Title: Far Cry 4 Gold Edition Version: v1.7 Content: Includes 39 DLCs Language Support: Multi-15 (supports 15 different languages) Release Type: Repack by Mr DJ
The phrase "far cry 4 gold edition ver 1.7 dlc39s multi 15 repack mr dj" refers to a specific, pirated repack of Far Cry 4 Gold Edition released by "
. This version includes the base game updated to version 1.7, all released DLCs, and multi-language support (up to 15 languages). included in this package is as follows: Main Plot: The Struggle for Kyrat The story follows Ajay Ghale
, a Kyrati-American who returns to his birthplace in the Himalayas to fulfill his mother’s dying wish: scattering her ashes in a place called Far Cry Wiki Arrival & Conflict
: Upon arrival, Ajay's bus is attacked by the Royal Army. He is "rescued" (or kidnapped) by
, the eccentric and flamboyant dictator of Kyrat, who claims to have known Ajay's mother. The Rebellion : Ajay escapes with the help of the Golden Path
, a rebel movement founded by his late father, Mohan Ghale. He becomes a symbol of the revolution and must help liberate Kyrat from Min's rule. Internal Rivalry
: Throughout the game, you must choose between two Golden Path leaders:
: A traditionalist who wants to preserve Kyrat’s religious heritage.
: A progressive who wants to modernize Kyrat, even if it means funding the nation through the drug trade. Included DLC Storylines Since this is the Gold Edition
, it includes additional story content beyond the main campaign: Valley of the Yetis
: After his helicopter crashes in the Himalayas, Ajay must survive in a frozen valley occupied by a mysterious cult and legendary Yeti creatures. Hurk Deluxe Pack : Features several missions involving
, a recurring character from the series, centered around explosive mishaps and "redemption". Escape from Durgesh Prison far cry 4 gold edition ver 17 dlc39s multi 15 repack mr dj
: A time-trial challenge where Ajay must escape one of Yuma's high-security prisons. The Syringe
: A mission focusing on preventing Pagan Min from acquiring a rare chemical recipe. Far Cry Wiki The Hidden Story: Shangri-La
By collecting Thangka fragments, Ajay "relives" the legendary journey of the warrior , who sought to cleanse the mythical land of Shangri-La from demonic forces. Far Cry Wiki
Title: The Unpacking of Kyrat
Part 1: The Install
Ajay Ghale didn’t remember dying. He remembered the bus, the hairpin turn, the pagan mask seller leaping out of the way. Then a crunch of metal, the taste of Himalayan dust, and a loading bar.
He woke up on a table. Not a ritual table, not a surgical one. A download table. Floating in a white void.
“Welcome to Kyrat Repack v17,” a robotic female voice announced. “Multi15 languages detected. Please select your poison.”
Before Ajay could speak, a man in a bright pink blazer materialized out of the pixels. Pagan Min. But… different. He was glitching at the edges, holding a golden spoon instead of a pen.
“Ah, the golden path is more of a golden torrent, isn’t it, Ajay?” Pagan said, biting into a crab rangoon that kept respawning every time he took a bite. “You see, the MR DJ repack didn’t just crack the game. It cracked the idea of the game. Every DLC is loose. Every update is a fork in the road. And version 17? That’s the one where I remember I’m just code.”
Ajay tried to move. His left arm phased through a wall that wasn’t there a second ago. His minimap flickered between Kyrat, the Mars DLC, the Yeti caves, and a strange neon arena labeled “DLC 39: The Unwritten.”
Part 2: The Fifteen Tongues
He stumbled out of the void into Banapur. But Banapur was speaking Spanish. No, Russian. No, Italian. He picked up a molotov cocktail and the tooltip read: “Bottle of Fiery Rage (French-Canadian Dub).”
The Golden Path rebels were there, but they were clones. Sabal and Amita were arguing, but their dialogue subtitles were stuck in German, and their voice lines were from a scrapped zombie DLC.
“We must free the… BRAAAAINS,” Sabal said in English, then coughed. “Sorry. Wrong repack module.”
Ajay realized the truth. The “Multi15” wasn’t a feature. It was a curse. Every time he pulled his trigger, the gun cycled through fifteen different sound effects—from a popgun to a laser cannon from the Valley of the Yetis expansion.
He found a hang glider. It had no wings. Just a DLC code that read: “Season Pass: Sky Fisher – Unlock the sky. Or don’t. We don’t care.”
Part 3: The Hunter of Glitches
That’s when he saw him. A hulking figure in royal blue, wearing the mask of the Rakshasa from Escape from Durgesh Prison DLC. Not an enemy. A feature.
“You’re the repack anomaly,” the figure growled. “I am Ver 17.3. I was supposed to be the stability patch. But MR DJ forgot to include me. So now I exist between your saves.”
Ver 17.3 handed Ajay a bow that fired explosive arrows that turned into honey badgers on impact.
“The only way out is to find the original ‘Crack.ini’ file,” the glitch-demon said. “It’s hidden in the one place MR DJ never touched: the Lost Cutscene from DLC 39.”
Part 4: DLC 39 – The Unwritten
DLC 39 wasn’t a map. It was a folder directory. Ajay walked through a forest of corrupted textures—trees made of stretched JPEGs, rivers of hexadecimal code, enemies that T-posed then despawned. Title: Far Cry 4 Gold Edition Version: v1
At the center was a throne. On it sat a miniature version of Pagan Min made entirely of repack notes and forum comments.
“You want the Crack.ini?” the tiny Pagan squeaked. “It’s not a file, Ajay. It’s a promise. The promise that you’ll never have to enter a CD key. The promise that you can play Valley of the Yetis before finishing Act 1. The promise that ‘Gold Edition’ means nothing and everything.”
Ajay reached for it. The world started deleting itself. Mountains turned into wireframes. His health bar split into fifteen overlapping segments, each in a different language.
Part 5: The End of the Unpack
He didn’t escape Kyrat. He became the repack.
The last screen faded to black. Then, white text appeared:
“Installation Complete. Far Cry 4 Gold Edition – v17 – All DLCs – Multi15 – Repack by MR DJ. Run as Admin. Ignore the Yeti. He’s friendly now. Thanks for playing.”
And somewhere in the code, Ajay Ghale sat cross-legged on a floating island, next to a glitched honey badger and a crab rangoon that never ran out, speaking all fifteen languages at once, waiting for someone to click “New Game” again.
Fin.
It is impossible to write about a Mr DJ repack without acknowledging the elephant in the room: piracy.
If you want to support the developers (Ubisoft Montreal), buy the game legally. If you want the most feature-complete, offline, portable version of the game for archival or modding purposes, Mr DJ’s repack is objectively the best technical package.