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Mass Effect 2: Lair of the Shadow Broker Hands-On - New Story and High-Speed Car Chases

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We get our hands on this soon-to-be-released downloadable content for Mass Effect 2.

BioWare's space opera sequel Mass Effect 2 has already offered players hours of hybrid shooter and role-playing adventure, but the developer isn't done yet. The next downloadable content for the game, Lair of the Shadow Broker, is described by BioWare as the "most premium DLC" for the game yet and will be the "richest in scope," since it not only will include five new levels (of which one is open-ended), but will also introduce content that will actually start bridging the gap between Mass Effect 2 and the next game in the series. The DLC will be released next week and will let you reconnect with an old friend, Dr. Liara T'soni, the blue-skinned asari researcher from the first game with whom you, as Commander Shepard, could have a romantic relationship. This time around, the good doctor ends up in a whole heap of trouble with the crime lord known as the Shadow Broker--the mysterious figure who has been referenced in both Mass Effect games--and it's up to you to rescue her. Please be advised that this story may contain minor spoilers.

Lair of the Shadow Broker takes place during the main Mass Effect 2 game on the planet Illium and begins with Shepard receiving a note from Liara to meet her at her home. Obviously, if you decided to have that special relationship with Liara in the first game and have imported your saved character to Mass Effect 2 to play the DLC, your interactions with Liara will be different. In any case, after reading the message, you can transport yourself immediately to her lodgings, which have been ransacked and covered by far-flung-future police tape (digital light displays with a scrolling ticker that reads "Police Line: Do Not Cross"), with Liara herself nowhere in sight. The local authorities were already prowling through the wreckage and demanded we leave the area, though a high-ranking asari agent, a Spectre (the special operatives of the Citadel Council, like Shepard) named Tela Vasir, pulled rank and cleared us to enter the apartment.

In a brief conversation with Vasir, we learned that Liara had apparently fled the scene moments ago, but we deduced that she must have left a note, or at least some clues, behind. After briefly searching her apartment, we found a picture, keyed to Shepard's identity, which changed to a landscape of an alien planet whose relics were part of the doctor's collection. We then scanned each relic until we found a hidden data disc with a recorded transmission of Liara conversing with an underground contact about the Shadow Broker's next move at the Dracon Travel Center, a huge downtown high-rise. The transmission ended with both Liara and her contact spooked by the sound of a break-in and both characters fleeing downtown.

We immediately transitioned over to the building--by way of a loading screen--with our team, while Vasir hopped into her hovercar to cover the building from the roof down. Our party entered the building to find not only that it had been blown up by explosives, but also that dozens of its employees had been gunned down by professional mercenaries whom we eventually encountered in the bombed-out office space, ducking down beneath the partial-cover flaming desks and torn-up computer terminals.

We finally made our way to the top and were just too late to save the informant from being shot, though Vasir was on the scene, claiming that she, too, had been too late and that the Shadow Broker's henchmen had already fled. Because we hadn't seen the shot ourselves, we found the agent's story to be highly suspicious, and moments later, our suspicions were confirmed when Liara herself emerged from the shadows with a gun trained on the Spectre, accusing her of murdering the contact and raiding her apartment. At this point, Vasir attempted to make a dramatic escape, finally leaping into her hovercar to escape into the Illium night.

Our party leaped into the nearest vehicle, a hovering taxi, and gave chase as part of Mass Effect 2's new car chases, which act a bit like a futuristic arcade racer with a Z-axis. Vasir's vehicle appeared onscreen with a bright-red marker and left a bright-red contrail, so she was easy to track, although the underhanded agent also had explosive mines that she left floating behind her that threw our own vehicle off track. Since our own vehicle didn't have any weapons (it was a taxi, after all), we couldn't do much other than try to follow Vasir around every tight turn and not slam into oncoming traffic. Fortunately, the game autosaved several times over the course of the chase, so it wasn't frustrating. Finally, the chase ended when Vasir had a head-on collision and went spinning out of control. We pursued the agent and leaped out of our vehicle to pursue on foot, at which point our play session ended.

Lair of the Shadow Broker will be available this Tuesday, September 7.

171 Comments

  • AkhilAnilkumar

    Posted Jan 2, 2011 3:33 am GMT

    Sounds great!!!!

  • cicerohellmann

    Posted Sep 14, 2010 10:39 pm GMT

    This DLC is just a Battle Cruiser shooting endorphin in my brain!!!!

