Tag Archives: Legion

Toxoplasmosis exposure warning issued for wild game dinners at American Legion post in Mount Kisco, Westchester County – WABC-TV

  1. Toxoplasmosis exposure warning issued for wild game dinners at American Legion post in Mount Kisco, Westchester County WABC-TV
  2. Two people have parasite from Mount Kisco NY game dinners, alert says The Journal News
  3. Parasitic infections in Westchester County linked to game dinners at American Legion Post, health officials say CBS New York
  4. Westchester County issues public health alert over potential exposure to parasitic infection from American Legion Hall dinners News 12 Westchester
  5. Urgent Public Health Alert After Parasitic Exposure Linked To Events Patch

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Stellar Lenovo Legion Pro 5 with 16-inch display, Ryzen 7 7745HX, and RTX 4070 enjoys whopping US$700 discount – Notebookcheck.net

  1. Stellar Lenovo Legion Pro 5 with 16-inch display, Ryzen 7 7745HX, and RTX 4070 enjoys whopping US$700 discount Notebookcheck.net
  2. RTX 3080 gaming laptop deal sees attractive price cut weeks ahead of Black Friday WePC – PC Tech & PC Gaming News
  3. Ready your PC for MW3 with this RTX 4070 deal on Amazon ahead of the Black Friday rush PC Guide – For The Latest PC Hardware & Tech News
  4. Holy crap! MSI Raider with RTX 4060 sees $900 price cut in rare gaming laptop deal Laptop Mag
  5. MSI GE76 Raider Gaming Laptop deal sees price plummet ahead of Black Friday WePC – PC Tech & PC Gaming News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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The Lenovo Legion Tower 7i Gen 8 RTX 4080 Gaming PC Is $2016 for Intel Gamer Days 2023 – IGN

  1. The Lenovo Legion Tower 7i Gen 8 RTX 4080 Gaming PC Is $2016 for Intel Gamer Days 2023 IGN
  2. Eye-catching GPU deal sees EVGA RTX 3060 Ti price fall below $700 PC Guide – For The Latest PC Hardware & Tech News
  3. This latest-gen Acer Nitro RTX 4050 laptop just had its price slashed on Amazon WePC – PC Tech & PC Gaming News
  4. Lenovo Has a Legion 16″ RTX 4090 Gaming Laptop for Only $2699.99 During the Intel Gamer Days Sale IGN
  5. Experience Starfield at its best with this incredible RTX 3090 PC deal PC Guide – For The Latest PC Hardware & Tech News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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American Legion baseball: State tournament schedule, first-round pairings complete – Salisbury Post – Salisbury Post

  1. American Legion baseball: State tournament schedule, first-round pairings complete – Salisbury Post Salisbury Post
  2. University of Charleston to host American Legion Baseball State Tournament West Virginia MetroNews
  3. Junior Legion baseball roundup: Montevideo wins a playoff thriller from Madison West Central Tribune
  4. Carlson, Redhawks ride wave of stellar play to the SubState 1 championship round Rochester Post Bulletin
  5. Fort Cumberland trounces Boonsboro, 10-0, in state tournament opener Cumberland Times-News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Russian Volunteer Corps and Freedom of Russia Legion report capture of Russian regular army soldiers in Belgorod Oblast, call governor for meeting – Yahoo News

  1. Russian Volunteer Corps and Freedom of Russia Legion report capture of Russian regular army soldiers in Belgorod Oblast, call governor for meeting Yahoo News
  2. Ukraine war: Anti-Putin fighters say two Russian soldiers ‘captured’ BBC
  3. Pro-Ukrainian ‘partisans’ offer to hand over prisoners to Belgorod governor Gladkov; Gladkov calls them ‘bastards’ and ‘fascists’ in response Meduza
  4. Russian occupation forces in Henichesk hold Ukraine supporters in administrative building basement Yahoo News
  5. Russian governor offers to meet group holding soldiers captive Reuters.com
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Russian Supreme Court Deems Freedom of Russia Legion Terrorist Organization – The Moscow Times

  1. Russian Supreme Court Deems Freedom of Russia Legion Terrorist Organization The Moscow Times
  2. Russia’s Supreme Court declares the Freedom of Russia Legion, reportedly comprised of Russian volunteers fighting for Ukraine, a ‘terrorist organization’ Meduza
  3. Russian Court Upholds Conscript’s Right To Alternative Service On Religious Grounds Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
  4. Russia OKs alternative civil service for mobilized believer The Washington Post
  5. Russian court upholds conscript’s right to alternative service on religious grounds Reuters
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Lenovo Legion 5i Pro (2022) review: faster and pricier

The 2021 Lenovo Legion 5 Pro was my favorite gaming laptop of last year. I loved its keyboard, its 16-inch QHD 16:10 aspect ratio display, and, of course, its powerful RTX 3070 GPU. What I loved the most was that Lenovo achieved in a $1,599.99 machine what most competitors charge close to $2K or more for.

