

Pro tip: Don’t waste your money on Easy Fatalities. (Not that this is the first instance of predatory DLC we’ve seen this year - check out Evolve.) Paying money for these does seem silly, but charging money for them seems kind of predatory on Activision’s part. If you choose to use one, all you have to do is press a button and you automatically perform the fatality. Each fatality requires a different combination of buttons, making it difficult to try them all.Įasy Fatality tokens alleviate the pain of learning the button combinations. To perform a fatality, you have to stand in the right spot and enter what’s often a complicated series of button inputs. Fatalities are a trademark of the series and one of its main selling points. In Mortal Kombat games, when you defeat an opponent, you get the opportunity to perform a “fatality,” which means you kill him or her in a brutal, gory, over-the-top manner. This one has caused a small uproar in the gaming community. For a comprehensive guide to the Krypt, click here. The Krypt includes unlockables such as new fatalities, cheats, concept art, and costumes.

While you can unlock all of the items in the Krypt by playing the game and earning “Koins”, you can pay $20 to skip the work and reap the rewards.

A portion of the money generated by this DLC will go toward the prize pool for the Mortal Kombat X Who’s Next Tournament. This is simply a cool-looking skin for Sub-Zero, the iconic ice-flinging fan favorite. But you won’t able to play as him in Mortal Kombat X unless you pony up the cash. This four-armed brute has been a series staple since the beginning.

Although individual pricing hasn’t been announced yet, you can assume buying the Kombat Pack gives you some kind of discount. Note that if you’d rather not buy all of these packs, you’ll be able to purchase them individually once they’re released.