  • Suikogaiden

    Posted Sep 14, 2010 2:33 am GMT

    These add-ons are nice and all, but why cant they just make ME3 instead, is the 50 hours of content in ME2 not enof... well maybe it isnt.

  • brado147

    Posted Sep 14, 2010 12:17 am GMT

    i'm liking this DLC so far. Good story, the perfect ME2 gameplay. I pay for quality DLC, like some of DA:O, Borderlands and ME2. But again, it's quality.

    and personally, I believe that people shouldn't give a damn about what other people buy.

    I think everyone hates reading xbox vs ps3 or DLC flamewars. The forums, from my point of view, are for giving our opinion about the game itself.

  • 008Zulu

    Posted Sep 11, 2010 5:09 pm GMT

    I like this DLC, the best one they have released so far.

  • bichasant

    Posted Sep 10, 2010 2:18 pm GMT

    It's just idiotic how somebody can waste so much time and energy on something they don't care for, it must be because they can't get any kind of fulfillment from their sorry, weak and pathetic lives. Exactly what part of "optional" do you not get? don't like it, then don't buy it! duh!!! Who the **** do you think you are telling others the way they chose to spend their money is wrong?

  • Bowserpwns

    Posted Sep 10, 2010 9:38 am GMT

    @NeilCardiff oh and honestly the fanboy claim doesnt give you any justice.

    your only saying fanboy because your arguing with people who like this game and perhaps you dont. i would defend any game with dlc.

    the entire point of dlc is to add to the experience of a game already great...why do you think so many great games have dlc?

    i just love how when people are cornered in an argument with no way out they just pull the classic "well...well.....your just a FANBOY!".......

  • Bowserpwns

    Posted Sep 10, 2010 9:20 am GMT

    again...this is a perspective of opinion....if your goal was come on to this forum and convince us "fanboys" that were getting ripped off its clearly not working...if you love the game enough youll pay the extra money....its all your conspiracy theory garbage about corperate companys only wanting your money and not wanting to give you good games thats just annoying....

    on that car analogy....you just said yourself that the car drives fine...which would mean that the car is FINISHED...just like me2... so please do us a favor and just ignore us all as you said because we clearly dont care about your opinion

  • NeilCardiff

    Posted Sep 10, 2010 8:54 am GMT

    @mypetmonkey
    You are obviously a shill and worth ignoring.

    As for the people willing to pay for DLC's you are nothing but succers paying way over the odds for snippets of gameplay.
    On that note, I have a car to sell you, drives fine, if you want the rear seats they'll be on sale next week for extra.

    BTW the only people whining are the fanboys crying about people not worshiping their beloved game.

  • Leria

    Posted Sep 10, 2010 1:00 am GMT

    Ah, but remember.... once you realize that you are paying 120 dollars when it comes down to it for what IS an UNFINISHED game..... won't you have a bad taste of bile in your mouth at realizing how BADLY you were ripped off?

    I darn well would!

  • Bowserpwns

    Posted Sep 9, 2010 7:32 pm GMT

    @ mypetmonkey i agree with you man, all this whiny people complaining that all this dlc means a game is unfinished? thats why companys have DLC....it lets people show what games they are most interested in by buying their dlc's......i can gladly admit ive bought all of the me2 dlc...and the me1 dlc as well...and any future dlc that bioware releases for me2 (as well as me3 when it comes out).

    and i will buy it with my HARD EARNED money from my JOB that ive saved up with

  • mypetmonkey

    Posted Sep 9, 2010 2:22 pm GMT

    DLC haters are a dead set geese... Nice fallback on the "fanboy" call from the "tight ass" crew.

    What i'm against are whinging gamers who seem to think the industry runs for free. Gamers that call a game "unfinished" when they probably wouldn't have on release day.

    I suppose you're working for free? If you have a job how often do you turn up and get told "yeah we're not paying you because our product isn't selling"?

    How do you think a company sustains itself over the 2-3 development time of a game? They've got staff to pay, they've got to pay them decently to keep the best. Production cost still need to be paid. Private jets? Million dollar bonuses? This isn't merchant banking. Show me one case of that? One article showing that any software development company dished off millions to its staff in bonuses?

    It's tight asses like you that will ruin the industry. It's people like you that see companies folding.

    You don't want it don't buy it, then don't. There is a heap of DLC out there i haven't bought (Borderlands, ME2 costume pack, FORZA 3, Alan Wake).

    But don't write-off peoples hard work and effort. The gaming industry isn't a charity just for you. Just because you bought their game it doesn't mean they owe you anything.

