Dark Souls II: Crown of the Ivory King

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83

Top Critic Average

85%

Critics Recommend

PC Gamer
80 / 100
GameSpot
9 / 10
Hardcore Gamer
4 / 5
GameTrailers
9 / 10
Metro GameCentral
7 / 10
Digital Trends
4.5 / 5
PCMag
4 / 5
PC Invasion
9 / 10
Creators: Bandai Namco Games
Release Date: Sep 29, 2014 - PC
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Dark Souls II: Crown of the Ivory King Media

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Dark Souls II: Crown of the Ivory King - Launch Trailer

Dark Souls II: Crown of the Ivory King Screenshot 1

Critic Reviews for Dark Souls II: Crown of the Ivory King

It's familiar, but Crown of the Ivory King is still another gorgeous five-hour helping of Dark Souls 2. Cherish it—it's your last.

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Dark Souls II, in all its epic designs, fittingly concludes in the harshness of winter.

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Dark Souls II: Crown of the Ivory King is arguably the best of the Lost Crown Trilogy, but it's not without its faults. The main complaint revolves around the conclusion not having a big pay off, despite sinking ten to fifteen hours into the entire set of quests.

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Crown of the Ivory King is exhausting, but at the end of it all, the predominant emotion swelling inside of us was sadness. We wanted more: one more boss fight, one more tucked-away room – not because the DLC is lacking, but because we didn't want to leave. This may be the last we hear of Dark Souls II, but it went out with a bang.

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Still not quite essential, but the best of the three downloads and an effective final chapter for the most successfully difficult video game of the modern era.

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Dark Souls II desperately needed Ivory King's detailed frozen wasteland.

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Dark Souls II ends in an icy bang with the Crown of the Ivory King DLC. Despite a few weaknesses, the scenario in the frozen city of Eleum Loyce is fun, challenging, and thoroughly rewarding.

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Crown of the Ivory King's snow-swept ramparts are an exemplary example of intricate, looping level design. This third and final release wraps up the most consistent set of DLC I've played since Fallout: New Vegas.

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