There are some neat set pieces to be found across the holes too, whether that’s when landing your ball in a stone monkey’s moving paw, sending the ball down the gigantic tail of a stone crocodile, or simply trying to launch the ball up the steps of the giant stone structure. It also just so happens to be a lot of fun to play across, with a good variety of holes on offer that’ll demand some skill to hit under par. “You can expect to putt balls across a luscious jungle environment surrounded by a myriad of stone structures, statues, and a weaving river that runs through the middle of it all – of course, there are also the remnants of explorers that previously embarked on a journey to find the city, though they met a… grisly end.” Again, there’s no other course that offers visually driven weather effects like this across the game (maybe with the exception of the wind in Quixote Valley) and it helps make El Dorado feel all the more unique and atmospheric. Not only is it lit up by a variety of glowing torches, flares, and flashes of lightning, but it’s also being hammered with rainfall (don’t worry, your clubs won’t get slippery and wet). It’s even better on the hard variant of the course, which takes place at night-time. It genuinely felt like I was there in the midst of a jungle, whilst the impressive attention to detail found in every nook and cranny ensures there’s ALWAYS something neat to uncover. It’s a wonderful setting and one that feels quite different to anything else in the game, with the sun beaming through the looming trees that hang over you and the sense of verticality as you work your way up the stone structures giving off some real grandeur vibes. You can expect to putt balls across a luscious jungle environment surrounded by a myriad of stone structures, statues, and a weaving river that runs through the middle of it all – of course, there are also the remnants of explorers that previously embarked on a journey to find the city, though they met a… grisly end. The lost city of El Dorado was supposedly located within the jungles of South America, and whilst the myth has been squashed in recent years ( take a look at this BBC article to find out more), the course in Walkabout Mini Golf certainly embraces the setting. I’ve had the chance to sink my teeth into the course and, believe me, it’s fantastic – ESPECIALLY the hard variant which offers one of the most atmospheric environments across the whole game.Īs a note, this review will be unscored, but you can check out our scored review of the base game through this link (spoiler: we loved it). In the meantime, they’ve just released an additional course that follows the ‘Lost Cities’ theme: El Dorado. It’s been confirmed that courses based around the Labrynth movie and the Myst video game are due to release later in the year too, so the future is exciting for us VR golfers. Thanks for any advice.The team at Mighty Coconut have given players some top-notch courses with their DLC for Walkabout Mini Golf, with The Gardens of Babylon and Shangri-La the first two of the game’s ‘Lost Cities’ DLC and Sweetopia offering a delicious-looking (and more fantastical) locale for players to sink some balls. If not, then at least hope, I’m not the only one here. But now I came out of ideas of what to do, so I would be really glad for any help or advice. I’ve completed this DLC once in another storyline, shortly after its releasing with no problem. I’ve already completed the sidequest from Charlatan in Sasau, so he has moved to Ledetchko.I’m supposed to talk to master Feyfar about documents from Ulrich (I’ve completed the sidequest from Master Feyfar succesfully). I also am using few mods, so I tried to do the quest without them.
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