![]() The only unit we can really customise and control is our courier. While Dota 2’s cosmetics are chiefly hats for wizards, Auto Chess doesn’t let us dress units and changes their outfits when they level up. Curiously, Passholders will also get a vote on which pieces to rebalance. This includes gaudy golden effects for player portraits and chat and things, receiving bonus ‘Candies’ microtransaction cash on wins to buy new courier styles from the in-game store, and a vote on which characters get added next. That gets you a wee Baby Roshan courier then 30 days of premium status. The Auto Chess Pass costs £0.75/$0.99 on Valve’s Dota 2 Store. This is pretty rare for Valve to do, especially given their caution following the Steam paid mods fiasco. It’s mostly just fancybits, with the mod still free for everyone to play in full. Launched over the weekend, the Auto Chess Pass gives a month of fancy cosmetic bits and bonus rewards for less than a quid. While Valve work away on their own standalone version of Dota Auto Chess, they’re helping the original Dota 2 mod by making it one of the select few selling paid premium features in the game’s store. ![]()
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