The 2022 version of the Legion 5 Pro brings more of the same but with an as-tested $1,999 price that costs $500 more than the AMD-based version that we tested last year. It still delivers one of the best typing experiences that I’ve experienced on a gaming laptop, and Lenovo improved on its display by adding variable refresh rate support to keep games looking smooth.

As for what’s new, it’s faster, with support for the latest 12th Gen Intel processors and AMD’s Ryzen 6000 H-series processors, along with new and more powerful GPUs. Also, last year’s edgier-looking top shell looks a little more toned down now.

Some downsides have carried over from the 2021 version, however, including the base model’s paltry 512GB of storage. It only takes a few games to all but use up such a small amount of space. And while I gave mild praise to its speakers last year, I’ve tested a few competing gaming laptops, like the Asus Strix Scar 17 and Razer’s latest Blade, that prove how much better they can sound if you’re willing to spend more. And some of Lenovo’s preinstalled apps and bloatware like McAfee anti-virus software regularly serve annoying pop-ups on the corner of the screen.

Then, there’s the matter of supply. The 2021 Legion 5 Pro was sold exclusively at Walmart, and it was sold out for most of the year, though it’s now more readily available for $1,399.99. I’m not sure if the pandemic’s effects on chip shortages are to blame, if Walmart dropped the ball, or if Lenovo misjudged how popular this model might be. Either way, it was disappointing to me that readers couldn’t find my favorite laptop in stock. As for this year’s model, we’ll have to wait and see if that situation improves.

At the time of publication, Lenovo had almost no details to provide about pricing for the other models in the Legion 5 Pro lineup, particularly the AMD-based models. It was even short on concrete details for the model that I’m testing for review, like an exact release date or a product page. It’s useful for the purposes of a review to have basic info for the sake of comparison, like prices for each configuration and when they’ll come out. We’ll update this review once Lenovo shares more info.

In place of the old, cross-shaped logo, this one just says “Legion” on the display’s shell.

It looks like a slab, but at least it’s a pretty good-looking slab.

Lenovo is now one of many manufacturers that makes two versions of its gaming laptops, one with AMD processors and another with Intel processors (Intel is denoted with “i” in the name, like Legion 5i Pro). The model that it sent over for review is nearly the highest-end Intel model that it offers, equipped with the Core i7-12700H processor (there will also be a Core i9-12900H model) and with Nvidia’s RTX 3070 Ti that has an impressive 150W maximum graphics power. As with almost all high-end gaming laptops coming in 2022, this Legion 5 Pro has 16GB DDR5 RAM clocked at 4,800MHz and can go up to 32GB. For storage, the configuration I have has 512GB.

It’s cool to see Lenovo getting on board with the latest standards, but it’s still out of touch with how little storage it includes in the base model. A measly 512GB of storage just isn’t enough given how large game file sizes have become. I had to offload storage after I had installed Cyberpunk 2077, Red Dead Redemption 2, Shadow of the Tomb Raider, and a few other apps. It’s not a good look that I feel the need to urge any prospective buyers to open up the laptop and install M.2 SSDs. All Legion 5 Pro models feature two M.2 slots of different sizes (one M.2 2242 slot and one M.2 2280 slot), and pricier configurations include at least 1TB of storage.

In addition to the default storm grey colorway, Lenovo also makes the Legion 5 Pro in a glacier white. The company has also swapped the outdated Legion logo on top of the display’s lid for a newer one that just says “Legion.” That completes my tour of the new design features in this year’s Legion 5 Pro. It looks nearly identical in all other ways. It’s still kind of a slab of a laptop design-wise and far from an immediate head-turner like the Razer Blade 15 or the Asus Zephyrus G14. Though, that could easily be considered a perk by some, including myself.

There’s a webcam shutter switch, a headphone jack, and a USB-A 3.2 Gen 1 port on the right side.

The USB-C PD port on the Legion 5 Pro’s rear can receive up to 135W of power.

