8 things we want in a Middle-earth: Shadow of Mordor sequel

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Rumours have been circulating that a Middle-earth: Shadow of Mordor sequel is in the works. TheCV of stuntwoman Lauren May Kim reveals Shadow of Mordor 2 as one of the games she’s worked on. It’s no surprise a sequel might be in the works – since its release, Shadow of Mordor has sold 2.88 million copies worldwide on the PS4 alone, and the game received widespread critical acclaim. Having played and loved Shadow of Mordor, I’m excited at the prospect of bothering a fresh generation of orcs in the sequel, so here’s a wishlist of things I’d love to see.

Better boss battles

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The final battle against The Black Hand is a huge disappointment in the original. After spending the entirety of the game brutally murdering most of Mordor, the finale doesn’t evenoffer a real test. I’d like to actually engage in combat with my most dangerous foes, rather than just tap a few buttons during anti-climactic QTE events, which is exactly what the concluding fight of Shadow of Mordor turns out to be. Give us a boss deserving of a Middle-earth beatdown.

The return Of the Nemesis system

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The Nemesis System was one of the greatest parts of the last game, if notthe greatest. It will almost certainly be included in the sequel, as confirmed by Shadow of Mordor design director Michael de Plater: “…to be super honest, it was our first go, so we’ve just scratched the surface with what we can do with the Nemesis system.” ‘First go’ implies there will be a second, and de Plater gives us another reason to believe the sequel rumours are true.

Restart button for failed missions

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This is more of an irritation, than a huge complaint, but being unable to restart a mission after failing is an annoyance. Pouring salt into your already cavernous wound, valuable murder-time is wasted on long journeys which could be avoided. The fast travel option from the first game shows the developers want to quickly get people into the action, so an automatic mission restart option seems like a logical step for the sequel.

More in-depth character exploration

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Celebrimbor’s story is further explored in The Bright Lord DLC and I’d like to see Talion’s back-story get the same treatment. However, Monolith may already have chosen which characters it’ll be delving into in its next Middle-earth game. “The thing we started to explore more and that I love as a character and [that] has so much more potential, is Sauron”, says Michael de Plater. “I think he’s such a strong villain and I’d love to explore the Nazgul [Sauron’s servants] as well.”

A better story

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While the original’s combat is ace, Shadow of Mordor’s narrative is a tale of mediocrity, thanks to an all-too-familiar dead family revenge plot. With the mention of a ‘new ring’ from Talion at the end of the game, the next story could be far more interesting. Ideas include Celebrimbor battling with Talion about whether making a new ring is a good idea, with the player making the ultimate decision, and Gandolf appearing in a bid to adopt Gollum – both of which are far better than regular revenge.

A bigger map

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With Udin and the Sea of Numen increasing the amount of areas we can explore in the last game, it seems logical that we’ll get an expansion of this in the sequel, perhaps into the surrounding areas of Mordor. What I’d really like though is for Shadow of Mordor 2 to have a Witcher 3-sized map, but of Middle-earth instead of the Northern Kingdoms.

Revamped skills

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As much as we all love many of Shadow of Mordor’s attributes and abilities ideas, it’d be great to see some new skills. A few can stay: Brutalize should definitely make the cut, and Brand would undoubtedly be used again thanks to its value within the Nemesis System. Fresh concepts, however, would allow for the core systems to stay in place without feeling worn out or boring. Much like learning your orc nemesis has levelled up, I’d like a blend of grim familiarity and fresh challenge.

No co-Op, no PvP

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Before it was released, Monolith responded to a question on Twitter with the words, “Alas, no co-op. Shadow of Mordor is being crafted wholly as a single-player experience.” Sure, this was the right decision, and I hope any further games continue to provide the same amazing single-player experience as the first. Trails of War – the score based competition providing an alternative, stabby challenge – can absolutely come back, though.

Original article first appeared on GamesRadar on 05/04/2016