Testament also has something called "the wheel of
Dark And Darker Gold consumables" that lets you craft and then quickly apply enchantments to your weapons, making your arrows deadlier, turning your sword into flames, and other magical effects. The Dark Souls 2 defenders are still logged on
It's especially nice that you don't need to open an inventory menu screen and hunt around a long list to quickly supercharge your gear on the fly. Testament has been in the works for a while—I found a Kickstarter page for it from way back in 2019, though it didn't secure enough funding at the time.
When's it releasing? "Coming soon" is the only clue, which hopefully doesn't mean, like, 2025. We can say it: Dark Souls 2 is the black sheep among its sequel siblings. It’s always been a weird one to digest, not least because it didn’t have series creative director Miyazaki at the helm.
Earlier this year, when first-time and veteran Souls players alike were polishing off their first or sixth playthroughs of Elden Ring, I was watching carefully. As I knew they would, they started looking backwards, asking which earlier Souls games were worth revisiting.
But I wasn’t trawling those Twitter threads for the standard replies, the obvious insistence that yes, you should try the first Dark Souls if you haven’t, and that yes, Bloodborne’s lack of a PC port is a heinous crime. As a Dark Souls 2 fan, I was seeking the other sickos.
However outcast or reviled we might be, I knew there’d be others coming out to bat for Dark Souls 2 in 2022, emerging from their wells to shame mankind. And I wanted to hear, after eight years, why
Dark And Darker Gold for sale they still insist it's not only worth playing, but the true peak of the Dark Souls series..