Today’s “This Week At Bungie” has given players a new look at where Bungie is planning on takingDestiny 2, especially with how the game plans to revamp theunderwhelming Trials of Osiriscontent to be more rewarding. Additionally, Bungie has hinted at the return of a fan favorite feature that could reward players for completing a challenge from all the way back in the originalDestiny.
This comes after Bungie already took a considerable amount offeedback about Trials of Osirisfor how fans would like to see the endgame content be more rewarding for players. As a result, it would seem that Bungie is looking to make some big changes in the upcoming seasons ofDestiny 2to verify that players are still enjoying the competitive PVP side of the game.

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While the weekly Bungie post pointed out a number of issues that players have had with the current format of Trails of Osiris, the announcement also highlighted the fact that Flawless Rewards may be coming back in future seasons. Bungie went into some detail about what the rewards may be, including having Trials specific gear dropping with space for an Adept Mod, to reference the Adept weapons from the originalDestiny’s Trials playlist. With any luck, Bungie hopes that this will makeDestiny 2’s Trials as popular as the originalwhen it dropped alongside theFallen Wolvesexpansion.
Some additional changes coming to Trials of Osiris include updates like creating token milestones for winning more than three games with elevating degrees of rewards. The first milestone will unlock at three wins, the second at five, and the third will unlock after a player receives seven wins. It would seem that Bungie hopes that this will stop players from resetting after three wins and offer better rewards for continuing to play under the same ticket, and bring in manyDestiny 2players that Trials of Osiris has already lost.
It may take a considerable amount of tweaking to get players back after earlyTrials of Osiris bugs, and complaints about rewards, but looking back on what made it so popular in the first place may be what can save it now. However, considering how well-received the Trials playlists have been from their first appearance inDestinyto similar variants like Trials of the Nine, it’s hard to imagine that Bungie won’t learn from those past successes. For now, players may have to be patient before the high-quality, PVP content for endgame players is as impressive as it has the potential to be.
Destiny 2is available now for PC, PS4, Stadia, and Xbox One.
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