Borderlands 4 – Story Pack 1: Mad Ellie And The Vault Of The Damned – that’s a damned long name (2K)
The first Story Pack for Borderlands 4 does several things better than the main game, while introducing one of the best new vault hunters in the series.
When Borderlands 4 was released in September last year, it may have felt like something of a throwback, as a story-led first person shooter designed for single or co-operative play, with its familiar cel-shaded visual style and wacky humour. But it was a lot of fun, and highly successful, with developer Gearbox endowing it with an ever-expanding, endgame, along with a surprising level of replayability.
Now Gearbox has released Borderlands 4’s first substantial chunk of DLC; the first of two mooted story expansions, this one entitled Mad Ellie And The Vault Of The Damned. It introduces a whole new area to the planet of Kairos – mainly a glacier, but with way more character and content than you would expect to find in a snowy waste – as well as a new story arc and a new vault hunter, called C4SH.
The Story Pack invites you to use whatever save you might already have going in Borderlands 4 and it starts you off at level 13, which is handy since that gives you some points with which to upgrade your vault hunter’s abilities. You can pick any vault hunter, but obviously it makes sense to play as C4SH.
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In terms of story, as the DLC’s title suggests, some familiar characters from the Borderlands universe feature prominently, notably Ellie, Moxxi’s feisty daughter; Moxxi herself; and the sinister Mancubus, who didn’t feature in the main game.
The story starts off slowly, by introducing the new environment and its deadly flora and fauna to you, as you pick up Ellie’s trail. It’s pleasingly different to that of the rest of Kairos: a much more anarchic space, in which various giant spaceships and pods have crashed, and a mysterious megalith is warping everyone’s minds, causing them to hear ghostly voices.
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Gearbox has availed itself fully of the weirdness that such a set-up allows. For example, your vault hunter gets dragged into dream sequences involving the captain of a doomed, crashing spaceship and his cryogenically frozen son. After that slow start, the story explodes into weirdness (much of it explained by Mancubus, a connoisseur of the weird) and only improves as it continues.
It takes around six hours to complete the main story, but a wealth of side missions add anything up to another nine hours. Plus, there are bunkers to discover and claim (by killing their resident bosses), along with all manner of environmental encounters, so there’s close to 20 hours of new gameplay in the Story Pack, which is pretty meaty – but then again, the price tag is substantial.
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The side missions are well worth pursuing; some are primarily designed to make you laugh, while others are more convoluted and introduce you to previously neglected parts of the map. Their general diversity is notable, with some encouraging you to perform ridiculously odd tasks, which is exactly the sort of thing most crave from a Borderlands game. Pretty much all of them give you the impression that Gearbox had great fun crafting them.
The DLC is a little darker in tone than usual (2K)
The new vault hunter, C4SH is definitely one of the highlights of the DLC. He’s a robot and a former professional gambler. He’s not visually that interesting but his action skills may just be the best of any of the game’s vault hunters.
He has three: the ability to whirl around in a frenzy shooting revolvers from each hand, rolling three dice and spawning a golem (whose level depends on what score his dice throw up), and the ability to chuck cards dealing various types of elemental damage at surrounding enemies.
The latter was by far our favourite, as certain coloured cards wreak vast amounts of damage and they can be wielded with precision so that you can use one timed period of card-chucking to reduce a horde of surrounding enemies to near death. And as you level C4SH’s action skill up, it grows even more powerful – you can, for example, unlock red cards that deal instant-kills to the more basic enemies.
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The DLC’s environment also impresses; it has more verticality to it that the main areas of Kairos and points where you really have to use all the tools at your disposal – hover jumps and grapple hooks included – to get to hidden places. Plus, it has diversity: there are lush underground oases in the glacier and pools through which you must swim to access certain places, along with giant wrecked spaceships which also offer traversal challenges.
Overall, the level design feels tighter than that of the main game, perhaps an indication that that aspect of Borderlands 4 – whose map, of course, had a much greater surface area – was a tiny bit rushed. Whether or not that was the case, this is pretty much an essential purchase if you enjoyed the original game. It’s meaty, beautifully designed, and much more uninhibited than the main game; it also has the best vault hunter and is generally up there with the finest parts of the franchise.
