bozak Horde, which will add a new location called Harran Stadium and a horde mode, which tasks players to complete various objectives, was scheduled to be released on 26 May 2015.[59][60]

The marketing campaign of the game received criticism for using a quote by YouTube celebrity, PewDiePie, in advertisements for the game: "I love this game. It's sooo awesome!".[61] The quote was taken from one of PewDiePie's gameplay videos, which was seemingly sponsored by the developers themselves during VGX 2013.[62] Critics noted that it is a "shady" and "ridiculous" approach in marketing, and the quote was also criticized for being grammatically incorrect.[63] PewDiePie later responded through Twitter, claiming that he did not remember saying the quote at all.[64]

On 25 June 2015, in parody of a promotional campaign between Destiny and Red Bull, Techland announced that it would give away codes for premium weapons to players who posted a picture of themselves drinking a glass of water on Twitter. This was later expanded into a "Drink for DLC" campaign, with the planned release of multiple pieces of free DLC for the game if a certain amount of pictures are posted.[65]

On 29 July 2015, Techland announced that they are developing The Following, a standalone expansion for Dying Light. The title will be free to all players who purchased Dying Light's seasonal pass, but will also be available for separate purchase. The Following will introduce a new story campaign, controllable vehicles, and a new map, the size of which is the same as all the previous maps from Dying Light combined.[66] It was released on 9 February 2016. The expansion released alongside Dying Light: The Following – Enhanced Edition, which includes the base game, all the downloadable content and content updates, and the expansion.[67]

A gameplay demo was released on 26 August 2015, approximately six months after the game's initial release. The demo offers three hour of gameplay content, and supports four-player co-operative multiplayer. Most gameplay mechanics, such as the day-night cycle and the crafting system are also featured in the demo.[68]

On March 16, 2016, a version of Dying Light: The Following, subtitled Enhanced Edition, was released on the DRM-free service GOG.com.[69]

Reception

Reception
Aggregate score
AggregatorScore
MetacriticPC: 75/100[70]
PS4: 74/100[71]
XONE: 74/100[72]
Review scores
PublicationScore
Destructoid7/10[73]
Eurogamer7/10[74]
Game Informer8.5/10[75]
GameRevolution[76]
GameSpot7/10[77]
GamesRadar+[78]
GameTrailers6.8/10[79]
Hardcore Gamer3.5/5[80]
IGN8.5/10[81]
PC Gamer (US)70/100[82]
Polygon6.5/10[83]
The Guardian[84]
USgamer[85]
VideoGamer.com8/10[86]
Gamereactor8/10[87]
The Independent3/5[88]

Dying Light received generally positive reviews from critics upon release. Aggregating review website Metacritic gave the PlayStation 4 version 74/100 based on 58 reviews,[71] the Xbox One version 74/100 based on 26 reviews,[72] and the Microsoft Windows version 75/100 based on 40 reviews.[70]

Writing for IGN, Mikel Reparaz gave the game an 8.5/10, praising its vibrant, ambitious and unexpectedly huge open world, featuring natural and fluid parkour movement, enjoyable co-operative multiplayer, increasingly satisfying combat, as well as the rewarding, memorable and often surprising side-missions, which he described as "the part that the storytelling really shines". However, he criticized the under-developed characters, clichéd antagonist, unstable online matchmaking, occasionally clumsy combat and the punishing difficulty in the early stage of the game. He summarized the review by saying that "Dying Light gradually and gratifyingly evolves into a fast, hyper-violent celebration of vertical freedom and zombie destruction. It is one of the most engrossing open-world games – zombie-infested or otherwise – I've played in a while."[81]

Brian Shea, writing for Game Informer also gave the game an 8.5/10, praising its graphics, immersive and well-executed narrative, accessible crafting system, rewarding melee-combat and satisfying combat animation, excellent cooperative multiplayer, huge variety of side-quests, as well the great difference between the day and the night. However, he criticized the unreliable parkour system, as well as the occasionally frustrating control scheme. He also criticized the gunplay, which he stated "don’t feature the same polish as the melee combat". He summarized the game by saying that "Dying Light is a strong open-world zombie game that delivers a good experience on nearly every front."[75]

Steve Burns from VideoGamer.com gave the game an 8/10, saying that "Dying Light is a pleasant surprise. Compulsive and well built... [the perk and upgrade systems] elevate Techland's latest to heights the developer has rarely hit before." However, he stated that the game "isn't quite enough to really drag those who tire of zombie-swatting through to the end."[86]

GameSpot's Kevin VanOrd gave Dying Light a 7/10, while he praised the game's day and night cycle, the free running mechanics, the co-op and competitive environment, he criticized the missions for being boring.[77] Eurogamer's Dan Whitehead gave the game a 7/10, saying that "Dying Light represents an improvement on the technical front, but has lost some of its knockabout charm in the process".[74]

Brandon Jones from GameTrailers gave the game a 6.8/10, while praising its accurate parkour system and the creative environment navigation, he criticized the lip movement which is rarely on track, limited facial animation, repeated character model, lack of a backstory, unnecessary upgrades, occasionally dim AI, texture pop-up, graphical issues and game-breaking glitches.[79]

Arthur Gies from Polygon gave the game a 6.5/10. He praised its unique setting, as well as the navigational challenges, which he stated "has captured a distinctive sense of scale, height and vertigo." However, he criticized the clunky parkour system, poorly explained crafting system, confusing menus and inventory, excessive gore, overused fetch quests, lack of a fast travel system, lack of depth in the competitive multiplayer "Be the Zombie" mode and the aimless campaign.[83]

Matthew Elliot from GamesRadar gave the game a 3/5, praising the threatening electro soundtrack, pleasing parkour, detailed environments and the day-night cycle. He stated that "the sense of urgency to get stuff done during daylight hours and the terrifying experience delivered at night has made Dying Light feel unique". However, he criticized the difficulty spike, the lack of characterisation, as well as the linear mission design of the story campaign, which he stated "the disappointing mission design contributes to the nagging sense that you'd rather be out hitting the restless dead with pipes."[78]

Sales

In the first week after its release, 1.2 million people played Dying Light.[89] The retail version of Dying Light debuted in No. 1 in the U.S. software sales chart, outselling heavy competitors such as Grand Theft Auto V and Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare. Dying Light has the highest-selling first month of sales for a new survival horror intellectual property, breaking the record previously held by The Evil Within.[90][91] The game also debuted in No. 1 in the UK software retail chart for two weeks, outperforming other major releases in February such as The Order: 1886 and Evolve, despite the game was released a month early in digital format.[92][93] In its first 45 days after its release, 3.2 million people played Dying Light, making it the most popular game the developer Techland ever developed.[94] On 19 May 2015, Techland announced 4.5 million players have played the game as of June 2015.[95] In May 2015, it was announced that the development of another Techland video game, Hellraid, had been put on hold so as to allow the studio to allocate resources and time to concentrate on the development of the Dying Light franchise.[96] On 13 August 2015, Techland announced that the game had sold five million units.[97]

A prequel novel, Nightmare Row, was announced by Techland on 13 January 2015. The story revolved around Mel Wyatt and her brother Paul, who were trapped in a hotel after the outbreak. The novel is written by Raymond Benson.[98]

Sequel

A sequel, Dying Light 2, was announced at E3 2018 by Chris Avellone, who will serve as the game's narrative designer.[99]

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