Freeze perhaps Batman's most sympathetic adversary, and by using his origin story as the basis for its narrative (lifting many elements directly from the classic Batman: The Animated Series episode 'Heart of Ice'), Cold, Cold Heart takes on a melancholy mood. Victor Fries' wife Nora is 'alive' but not really alive like too many women in comics, she exists not as an individual with her own value but serves only to fuel the anguish of a male character, and because she is literally being kept frozen, she gives slightly different meaning to the phrase 'woman in a refrigerator.' Still, his anguish over her fate makes Mr. It takes only a few hours to complete, but thanks to its strong narrative, a few great locations, and a more focused structure, it's pretty good while it lasts. Cold, Cold Heart, the new downloadable content for Arkham Origins, is better about this. Where Origins stumbled was in its pacing, trotting out its expected components in a meandering fashion rather than giving those components the supportive context they deserved. These aspects are tried and true they are necessary components of any Arkham game. It wasn't the brawling or the stealth or the grappling and gliding around environments that held Batman: Arkham Origins back from being a good entry in the Arkham saga.