If you haven’t played Borderlands 4 but are contemplating it, then it’s a good idea get a version that includes the story DLC. Another reason why now would be a good time to do so, is that Gearbox has worked hard to improve the game technically since release, and it’s noticeably slicker and smoother than it was last autumn.
Plus, it contains vastly more to do when you finish all the storylines. Mad Ellie And The Vault Of The Damned does a fine job of emphasising the fact that Borderlands 4 is a game that is improving over time, a testament to its solid infrastructure design when it was first released.
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Borderlands 4 – Story Pack 1: Mad Ellie And The Vault Of The Damned review summary
In Short: An impressive, near-essential expansion for Borderlands 4, with an excellent new vault hunter and some of the best level and mission design in the franchise.
Pros: Great new vault hunter, tight level design, and imaginative and diverse side missions. Decent new bosses and plenty of content.
Cons: Still some long-running problems, like the dodgy direction indicator. Very expensive, with some patchy voice-acting.
Score: 8/10
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Formats: PC (reviewed), Xbox Series X/S, and PlayStation 5* Price: £26.99 Publisher: 2K Developer: Gearbox Software Release Date: 26th March 2026 Age Rating: 18
Alongside his nephew Ruairí Keating, Ronan revealed his one regret after the passing of Ruairí’s father and Ronan’s brother, Ciarán Keating.
Ciarán lost his life in a car crash in 2023 while on his way to watch his son play football, with his wife Annemarie sustaining severe injuries in the incident.
“I never get to say it but…I was the baby,” Ronan said through tears. “He was my older brother, my eldest brother, and he’s my hero.
“I always looked up to him, you know. I joined the band, and I had to kind of grow up very quickly, and I missed stuff between us, and because of that, I lost a lot,” reports the Mirror.
He continued, “I lost a lot and made a lot of sacrifices.”
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“It is very hard,” Ronan wept, reaching across to console his nephew. “I am sorry, I am sorry, I don’t want to get upset.”
In a separate clip, Ronan spoke about Ruairi’s bond with his father. He remarked, “Oh, man, it’s hard enough for us as siblings. I can’t imagine where you are.
“You know, I’ve kind of parked my emotions for the last two years. I haven’t been able to really deal with it. I haven’t been able to deal with the loss, you know.
“He made the decision to make a life for his family. He left Dublin, and he went to the west. And I think this journey that I’m on, you know, coming here and doing this, is me trying to understand more about Ciarán’s choice, so that I can somehow grieve and let go, because I found it very hard.”
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Ruairí continued, “It’s the same for me playing football too. I always look up and still think I can see him there.
“It’s always the hardest part as well, after games, I used to check my phone. The first thing I’d see is my dad’s name, looking at my phone and not seeing that anymore. It’s really hard.”
He then said, “I know he can see me, and I know he’s watching.”
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Ronan told his nephew, “He was so proud of you, and he will still be so proud of you in everything that you do, all of you kids, you were his world, you know, pride and joy.”
Ronan Keating’s Wild Atlantic airs on BBC Two at 6.30pm on Monday.
“I fear that I would have ended up being a world champion but a very depressed, sad and miserable world champion.”
Delicious Orie had the world at his feet when he made his professional debut a year ago.
After the Paris Olympics there was a bidding war for him despite the heavyweight failing to win a medal.
Frank Warren’s Queensberry eventually saw off Eddie Hearn’s Matchroom as well as interest from the WWE to sign him.
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He was the next big thing in heavyweight boxing. And then a month later, Orie announced his shock decision to walk away from boxing altogether.
“I wanted to pull out before the boxing exposed me,” he tells BBC Sport.
“I turned pro for the money, I needed the money, only to realise that money gives you a little bit of happiness, it really does, but it gives you zero fulfilment. Nothing. You feel nothing.”
Orie was a standout fighter in the amateur ranks despite only taking up the sport aged 18. Originally from Russia, he moved to the UK as a child with his family.