Despite the limited design tweaks, some of the ports have been rearranged to make room for an extra USB-C port. On the left side, there’s one USB-C 3.2 Gen 2 port and a Thunderbolt 4 USB-C port. The headphone jack is now on the right side instead of the left, joining the switch that controls the electronic camera shutter and USB-A 3.2 Gen 1 port. The connectivity on the rear is mostly the same as that of last year’s model, consisting of a power jack, two USB-A 3.2 Gen 1 ports, an HDMI 2.1 port, a USB-C PD port, and an Ethernet port. Last year’s model had one extra USB-A port, but I’m not distraught over it getting left out.

As for how long this gaming laptop can last on a single charge, I got around five hours with a mix of using about a dozen tabs in Microsoft Edge, with Slack and Spotify running in the background. The screen’s brightness was set to around 40 percent, and I set the Legion 5 Pro’s cooling profile to its automatic settings. I also did a 30-minute Zoom meeting. So, the longevity here isn’t abnormally low, nor is it very good. But thankfully, Lenovo offers a couple of ways to charge the laptop, which is a move that several other manufacturers have also adopted.

Lenovo more than doubled the top charging speed of its rear USB-C port to 135W in this new model from 65W last year. Charging via USB-C sure beats carrying around its massive 300W power brick, though the laptop will drain faster than it can charge if you plan on doing some gaming while only using a USB-C charger. Conversely, one convincing reason to bring that hefty charger along is to use the Super Rapid Charge feature, which claims to recharge a large portion of the 80Wh battery in around 30 minutes. Using the feature requires you to opt in through the preinstalled Lenovo Vantage software. I’ve tried it, and it filled over half the battery’s capacity in that timeframe (though the wrist rest gets a little toasty during the process).

The Pixel 6 is pretty big, just to put the size of this 300W power brick into context.

The Legion 5 Pro continues to be an absolute dream to type on — and use, generally. Many manufacturers have delivered minor keyboard redesigns this year (including Dell, Alienware, and more), but Lenovo was right to keep this one exactly as it was. It’s jam-packed — there’s a full number pad, and its directional keys are nice and big. On some keyboard layouts, I’ll accidentally hit the power button or misfire by hitting the right Shift when I want to press the forward slash button — but I didn’t experience accidental presses here. Lenovo claims to have slightly increased the size of the trackpad in this year’s model, but the difference is negligible.

An area that Lenovo didn’t update (though I wish it had) is the Legion 5 Pro’s speakers. They’re no worse than the ones in last year’s laptop, but some manufacturers have made big improvements here in 2022. Bad speakers like the ones in the Legion 5 Pro are what inspired video creator Dave2D to do in-depth testing to get to the bottom of why Windows laptops generally have such terrible audio, especially when compared to recent MacBooks. I get that many gamers use gaming headsets and headphones, but these speakers could have used some love for 2022.

Many games are configured to take full advantage of 16:10 aspect ratio screens, like Cyberpunk 2077.

Sadly, some games (like Elden Ring) don’t play nicely with screen resolutions that fall outside the norm.

The 16-inch matte IPS display included with this Legion 5 Pro has received some upgrades, even if you might not immediately notice them. Like last year, it has a 165Hz QHD+ resolution panel. What’s new is that it supports variable refresh rate (VRR), which lets the display’s refresh rate flex in sync with the hardware, with the intent being that you’ll notice fewer stutters during intense gameplay.

Outside of screen specs, the display built into the Legion 5 Pro looks just as stunning as last year’s, with 100 percent coverage of the sRGB color gamut. Lenovo says that it can offer 500 nits at peak brightness. While I didn’t have the tools to measure the accuracy of that claim on-hand, the screen remained very bright and crisp while bathed in natural light. Lower-end versions of the Legion 5 Pro have a 1,920 x 1,200 resolution with 300 nits of peak brightness.

Shifting to gaming performance, I noticed a sizable year-over-year improvement in almost every game that I tested. For instance, Shadow of the Tomb Raider’s benchmark (with graphics settings and ray tracing set to ultra and Nvidia’s deep learning super sampling, or DLSS, set to balanced) ran at an average of 82 frames per second at native resolution — a 20-frame increase over the last-gen laptop. Without ray tracing (with DLSS still switched on), the performance shot up to 110 frames per second.

With its graphics settings on ultra and the full suite of ray tracing options set to max (with DLSS on), Control was almost always running over 55 frames per second at native resolution, with some environments hovering comfortably above 70 frames per second — another dramatic year-over-year improvement. The 2021 model topped out at around 45 frames per second regardless of the scene.

The build quality remains excellent on the Legion 5 Pro, though barely anything has changed year over year.