  • NeilCardiff

    Posted Sep 9, 2010 1:43 pm GMT

    @Vruc
    I agree, it is getting ridiculous now and it's only going to get worse with idiots prepared to pay for all these DLC's.

    The sort of comments here are music to the software companies as they realise that these suckers will pay and pay and pay.

    Their excuses are as endless as they are stupid, especially the one that EA/Bioware needs money, yeah, vastly rich companies like EA/Bioware always need suckers money, private jets and million dollar bonuses don't grow on trees you know.

  • NeilCardiff

    Posted Sep 9, 2010 1:32 pm GMT

    @mypetmonkey
    WOW, you certainly are getting very upset at my opinions.

    I didn't realise that this comments section was just for you and your yes men.

    There should be a fanboi only warning that negative comments will get moronic replies from ass kissers like yourself.

  • Bowserpwns

    Posted Sep 9, 2010 6:51 am GMT

    @Vruc i understand that dlc is a money scam. what i dont under stand is certain people that say the game itself is unfinished. i played my first play through on me2 without ANY dlc and i still loved the game and in my opinion was very finished.

    then everytime a dlc came out it convinced me to go back to the game for another playthrough.

    seriously... i dont care if this is a money scam...EVERY company in the world needs to make money...and the more money i give bioware the more money theyll have to make me3 one of the best games to date

    bioware needs money to make quality games as much as any game company...their not like blizzard...hoarding cashes of money and letting it sit

  • wexorian

    Posted Sep 9, 2010 5:02 am GMT

    No one telling you to buy it io bought ervery dlc and fisnihed this one too, this dlc is very cool, with good story , new mehcanic flyng car i mean , and oustanding final, who dont want to buy it dont post ridiculus posts

  • Vruc

    Posted Sep 9, 2010 3:55 am GMT

    @ NeilCardiff - finally, someone who understands that DLC is stupid money scam, that's miraculously working. Why should "bridging" DLCs be needed at all? Mass Effect is a trilogy, all one should need are the three games; and will they justify me missing out on content on the ME3 disks when I have both previous titles, yet I don't intend to buy DLCs? Aren't they "optional"? Seems pretty much mandatory to me to have them, otherwise you don't receive the full experience...

    Not to mention ME2 has cut content beyond belief. Kasumi DLC? Please, 90% of her dialogue and a working NPC squad member Kasumi is on the game disk. All weapon packs? They're in my CE art book, so they've existed for two years, yet EA decided not to include them (and that's why Geth look ridiculous with regular shotguns, unless you download the FirePower DLC, which miraculously fixes them).

    Plus, LotSB has things that should have been patched in; yes, those old free bug fixing things called patches. Squad members can get their powers retrained only with this DLC? Seriously, they can't add that simple code with a patch?

    Pft. By a couple of years from now people will have to pay to get even game braking bugs fixed, I bet.

  • mypetmonkey

    Posted Sep 9, 2010 1:12 am GMT

    @NeilCardiff yeah because 2 whinging gamers compared to 9 overall pages of positive comments on the DLC isn't convincing enough...

    Additionally whats to say it isn't a preview of Mass Effect 3? Tight pessimistic gamers.... that's all ya'll are

    Don't want it? Don't buy it.... Just don't whinge about it.

  • NeilCardiff

    Posted Sep 9, 2010 12:21 am GMT

    This DLC is advertised as "bridging the gap" between ME2 and ME3 therefore ME2 was not finished.

    @mypetmonkey

    I think you're trying to convince yourself that this isn't a rip off, not us.

  • mypetmonkey

    Posted Sep 8, 2010 10:58 pm GMT

    @organbank But if you feel that way and you don't buy it.... how exactly are you being ripped off?

    You are lamenting the days when digital distribution wasn't an option. You're just a pessimistic glass is half empty kind of guy, when in fact the glass was full and now is overflowing. You obviously can't see the difference between a half finished game and a finished game.

    What your getting is content usually scrapped before final cuts. Then they spend time and money on (developers don't work for free) bringing it up to speed.... AND THEN THEY GIVE YOU THE OPTION TO BUY IT. You don't need it, it won't be necessary for Mass Effect 3 (hell it might even be included in Mass Effect 3).

    Bioware never gave away additional content to its games for free. Never... ever... ever.... Q&A never means looking at a game and saying "is there absolutely nothing we can add to this game".

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Game Info

  • Xbox 360 PC Release Info

    • Release Date: Sep 7, 2010
    • ESRB: M
      Titles rated M (Mature) have content that may be suitable for persons ages 17 and older.

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