SEARCH & BOOK THE WORLD'S BEST HOTELS
Search form
NEED ASSISTANCE?   

Dead Island- Riptide May 2026

Dead Island 2 took a decade to arrive, and when it did, it wisely ignored Riptide entirely. Play Riptide as a historical artifact—a warning about what happens when developers rush an expansion to capitalize on a hit, without understanding why that hit worked in the first place.

It is the definitive game. Not aggressively terrible, but aggressively mediocre. It takes everything that was charmingly flawed about the original and sandblasts away the charm, leaving only the flaws. Dead Island- Riptide

Then came Riptide (2013). If the first game was a chaotic, drunken luau of fun, Riptide is the next morning: the sun is too bright, the drinks are watered down, and you’re stepping in broken glass while trying to remember why you thought any of this was a good idea. Riptide begins with admirable audacity. It literally writes off the multiple, mutually exclusive endings of the first game by having the heroes escape on a helicopter, only to be shot down by a naval quarantine. They wash ashore on the military-controlled archipelago of Henderson – not a resort island, but a flooded, storm-lashed military quarantine zone. Dead Island 2 took a decade to arrive,

Riptide commits the greatest sin a sequel can commit: it is exhausting. The first Dead Island had a sense of discovery—waking up in a penthouse, stepping onto the beach for the first time, watching the sun set over a resort slowly decaying into chaos. Not aggressively terrible, but aggressively mediocre

Riptide offers none of that. It is a flooded, brown, muddy slog through a military base where every NPC hates you, every weapon breaks after 20 swings, and the game’s engine is actively trying to crash.