The power button’s LED color indicates which performance profile is selected, blue being the quietest.

The only game that I tested that didn’t display a huge boost in performance was Red Dead Redemption 2, which ran at an average of 59 frames per second (the same result that last year’s model put up) with graphics settings set to ultra. DLSS wasn’t available in Red Dead Redemption 2 when I tested it last year, but that feature bumped the average up to 73 frames per second.

Like last year’s Legion 5 Pro, this model keeps relatively cool and quiet while running games. You can switch between performance profiles by holding the Function key and pressing the Q key. The power button’s LED changes colors to indicate the profile that has been set (blue is silent mode, white is auto mode, and red is performance mode). For transparency, the gaming results that I recorded came from the auto mode, but most games got a small frame rate boost once the performance mode was enabled. That mode works exclusively while it’s plugged into power, and it’ll automatically brighten the screen and prep the machine to use its full amount of power. With that setting on, the fans can run full tilt in games and in other demanding applications, but even then, it’s not the loudest gaming laptop I’ve ever used.

Running through a few more tests, the Legion 5 Pro delivered impressive results in our Adobe Premiere Pro export, which measures how quickly a machine can render a 4K file from our Verge video team. The five-minute, 33-second clip finished exporting in just two minutes, 34 seconds. Suffice to say, I’ve got no complaints about this performance — it’s fast. I also ran Puget’s Premiere Pro benchmark, and the Legion 5 Pro got an aggregate score of 835. You can check out its in-depth results here.

The keyboard layout is unchanged, but that’s okay. It’s still a dream to type on.

I’m happy with the internal spec improvements that Lenovo made to this year’s Legion 5 Pro, and people who don’t want to spend a fortune on a gaming laptop should consider this model. It’s a fast laptop for more than just gaming, and I still adore the typing experience.

Lenovo’s lack of transparency around pricing notwithstanding, the best thing about this Intel-based version that I tested is its price. Considering its power, this $1,999 Legion is still fairly affordable as far as rigs loaded with Intel’s 12th Gen chips go. For example, it’s $500 less than the Asus ROG Strix Scar 17 that I mentioned earlier, yet it has a similarly powerful GPU. It’s priced more competitively to Asus’ ROG Zephyrus G15, but with that model, you’re giving up some power in exchange for portability.

Lenovo didn’t need to do much to make the 2022 Legion 5 Pro a hit. On one hand, it delivered just enough to satisfy me by increasing the power and adding some conveniences, like faster USB-C charging and a Thunderbolt 4 port. And even with its subpar speaker system and low amount of default storage, the Legion 5 Pro is unique in the sense that it’s far less costly than the likes of machines that do some of those things better, like Razer’s Blade 15, this year’s Asus ROG Zephyrus G15, or the aforementioned Strix Scar 17.

Of course, I wish Lenovo would buck up and deliver a truly outstanding product for people who don’t want to spend a fortune. But at this price, I can overlook its faults. That is, so long as Lenovo can actually keep this laptop in stock.

Photography by Cameron Faulkner / The Verge

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New Lenovo Legion 7 and Slim 7 Laptops Pair Brawn with Beauty

Lenovo Legion 7
Photo: Florence Ion/Gizmodo

Lenovo is best known for its ThinkPad business laptops, but its Legion series has birthed some of the best gaming systems I’ve used in the past few years. Today, the laptop maker is replacing the old with a new fleet consisting of the Legion 7 and Legion Slim 7, each available with either AMD or Intel (denoted with an “i” in the model name) processors.

Along with the latest processors and graphics cards from the two main chipmakers, these gaming rigs sport multiple 16-inch display options, a bevy of ports, massive batteries, and some fun RGB lighting. Consistent across all systems is an understated design with pops of colorful lighting, 1080p webcams, and high-res panels.

Lenovo Legion 7 and Legion Slim 7 release date and price

Before we dig in, let’s talk pricing and availability. The Legion 7i will start at $2,449 when it launches later this month. Its AMD sibling, the Legion 7, comes in at $2,059 and will be available in June.

The Legion Slim 7 models are less expensive, though remain in the premium category; the Slim 7i, running on Intel chips, will cost $1,589 when it arrives this month while the Legion Slim 7 with AMD Ryzen processors is expected to go on sale in June for $1,519.

These are only starting prices, so you’ll pay extra for upgrades to the processor, graphics card, and display. I’m afraid the price of these systems, which is already high at the base models, could quickly get out of hand once you’ve configured them to your liking.

