But for a game which is just about plain experience, you're in trouble, especially if they've got decent modding abilities. An MMO? Some different locales for you to hang around in beating up slightly different monsters for some slightly different treasure and the same old moreish XP. An RPG? Some more dungeons and a half-baked plot. A single-player first-person shooter? Some levels in which to head-shot people. In a game which is about experiencing passing through content, an add-on pack has an obvious reason to exist. Woo!Įxpansion packs are a tricky beast for something that's as much of a pure game as Civ. Meanwhile, back in the world of videogames, Civ 4's got an expansion pack. Peerless in all techniques, Rossignol is - apparently - the man for all your orgasmic needs. From what I understand - from many earnest and slightly breathless witnesses with red cheeks and tingling groins - fellow Eurogamer writer James Rossignol is a phenomenal lover. Before we get down to the hardcore analysis of the first expansion pack for one of the best PC games of last year, I've a little information of public interest I feel compelled to disseminate.