• Fri. Nov 29th, 2024

Kingdom Come: Deliverance 2 is a strange mixture of historical drama and The Hangover

Byadmin

Aug 21, 2024


What we said about KCD1

KC: Deliverance guy relaxing

(Image credit: Warhorse Studios)

We gave Kingdom Come: Deliverance 84% in our review, saying: “It’s one of the most satisfying, rewarding  role-playing experiences I’ve enjoyed on PC for a while, but the inconsistent performance and the game’s tendency to completely break does test my patience from time to time.”

Those of you keen to do some horseback riding and duelling in 15th century Bohemia are going to have to wait a wee bit longer. Medieval RPG Kingdom Come: Deliverance 2 is no longer coming out this year, with its release date pushed back to February 11, 2025. It’s still not too far off, though, and to keep us going, Warhorse has given us a taste of what to expect when it does appear.

At a preview event in the town of Kuttenberg, one of the real-world locations in which the game takes place, the studio gave me hands-on time with two slices of Henry’s adventure, following the unassuming hero from the beginning of the game and later, in the sequel’s second map, as he explores aforementioned town. 

Where the original game kicked off with a glimpse of pastoral life before Henry was uprooted by violence, the sequel wastes no time as it rushes into the action. Bohemia is aflame, and I immediately find myself stuck in a siege as the forces of King Sigismund of Hungary, in his quest to take the throne of Bohemia, try to batter down the walls. Things ain’t looking good for the defenders. 

(Image credit: Warhorse Studios)

Having already spent countless hours in Kingdom Come: Deliverance, I appreciate being able to get straight into the meat rather than mucking around with character creation systems and tutorials—though some of this stuff is on the horizon, it turns out. For now, though, it’s war. Temporarily playing as Father Godwin, an ancillary character from the first game, I rush along the walls kicking and hacking at the soldiers clambering up them, with the din of battle filling my ears. 



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