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Vampires. An odd choice, we’ve always thought, for the villains of the latest entry in the Arkane canon. In most of its games, even the end-of-level bosses tend to be frail human beings – supernaturally powerful in what they can do to you, perhaps, but able to be taken down with just a couple of shots, or a single knife in the back. “The average enemy in [Dishonored] was, like, an elderly aristocrat,” says Arkane Austin studio director Harvey Smith. “So what do you do? You can’t turn them into, you know, Hitler in a mech suit.” We’re having this conversation in Bethesda’s London HQ, watched over by a screensaver image depicting BJ Blazkowicz. “Well, you could do that, but…”
The point is that creatures of the night tend to be a little hardier. Arkane loves diegetic explanations for its design decisions, and we wonder if this might be a way of explaining the need to extend their health bars when four players are out slaying together. “We don’t do the bullet-sponge thing, because it’s not as much fun,” Smith says, to our relief. “That gets obnoxious, where you’re just dumping clip after clip into them.” We only get to play solo – and Smith concedes that there is a little damage scaling when more players