Lenovo Legion 7 and 7i

While the Slim models are designed for portability, the Legion 7 and Legion 7i are all about performance. These two systems can be configured with the latest processors from AMD (Legion 7) and Intel (Legion 7i): up to a Ryzen 9 6900HX or Intel Core i9-12900HX, respectively. They each support up to 32GB of DDR5 RAM (16GB x 2) and up to a 2TB SSD.

Lenovo Legion 7
Photo: Florence Ion/Gizmodo

On the graphics front, the Legion 7i’s Intel CPUs pair with Nvidia GPUs in the form of either an RTX 3070 Ti (8GB of RAM) or an RTX 3080 Ti (16GB RAM). The AMD model goes all in on Team Red with either a Radeon RX6700M or RX6850M GPU.

Turning to the design, the Legion 7 and 7i have a simple, understated unibody chassis made from aluminum and magnesium. Two noteworthy design elements include a CNC metal trim around the edges and some dazzling RGB lighting bordering the deck, glowing through the vents, and illuminating a full-size keyboard with a numpad and WASD Force Sensory keys that let you accelerate an in-game character based on the force you apply.

Photo: Florence Ion/Gizmodo

At 14.1 x 10.4 x 0.76 inches and 5.5 pounds, the Legion 7 isn’t the most portable gaming laptop, but it isn’t a stationary beast, either. I wouldn’t want to bring it onto a flight, but a quick jaunt to a nearby cafe won’t result in any trips to the chiropractor.

In a way, the thickness pays off with the wide array of ports this laptop offers: on the left side are two Thunderbolt 4 (or two USB 3.2 Type-C and a USB4 Type-C on Legion 7i) ports; on the right side are a USB Type-C connection, a webcam shutter switch (for a 1080p webcam), and a headphone jack; and on the rear are two USB Type-A ports, another USB Type-C port, an HDMI 2.1 connection, an RJ45 Ethernet port, and a power jack. Sorry content creators, no SD card slot here.

Photo: Florence Ion/Gizmodo

There are a few display options available for the Legion 7, but one, in particular, sounds promising. Opt for the premium screen and you get a 16-inch, 2560 x 1600-pixel panel with a 16:10 aspect ratio, a 3-millisecond response time, and—take note, gamers—a variable refresh rate that scales from 165Hz to 240Hz. The other option is identical except with a standard 165Hz refresh rate. They are both certified to VESA DisplayHDR 400 and Dolby Vision specs.

Wrapping things up is a spec we don’t see too often: a 99.99Whr battery. Add another hundredth and Lenovo would risk getting in trouble with the TSA, the folks who set the capacity limits for batteries allowed on planes. What that means for runtimes is unclear. What I can tell you is that, with “Super Rapid Charge,” the Legion can juice up from dead to 100% in around 80 minutes.

Lenovo Legion Slim 7 and Slim 7i

It doesn’t take a Ph.D. to decipher the differences between the Legion Slim 7 and the standard model. These are, you guessed it, more portable versions for folks like students, professional gamers, or creative pros, who need to work or play away from their desks.

I’ll get right to it: the Legion Slim 7 and Slim 7i weigh 4.5 pounds and measure 14.1 x 10.1 x 0.67 inches, meaning they are considerably lighter and thinner than their full-size counterparts. You won’t find an Ethernet port on these, but there is an SD card reader

Lenovo Legion Slim 7 (left); Lenovo Legion 7 (right)
Photo: Florence Ion/Gizmodo

What do you lose in the downsize? To start, a bit of power. While you can get up to the same Core i9-12900HK or Ryzen 9 6900HK CPUs, the Slim 7i and Slim 7 start with Core i5 and Ryzen 5 CPUs.

More options certainly isn’t a bad thing, since you can bump up the CPU power to match the non-Slim versions. Where the non-Slim version has the advantage is with the GPU; the Slim 7i starts with an RTX 3050 Ti and goes up to the RTX 3070, but can’t reach up to the RTX 3080. Similarly, the Slim 7 can be equipped with a Radeon RX 6800S GPU, but no 6850M. You also drop memory from 32GB to an unorthodox 24GB (8GB onboard and a 16GB slot). Storage, however, still goes up to 2TB.

Lenovo Legion Slim 7
Photo: Florence Ion/Gizmodo

Another key difference is the screen options, and here is where the fine print really matters. The Legion Slim 7i with Intel chips can be equipped with a 16-inch, 2560 x 1600-pixel mini-LED display with a 165Hz refresh rate and 3ms response time. Available later in the year, this panel option peaks at an eye-watering 1,250 nits and is VESA DisplayHDR 1000 and Dolby Vision certified. Mini-LED, by the way, is a fairly new technology that sits somewhere between LED and OLED, delivering outstanding contrast, black levels, and brightness.

