Skip to main content

Have You Played... Dishonored 2?

Don't be an outsider

A side-on screenshot of Dishonored 2's villains

Occasionally I have these moments where I can't stop thinking about Dishonored 2. They come in fits and spurts, when I'm playing a game or I'm ordering a takeaway or I'm reading a book. I think to myself, "this just isn't A Crack In The Slab though, is it?"

A Crack In The Slab is a mission where you head into a ruined mansion that's been sealed off for three years. Your task is to find out what on earth went on in this mansion in the past, and to do so, you're given this weird time-bending device.

Now get this: as you explore the mansion in the present, you can also see it from the same perspective in the past by looking through your magical timepiece. At any point, you can choose to flit between the present and the past, seamlessly transitioning from stepping over rubble to seeing your reflection on gleaming marble floors.

Watch on YouTube

It's the little things about this level that continue to blow my mind, like escaping from a locked room by flipping over to the present where the door has crumbled to dust. Or the time I entered dining room that was empty in the present, but filled with guards sat around a long table in the past. I hid under the table in the present, nipped back in time to nab a guard’s master key off his belt, and flipped back to the present without any of them being any the wiser.

Don't get me started on Jindosh's Mansion.

Read this next

Ed Thorn avatar
Ed Thorn: When Ed's not cracking thugs with bicycles in Yakuza, he's likely swinging a badminton racket in real life. Any genre goes, but he's very into shooters and likes a weighty gun, particularly if they have a chainsaw attached to them. Adores orange and mango squash, unsure about olives.
View comments (38)
In this article

Dishonored 2

PS4, Xbox One, PC

Related topics

Rock Paper Shotgun is better when you sign in

Sign in and join us on our journey to discover strange and compelling PC games.