New tenants have been moved into an old house on Kruszwice Street. The Stein family will have to endure more than one test in an attempt to survive in the best country in the world. But we won’t talk about them here.
Before the arrival of Karl and his family, familiar to us from the plot of the main game, another manager lived on the ground floor of a nondescript house. Elderly Uncle Hector has been keeping order in the building loyal to him for many years, doing his job responsibly. But everything comes to an end. On his birthday, the state gave him a gift - a one-way ticket to the euthanasia center under the Blissful Sleep program. At the age of 85, every citizen has managed to serve the Motherland and now, having become a burden, must go to the Other World with a sense of accomplishment. It was the turn of old Hector, but bad luck, he was only 65! Apparently, nature messed something up or time moved too slowly, calling into question the infallibility of the system, and the system, like the Great Leader, never makes mistakes. Be that as it may, it is impossible to prove that he has the right to live another 20 years. The clock is ticking, there are only two weeks left before the premature verdict is put into effect, and you need to use all the connections you have made in your life, find any loopholes in order to defend your right to exist.
In this addition, we have the opportunity not only to solve new problems of old residents, but also to look at already familiar characters from a different angle, which will make the events of the main plot perceived completely differently. The most unpleasant and repulsive character may turn out to be a completely different person, and skeletons will fall out of the closets of seemingly the most trustworthy residents.
To fully understand the entire storyline, this DLS is simply necessary, and in terms of the abundance of content it is practically not inferior to Karl’s story. I definitely recommend it.