Home » News » Dead by Daylight adds a K-Pop killer in new All-Kill chapter
Dead by Daylight K Pop All Kill
News

Dead by Daylight adds a K-Pop killer in new All-Kill chapter

Developer Behaviour Interactive has teamed up with minds behind U-KISS and BTS to pull the new content off.

Dead by Daylight will add a K-Pop killer to its ever-expanding roster as part of a new chapter called All-Kill.

The Trickster is the name of the K-Pop killer, who’ll be added to the game alongside a survivor named Yun-Jin.

As IGN reports, developer Behaviour Interactive has teamed up with U-KISS band member Kevin Woo alongside DJ Swivel, a Grammy Award-winning producer who has worked with groups like BTS, in order to ensure K-Pop accuracy.

“Yun-Jin was rejected as an idol trainee and instead joined the fictional Mightee One company as an intern and later became the label’s biggest hit-maker, though she was never able to take credit for her hits. Looking to turn her new group NO SPIN into stars, she recruited Ji-Woon as its newest member,” IGN said, summarising the chapter.

“When the rest of the band died in the fire accident, Yun-Jin rebranded Ji-Woon as a solo act called The Trickster. Unfortunately for her, Ji-Woon’s violent tendencies would take him from being a K-Pop star into a killer for The Fog.”

All-Kill is playable on Dead by Daylight‘s PC-based Public Test Build server. Also included on the test server is a new colourblind filter which includes deuteranope, protanope and tritanope modes.

Dead by Daylight is currently available on Windows PC, Xbox One, Xbox Series S & X, PS4, PS5 and Switch.


This article may contain affiliate links, meaning we could earn a small commission if you click-through and make a purchase. Stevivor is an independent outlet and our journalism is in no way influenced by any advertiser or commercial initiative.

About the author

Steve Wright

Steve's the owner and Editor-in-Chief of Stevivor.com, the country’s leading independent video games outlet. Steve arrived in Australia back in 2001 on what was meant to be a three-month working holiday before deciding to emigrate and, eventually, becoming a citizen.

Stevivor is a combination of ‘Steve’ and ‘Survivor’, which made more sense back in 2001 when Jeff Probst was up in Queensland. The site started as Steve’s travel blog before transitioning over into video games.

Aside from video games, Steve has interests in hockey and Star Trek, playing the former and helping to cover video games about the latter on TrekMovie.com. By day, Steve works as the communications manager of the peak body representing Victorians as they age.