Lenovo Legion Slim 7
Photo: Florence Ion/Gizmodo

I assume that display upgrade will cost a pretty penny; if it’s out of your price range, you can go with a standard IPS display with a 165Hz refresh rate. Interestingly, the AMD model doesn’t get the mini-LED treatment and instead mirrors the options available on the standard version: a 2560 x 1600 IPS panel with a 165 to 250Hz variable refresh rate, or a similar panel with a flat 165Hz refresh rate.

Lenovo did, however, find a way to pack that 99.99Whr battery in the Slim model as well. I can’t promise you long battery life, but you do at least get Super Rapid Charge for getting the battery to full in under an hour and a half.

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Watch Dogs Legion Bloodline DLC: Review

Image: Ubisoft

Watch Dogs Legion’s first DLC brings back old characters in a shorter and better adventure than the main game.

I was a big fan of Watch Dogs 2 and even a bit of Watch Dogs 1 defender. But I was so disappointed by Legion, the third game in the franchise released last year. It looked nice and had some cool ideas, letting you recruit any NPC you saw walking around on the street. But it was plagued with bugs and even when it worked it often felt empty and soulless, with a narrative that left me bored most of the time. So I wasn’t expecting much from its first DLC, Bloodline, released earlier this month. But surprisingly, this new expansion fixes a lot of what Legion got wrong and ends up being a much, much better game as a result.

Watch Dogs Legion: Bloodline, clunky name and all, is set in the same London map as the main game. However, the DLC takes place shortly before the main events found in Legion. You probably don’t care about that, but just wanted to mention it. This time around, unlike in Legion, you take on the role of single character, Aiden Pearce. He was the main character seen in the original Watch Dogs. He’s older and somehow even gruffer than before. He accepts a job in London because his nephew, Jackson, lives in the city and he can’t get over what happened to Jackson’s sister. (Spoilers: Someone trying to kill Aiden ended up killing the little girl, leaving Aiden a sad and broken man who shoots a lot of people in Chicago.)

Because Bloodline ditches all the NPC recruitment found in the main game, the story in the DLC is actually interesting enough to care about. It’s not incredible or anything, but it’s wild how much more engaged I was playing Bloodline simply because characters were acknowledging things and growing and changing over the course of the campaign.

Before, because you could play any mission as any number of recruited people, Watch Dogs Legion had to write all of the dialogue and the overall story very vaguely. Characters couldn’t say things like “Wow, remember that time I did that thing with you and you got mad and I then did this other thing and made you happy again?” because there was no guarantee the character you currently were playing as had done anything before this. So as result, there was no fun over-the-radio banter or character arcs in Legion, unless you count the annoying robot talking to you all the time. (God, I don’t count that asshole.)

But in Bloodline, the game and its writers can focus on Aiden, who he is, and how he has changed and continues to grow. Aiden is still not much of a character, mostly an angry dude in a trench coat, but that’s better than before. And thankfully, Aiden isn’t alone in London. Wrench from Watch Dogs 2 plays a big part in this new DLC and he’s great. The way Bloodline balances Wrench’s annoying traits with his emotional moments is solid stuff and much better than any of the generic conversations my NPCs in Legion ever had.

Bloodline also brings back more classic-like side missions, which slowly build into their own storylines that often have satisfying ends. These missions often feature hacking and combat, which is fine because Aiden is a very powerful character in Bloodline, able to even shut down and massively hack all electronics around him with a simple button press. (Reminiscent of how you could shut down all of Chicago in Watch Dogs.)

Screenshot: Ubisoft

And, not to sound like a broken record, but being able to know who is actually doing these side quests allows the writers to create more enjoyable moments through dialogue. Aiden is a bit of a grump, team him up with a fun and young rebel. Again, nothing revolutionary here, but it’s such an improvement over Legion that I got more disappointed with that game as I finished the seven-hour or so Bloodline campaign.

I hope we get another Watch Dogs game, because this DLC proves that the franchise still has so much more life in it and that Legion, while an impressive experiment, was a mistake that Ubisoft seems willing to acknowledge. If you are a fan of the previous games and want to know what happened to characters from those past titles, Bloodline is also a nice bit of fan service too.

And you barely have to talk to an annoying British robot via radio. That alone is maybe the best part of Bloodline.

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