Kingdom Come: Deliverance II: Have you ever delved into the medieval role-playing game?

Kingdom Come: Deliverance II: Have you ever delved into the medieval role-playing game? 57 comments

Kingdom Come: Deliverance II: Have you ever delved into the medieval role-playing game?

Kingdom Come: Deliverance II has been released and is enjoying great early reception. Does your joy also play the second part of the medieval adventure around Daredevil Heinrich? Or do you avoid setting, scope, or certain game mechanics? Today’s should provide some answers.

Table of Contents Have you ever delved into medieval roleplaying? Kingdom Come: Deliverance II is well received – here too? Are you playing Kingdom Come: Deliverance II and how? How do you like medieval adventure? What do you like and what is scary? Participation is expressly desired, the last ten Sunday questions in the overview of motivation and data use

Kingdom Come: Deliverance II is well received – here too?

Kingdom Come II once again puts players in medieval Bohemia at the beginning of the 15th century, where they are allowed to explore an open world, which is divided into two areas and, compared to the first part, twice as large and again modified in an additional modified CryEngine. Among other things, this goes to Trosky Castle and Kutná Hora. It’s one of the largest medieval towns to ever be in a video game, the developers said.

As in the first part, the emphasis is on a realistic depiction of medieval everyday life and living. Fantasy elements, for example, also don’t contain Deliverance II. Nevertheless, the developers promise exciting action. As a former blacksmith and homemade knight, it is important to avenge the death of your own parents, with the King of Hungary, Sigismund of Luxembourg, as the antagonist during the action.

This is well received as part of numerous tests and reviews for the release. Kingdom Come: Deliverance II is a very good, very complex role-playing game with countless items and skills, which fans of the first part should especially like. Most testers report high to very high ratings, although the game is not perfect and some players complain about the heavy combat system, some of which complain about quest happiness or individual graphical errors.

In contrast, the compelling medieval world gets high praise in unison due to its variety and optics. NPCs, who are not lifeless dolls, are also often emphasized, but continue a daily routine and contribute so much to the atmosphere. So far, the role-playing game has also been going well among players, shortly after release, 91% of the more than 12,000 reviews are positive in the Steam store.

Are you playing Kingdom Come: Deliverance II and how much?

With such a well-made release, it’s worth asking: are you also playing Kingdom Come: Deliverance II or are you planning to?

In this context, the question is also interesting whether the first part was played.

How do you like medieval adventure?

Kingdom Come: Deliverance II enjoys mostly positive ratings and reviews. Do you agree? Or does the game completely give you the cold shoulder?

The impetus stone in the review is sometimes the stained memory system: Kingdom players come: Deliverance II may not be able to store and store fast storage as you want, but you have to go to a bed or keep the corresponding potions in stock. Do you think this is beneficial and welcome to immersion? Or is the lack of fast lane mechanisms a solid criticism?

What do you like and what is scary?

Two final questions should be about aspects of role-playing that particularly appeal to you or bother you or even prevent you from playing. So all interested readers can participate, whether they are already playing Kingdom: Deliverance II, will still be playing, or will leave it left.

And at the end: are there any aspects that you completely disagree with?

Participation is expressly welcome

As always, the editorial team is happy to hear sound and detailed reasons for your decisions in the comments on the current Sunday issue. If you personally represent completely different views that are not covered by the answer options given in the article’s surveys, you can also report on the forum. Ideas and suggestions on the content of current or future surveys are also welcome.

Readers who have not yet participated in last Sunday’s questions can do so, as surveys always take place over a 30-day period. The prerequisite for participation is only a free basic computer account. In the forum in particular, exciting discussions are always going on in the forum.

The last ten Sunday questions in the preview

RTX 5090 and 5080: How restrained was the market launch and will benefit AMD? RTX 5090: How disappointed are you with the Nvidias 575 watt shred rod? Handheld gaming consoles: Do you have handhelds and looking forward to the Switch 2? & RDNA 4: What is your first impression of the new graphics? Christmas Questions: Did you upgrade in 2024 and there was technology for the festival? DIY PC manufacturing: pirates or blessing? Gaming PCS: Which manufacturers are the graphics card, SSD and housing? Mobile phone: how expensive is your tariff and which provider are you? Audio on the desktop PC: are you using headphones, speakers, headphones, or a microphone? Idle Consumption: What is actually “idling” for you and is it relevant?

Motivation and use of data

The data collected through Sunday Questions only serves to make the mood within the community and the hardware and preferences of readers and their development more visible. There is no financial or advertising context, nor is there any evaluation for the purposes of market or data to third parties.

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