
Yes, the Alchemist has already come to the Ossean Wastes, and has allied himself with the vile Ezrohir, presumably to aid their impending attack on Zeryphesh. And I wasn't really motivated to follow the inter-mission intermissions either, with dialogue as eye-glazingly unreadable as the following:
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I'm not wholly shocked that there hasn't been a Netflix series based on the concept. People are sending you, whoever you are, off on missions to do something to stop the Alchemist from doing something else. There's something about an Alchemist, something about some bad thing he did at the end of Torchlight I (like anyone finished Torchlight I), and then it just starts. I'd love to interject here to detail what Torchlight II is about, but honestly, despite having watched the introduction twice I couldn't tell you a single thing about it. And I'm left wondering: am I just playing them wrong? Taking out purple-level bosses I hadn't really noticed I was fighting.

But this time out, I found myself often barely paying any attention at all, and doing just fine. I can't imagine a way they could be all-consuming, considering how little there actually is to be doing at any one time. I've always played action-RPGs while doing something else. As much as I expected to gently sink back into a nice few days clicking through this 2012 game, it's felt a bit like a slightly annoying chore to do in the background while I finally get around to watching Mr Robot. And I've found myself feeling an enormous distance from them. Is this heresy? It feels a bit like heresy. At the time of its release, I confidently declared TL2 to be the better game, and yet one seems like it's still the dominant title in the field, and the other like a retro feature idea despite having most recently been released three months ago.Īnd my conclusion? Having replayed both a bunch in the last month, I still prefer Torchlight over Diablo! But, um, well, I'm not sure how much I actually like either.
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A wondering that probably reveals a damning lot, since Torchlight II was actually re-released for Switch, PS4 and XB1 in September this year, and I didn't even notice. With Diablo III continuing to be so popular, the same game finding a new audience and fresh buzz seven years on with its Switch release last year, I wondered if Torchlight II could do the same.

I feel like I'm having a sort of ARPG existential crisis. Past Perfect is a retrospective column in which we look back into gaming history to see whether old favourites are still worth playing today.
