The 7 Best Dota 2 Reborn Mods
Valve has finally rolled their engine and interface overhaul for Dota 2, subtitled Dota 2 Reborn out of beta as of yesterday. Among the best features Reborn adds to the game is functionality for user-created custom game types, which mod-makers had been tinkering with for a while now thanks to the workshop tools released last year. Since then, both Valve and the community have managed to create some fun, interesting, and strange games to play within Dota 2, and if you’re just now downloading the Reborn update, here are a few of the best mods out there to get you started.
7. Omni Party
Back in the old StarCraft games, there were lots of games like this. They were called “bounds,” and they were sort of like a collection of those sections in games where you’d have to wait for the right moment to walk through, say, a row of thwomps that were all on a timer. Omni Party isn’t just that. It’s a collection of a few of those moment and some Mario Party-style mini-games. It doesn’t have the greatest lifespan and won’t take too long to outstay its welcome, but if you need a short break from playing regular Dota 2 and play some more Dota 2, Omni Party isn’t half-bad.
6. Curse of River’s End
It’s a shame more people haven’t been able to play this mod, mostly due to it lacking dedicated servers. Curse of River’s End is a brand new map for playing regular old Dota 2, and the amount of work that’s gone into it is astounding. It replicates all the intricacies of the classic map—there are lane and neutral creeps, side and secret shops, and Roshan has a new spot on the map as well. It also looks beautiful, taking on the aesthetic of a medieval town instead of a magic forest (though there are some incongruent American blue mail boxes strewn about). It may not be as delicately balanced as the actual map, but it’s worth checking out for the sheer effort put into it alone.
5. Dota 10v10
Dota 10v10 isn’t Valve’s first mod for the game (more on that in the bit), but it’s something players have dreamed about since Dota’s early days—what if each side had ten people on it instead of five? The result is that the game can barely hold that many people; not only is the regular balance of which heroes should focus on getting gold and which should focus on fighting or helping their team thrown out the window, people just disconnect a lot. Probably because these games can be extremely lopsided and there’s no penalty for leaving a game, like this there is in Dota 2 proper. Still, the few matches I’ve played of it have been fun, and my team even managed to win a match when we had four fewer people than the enemy team.
4. Petri Reborn