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He set high standards for himself, even as a seven-year-old realising the opportunities available to him in the UK.
Orie worked for years to become part of Team GB and secure a regular income from boxing. His goal, over a near-decade journey, was to be Olympic champion. When that did not happen, Orie felt a shift inside him, even if it was subtle.
“There was no plan B, there was no other thing, it was just tunnel vision to win that medal,” he says.
“So the fact that I didn’t magnified the feeling even more when my hand wasn’t raised.
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“I gave everything to the sport, I missed everything – happiness, birthdays, weddings, funerals, everything,” he adds.
“Knowing that I could never achieve that again when I didn’t have my hand raised, that was very sobering.”
Arsenal lost the Carabao Cup final to Manchester City before the international break and suffered a shock FA Cup defeat to Championship side Southampton on Saturday.
Those back-to-back defeats mean an Arsenal team who were chasing a historic quadruple just two weeks ago have fallen short in two competitions.
Arsenal are still on the verge of a memorable season, however, as they attempt to win their first league title in 22 years and lift the Champions League for the first time ever.
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Their nine-point lead over second-placed Man City is ‘huge’, according to Lineker, who remains confident Arsenal will clinch a long-awaited Premier League title.
But the England legend admits Arsenal are going through a ‘little wobble’ and has also accused Arteta of ‘panicking’ since the Carabao Cup final defeat.
‘It’s been a tough two weeks for Arsenal,’ Lineker said on The Rest is Football podcast. ‘People are asking if they’re panicking or if it’s a crisis, it’s definitely a little wobble.
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Arsenal are going through a difficult spell (Picture: Getty)
‘Obviously Gabriel went off with ice on his knee so that’s a concern because he will be a big miss if he’s out. The next game or two are hugely important for Arsenal, they need to steady the ship, there’s no doubt about it.
‘They’ve got a huge lead in the title race but it’s squeaky bum time. I think they will be fine, I think they will win the league, which will still be the main thing for them.
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‘The Champions League would obviously be an enormous bonus because it’s a competition they’ve never won.
Southampton stunned the Premier League leaders (Picture: Getty)
‘I’m pretty confident they will win the league. It’s not a bad situation to be in, nine points clear at the top of the Premier League and in the quarter-finals of the Champions League.’
Lineker added: ‘Southampton played exceptionally well and Arsenal were off it.
‘I do want to throw something out there and it’s easy in hindsight but I thought there was a slight signal of panic when they withdrew so many players or the players themselves withdrew from international duty.
‘I just wonder if it showed a bit of panic when you need a bit of calm and confidence.
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‘It’s easier to say that now but I just wonder if it showed us something because you wouldn’t ordinarily do that.’
‘This is not a fluke,’ Alan Shearer on BBC One as Southampton celebrated a brilliant victory in the FA Cup. ‘Victory went to the better side on the night.’
Speaking to Betfair, Shearer added: ‘After Arsenal got knocked out of the FA Cup, it will be incredibly tough for them, mentally, to go on and achieve what they want to achieve.’
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Arsenal face Sporting in the quarter-finals of the Champions League on Tuesday night before returning to Premier League action at the weekend against Bournemouth.
Tehran responded with missile fire on Israel and its Gulf neighbours
Associated Press Reporters and Ashlie Blakey Live and breaking news reporter
08:32, 06 Apr 2026
More than 25 people have been killed in Iran following a wave of attacks carried out by Israel and the United States.
Tehran responded to the attacks with missile fire on Israel and its Gulf neighbours, according to reports. The airstrikes came as Donald Trump’s deadline for Tehran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz loomed.
The US President issued an expletive-laden threat against Iran over the weekend, saying America would escalate strikes on its infrastructure if it doesn’t open the Strait of Hormuz by his deadline, which is 1am UK time on Tuesday. In a social media post, Mr Trump promised strikes on Iran’s power plants and bridges.
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He said the strikes would set the country ‘back to the stone ages’ and would added that Iran would be ‘living in hell’. But a defiant Iran showed no sign of backing down, striking economic and infrastructure targets in neighbouring Gulf Arab countries and challenging the US’s account of the rescue.
