The Into The Light mini-expansion is just the sort of redemption story Bungie needed to win over the Guardians prior to the release of The Final Shape.
Quite frankly, of all the game series released during the live-service period, Destiny 2 has seen more highs and lows than any other. After a difficult start with The Red War, Bungie’s popular sequel to its looter shooter game only really recovered with Forsaken. Since then, there have been several amazing (The Witch Queen) and dreadful (Lightfall) moments that have influenced players’ perspectives.
The most recent mini-expansion before Destiny 2’s grand climax is called Into The Light. With the release of new content like Onslaught, a new zone, and the reprinting of beloved missions and weaponry, the developers are making every effort to lure gamers back before one final push.
It’s effectively reminded gamers of the main reason they play the looter shooter, and it’s done a nice job of accomplishing that.
First off, the recently launched Onslaught mode is unquestionably one of the greatest seasonal additions in recent memory. It strikes a good mix between replayability and difficulty and allows you to farm the re-released weaponry. Then there are the more challenging challenges, which provide even greater rewards, such as Adept weaponry and other items.
The mini-expansions reintroduction of the Zero Hour and Whisper of the Worm missions is also a pleasant sight, allowing seasoned players to revisit and uncover their mysteries while allowing novice Guardians to take on a few fresh challenges.
Along with amazing loot, this section offers craftable exotics and randomly rolled reissued weapons. Even if you already have one of these weapons before entering Into The Light, this offers you a lot of incentives to farm the content.
Another great little area is the Hall of Champions, which has its own reputation system that allows you to earn different awards as you advance and attune to a particular weapon to improve your farming. By doing this, Bungie is blatantly demonstrating to the gamers that they are aware of what they want and are able to provide it.
The Final Shape is back in the top 10 most played Xbox games, indicating that gamers have come back for one final chance before it opens, according to player counts across many platforms, including Steam and Xbox.
Comparable levels of success were seen on Steam, where the game’s player count doubled after release, peaking at 50–100k concurrent players. In light of a small content drop, it’s a mini-renaissance, but its significance goes well beyond its apparent extent. It has been crucial to rebuild community trust in Destiny 2 with The Final Shape rapidly approaching. All eyes were now on Bungie to deliver what was perhaps its most significant release to date.