For many who missed it, following the bloody finale of Mortal Kombat 1’s story, which noticed Liu Kang and the gang dispatch the Lethal Alliance of Shang Tsung and Quan Chi, a model of PS2-era jobber Havik found that not solely do different timelines exist, however that they might all use a little bit extra chaos. This brings us to the brand new storyline, which sees him invade Liu Kang’s timeline, and kidnap Geras to infuse his MacGuffins with the ability to take over all timelines.
For many who hoped the timeline crap would come to an finish after Mortal Kombat 11, we’re afraid it’s at its peak right here, as we’re handled to completely different variants of all of the solid, together with a Council of Kangs-esque quantity of Havik. Nonetheless, the opposite – and much much less tiresome – facet to the story includes our trio of DLC fighters: Cyrax, Sektor, and Noob Saibot. We take care of the aftermath of Sub Zero’s betrayal of Earthrealm and the way it has affected the robo-enhanced duo, with Cyrax particularly being the center of this storyline (till she disappears for an enormous chunk of it, as is custom for good characters).
One drawback we had with the unique recreation’s story was Johnny Cage, who treads the road of being character and a popular culture spouting machine, and this time round he’s insufferable. Each line out of his mouth is mainly a reference, together with one that’s nearly actually “this is rather like Sport of Thrones Season 3 Episode 9”. A majority of the humour within the enlargement falls utterly flat, however Johnny is the worst.
Which is bizarre, as a result of this enlargement additionally contains Animalities for each character, that are usually fairly humorous. Whilst you don’t must pay for the DLC to get the Animalities, they’re new with this replace. There’s some apparent ones like Scorpion turning right into a Scorpion (not a Penguin this time, sadly), and a few extra on the market ones like Quan Chi’s. In the meantime, Johnny Cage and Peacemaker get the perfect ones by far.
Whereas the Khaos Reigns enlargement does include a full Kombat Move 2 (together with the visitor fighters later down the road), the story is just round two hours lengthy, making this enlargement’s value – which is sort of on par with a whole recreation – a little bit questionable. And it doesn’t do something to vary the obvious flaws already current in Mortal Kombat 1 such because the horrible Invasions mode or the overpriced cosmetics.