And Iran’s joint military command warned of stepped-up attacks on regional oil and civilian infrastructure if the US and Israel attack such targets there, according to state television. Overnight explosions rang out in Tehran and low-flying jets could be heard for hours as the capital was pounded.
Thick black smoke rose near the city’s Azadi Square after one airstrike hit the Sharif University of Technology grounds. Two people were found dead in the rubble of a residential building in Haifa, according to Israeli authorities.
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The search was ongoing for two more even as new Iranian missile attacks hit the northern Israeli city early on Monday. Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates both activated their air defence systems to intercept incoming Iranian missiles and drones, as Tehran kept up the pressure on its Gulf neighbours.
Iran’s regular attacks on regional energy infrastructure and its stranglehold on the Strait of Hormuz, through which a fifth of the world’s oil is shipped in peacetime, have sent global energy prices soaring. Iran has let some vessels through the strait since the war began, but none belonging to the US, Israel or countries perceived as helping them.
Some have paid Iran for passage and the overall flow of traffic is down more than 90 per cent over the same period last year. Beyond Mr Trump’s military threats, diplomatic efforts are still underway to see if a solution can be reached to open the waterway.
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One of Monday’s morning airstrikes targeted Tehran’s Sharif University of Technology, where Iranian media reported damage to the buildings as well as a natural gas distribution site next to the campus. It was not immediately clear what had been targeted on the grounds of the university, which is empty of students as the war has forced all schools into the country into online classes.
Multiple countries over the years have sanctioned the university for its work with the military, particularly on Iran’s ballistic missile programme, which is controlled by the country’s paramilitary Revolutionary Guard. A strike near Eslamshar, southwest of Tehran, killed at least 13 people, the semi-official Fars news agency reported.
Five others were killed when a residential area in the city of Qom was hit, and six more were killed in strikes on other cities, the state-run IRAN daily newspaper reported. Three more people were killed when an airstrike hit a home in Tehran, Iranian state television reported.
Two fire crews were called to the property in Wellington Street shortly after 6.20pm on Sunday (April 5).
North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service said the crews responded to a report that the television ariel was “hanging in a dangerous position from a property after becoming damaged in high winds”.
“Crew power and bolt cutters were used to remove the ariel before the possibility of it falling onto the footpath below,” a service spokesperson said.
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The callout by the fire service came as York and North Yorkshire were battered by high winds brought by Storm Dave at the weekend.
This follows reports that a school in Walkden ordered more than 130 books to be removed from their library’s shelves.
Index on Censorship reported in March that The Lowry Academy had removed the books – with the number rising to almost 200 if each issue of the graphic novels was counted.
The school said that no books had been banned, but re-classified – although a number had been removed.
Yasmin Qureshi, MP for Bolton South and Walkden, said she has written to the Secretary of State for Education, Bridget Phillipson MP.
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Ms Qureshi described as ‘unacceptable’ claims that books including We Should All Be Feminists by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie and Pageboy by Elliot Page were removed.
Other books reportedly removed include a graphic novel of George Orwell’s 1984, Alice Oseman’s Heartstopper series and Stephenie Meyer’s Twilight books.
Yasmin Qureshi MP (Image: Office of Yasmin Qureshi MP)
Ms Qureshi said: “A qualified librarian exercised her professional judgement in good faith, only to resign under pressure and face investigation. That is unacceptable.
“School libraries should open young minds, not reflect the personal preferences of senior leadership. Books must be determined by educational need and expertise, not ideology.
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“I’ve asked the department what powers it has to investigate and whether they will act on this case and wider library governance issues.
“Our young people and educators deserve better.”
In a statement given to PA the school denied that books had been “banned” and said they had instead been placed into “age-appropriate categories”.
A spokesperson for the academy said: “It is not the case that books have been ‘banned’ by the school.
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“Following concerns that a number of books within the library were neither age- nor content-appropriate, an audit was conducted.
“Following this, books have been placed into age-appropriate categories and returned to the shelves.
“A very small number of books were deemed inappropriate even for older children due to their content and have been removed.”
The Lowry Academy has reportedly removed nearly 200 books from their library (Image: Google Maps)
Teachers at the National Education Union (NEU) conference in Brighton voted for a motion calling on the union executive to oppose censorship in school libraries.
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Daniel Kebede, NEU general secretary, said: “Any move to censor books in school libraries based on misinformation and fearmongering should ring alarm bells for all of us.
“The USA and Hungary are examples of countries which have implemented book bans in schools, primarily targeting books by women, black and LGBT+ authors, and the NEU is clear that this is not a path we are prepared to follow in the UK.”
The motion also called for the union executive to promote the body as a union for librarians amid reports they are seeing both internal and external censorship of library materials, as well as redundancies, budget cuts and extremely low pay.
The organisation has supported thousands of unemployed South Lanarkshire residents into work, skills and training.
The long-serving chairperson of Routes to Work South (RTWS) has stepped down after 17 years in the role.
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It means the search is on to find a replacement for Bill McBride at the organisation that has supported thousands of unemployed South Lanarkshire residents into work, skills and training.
South Lanarkshire council’s head of enterprise and sustainable development, Alison Brown, said: Alison Brown said: “Bill’s leadership has been instrumental in shaping RTWS into a respected, stable, and forward‑looking organisation. Under his guidance, Routes to Work South has expanded its services, deepened its community partnerships, and delivered programmes that have helped many residents overcome unemployment and build brighter futures.
“We are immensely grateful for his contribution.”
A new chairperson and up to five independent directors are now needed for RTWS.
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It is an arms-length external organisation of South Lanarkshire Council that celebrated their 20th anniversary last year.
The positions are voluntary (with expenses reimbursed) and successful applicants will attend quarterly board meetings and sub-committees.
The organisation welcomes applications from individuals with experience in:
■ Finance, audit, or risk management
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■ Human resources / people and culture
■ Legal and regulatory compliance
■ Strategic leadership and organisational development
■ Digital, data or information governance
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■ Employability, skills, health or economic development
■ Community development / third sector leadership
Alison added: “RTWS has grown into an award‑winning Scottish charity and a key contributor to tackling poverty and promoting economic inclusion across South Lanarkshire. The organisation supports residents to develop the skills, confidence, and opportunities needed to progress into sustainable employment.
“We would love to hear from people interested in helping us grow the service, guide its strategic direction, strengthen governance and ensure high‑quality delivery of employability programmes.”
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Applications should be submitted by Thursday 30 April by sending a CV and short supporting statement by email, or informal enquiries can also be emailed or call 0141 584 2915.
*Don’t miss the latest headlines from around Lanarkshire. Sign up to our newsletters here.
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It’s no secret that there are some fantastic spots to get some great grub across the region, a place home to so many talented and dedicated restaurants.
And this year we’ve once again been looking to shine a spotlight on the best of the best, along with the help of our readers.
We can now reveal the top ten finalists in our competition – and we want you to now vote for your favourite.
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This year’s top ten are:
Burtree Inn – Burtree Gate, Darlington, DL2 2XZ
Stable Hearth – 33-35 Duke Street, Darlington, DL3 7RX
Taipan Asia – 10 Crown Street, Darlington, DL1 1LU
The Talbot – 47–49 The Green, Bishopton, Stockton-on-Tees, TS21 1HE
To vote, you simply need to cut out a coupon printed in The Northern Echo this week and next. You have until Wednesday, April 22 to vote for your favourite.
In the meantime, we’ll be highlighting each of the restaurants and gastropubs in our top ten to help you decide which one to vote for.
The Northern Echo editor Gavin Foster said: “We have some fantastic restaurants across Darlington and County Durham and our best restaurant or gastropub competition is the perfect opportunity to shine a spotlight on that.
“We are delighted to once again be launching our search for the best of the best. Get your votes in now!”
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To vote, you simply need to cut out a coupon printed in The Northern Echo this week and next. You have until
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