I played like 1/4 on this on release. Just repurchased it for a console for 5$ for full game/DLC. Worth it. Woman's lot gets hate because out of all the DLC it's the one that got polished while the mercenary one was just just epic build up to just one big F-U.
I find it hilarious that Henry has only level 1 in strength and maintenance at the game start, despite being a blacksmith's apprentice. He's such a fuck up he couldn't even learn one thing from helping his dad.
I actually thought it was cool that he can use the grindstone and sharpen weapons himself right from the start, while he can't really do anything with the clothes outside of very minor fixes at first. I took it as a nod to him learning at least some stuff from his dad. But the level 1 strength...yeah, that's pretty funny 😂
Well, the “Henry age thing” is kind of a doozy. Technically it was confirmed to be 27, but at the same time, people in the game constantly regard him as a child/teenager and he is the same age as Hans Capon, who is a teenager that is unable to actually rule because he’s too young
The Hans bromance was epic. You really are lead down this path that makes you think you'll become bitter rivals, but then he turns out to be one of your best friends. It was great to see that twist.
@@incurableromantic4006 Modern sensibilities have lead down this path that makes people think anyone that disagrees with you needs to be destroyed. It's pretty sad. No chance for redemption at all.
problem is, you're forced to become his best friend. I appreciated the fact that he turned out to be an okay guy, but didn't really want to become his buddy.
@@incurableromantic4006 Reminds me of a scene from Boardwalk Empire when Meyer Lansky is telling the story about how he met Charlie Luchiano. As a kid, Charlie and his friends would rob him of his lunch money and beat him up, but Meyer would never stand down and give up without a fight. After a few times of that happening, Charlie invited him to join his gang. May or may not be based on a true story, though. As for the game, I don't really remember. It's mostly the sentiment that matters. Two unlikely friends is a better story than rivals, imo.
I like how brutal KCD is towards the player at times. Me and a friend of mine was discussing our playthroughs and instead of typical "yeah, i sided with X faction, kicked the Y faction's ass and got the bittersweet ending" we were talking about how we fucked things up in many different ways because our Henry wasn't really that competent or the quest was secretly on a timer. KCD is defined by the mistakes player makes and i fucken love it
i cant agree more there are only two games (or game franchises) that did it similar for me and are still faves that would be gothic one and two and Fallout one and two
@@rja9784 Yeah. It's far away from KCD. Not even close. It's bigger, has more biomes. But it's not that immersive and does not have that hand crafted level of details.
@@Sir_Fres Yes, I spend 40+ hours in RDR2 on PS4 Pro. What I mean by hand crafted is not cabins or other "people-made" objects. I mean the forest itself - terain, caverns, rocks, grass, bushes, trees, nature sounds, etc. I had no this feeeling in RDR that I am in forest. In KCD I choosed to not use fast travel entirely and often switch horse from running to slow gallop because of how good forest is, especially when you have home theather surrond sound at home.
This was such an incredible game. The story is compelling. The world is alive. The gameplay is really really good. This game rewards the player for playing the game. If you put the time into it you will inevitably start to understand and flourish in combat and money making. Great review. This game absolutely ruined a whole year for me. No other game could quite fill that itch. I had to quit cold turkey lol.
Tbh I think this is hands down the most realistic open world map ever designed, usually things are so crammed and scaled back in open world games to make them feel even more massive, but the dense forests and rolling hills and path layouts are just so true to life no game can top it.
Well your thoughts about it being realistic are actually truth, you should look up real world locations of Skalitz, Rattau, etc. and compare it to the in game map, Im sure there's a video on UA-cam here that shows it
@@Downerfunk It's not a perfect copy of the real world; they did pull Skalitz and Rattay closer together, yeeting a lot of land (and villages) in between. But it is very realistic, and every individual place is just like it might have been in real life.
Morrowind ruined Skyrim for me. Skyrim was never a good game. I hated it when I first played it. I've tried to play it again, but I can't get into it. One of the worst games I've ever played.
My favourite thing about KCD is that the world just continues with or without Henry's input. Time sensitive quests are something that really makes you feel like you're in a living world where things don't just wait for you.
@@alexhulk6you could just not do the quests, but then you'd complain that there isn't enough content. If someone in a game tells me "please hurry" and I don't I wouldn't be surprised to not get anything if I show up two weeks late.
@@alexhulk6 I do not understand why people get upset over a game having a mechanic that does not accommodate their personal playstyle. Why the need to bash it? Just play something else.
@@danielflanard8274I guess what they want is a game that incorporates a freedom to choose a playstyle, not just putting everyone into a bottleneck until all KCD players are just the exact same humans.
@@S0n0fG0D It is fine if that is what they are looking for in a game but it is not a mark against a game that does not fulfill that criteria. "Putting everyone into a bottleneck until all KDC players are just the exact same humans." You just described nearly every game in existence. People play KDC because it has what they are looking for. No one is forcing anyone to play it. The solution is as simple as everyone looking for media that suits them rather than trying to make things change to suit them. If I like the idea of a game but do not enjoy playing it, I do not get bitter over being excluded from the experience, I either make an effort to appreciate it or I find something else to play.
This game has been largely under appreciated and under the radar since it’s release. Remember playing it back when it dropped and it truly was some of the most fun solo gaming I had over the years
Any game with realistic combat garners hate. "Wow I cant just jump 5 fully armored soldiers like this is Skyrim? 0/10! Give me my power fantasy! Stop trying to make me think about stuff!"
@@Tinylittledansonman I thought combat was cool cuz u really did suck until u spent time in the game, by like 40 hours or some shit Henry is saucing up on the battlefield with some wicked armor
Also a small EU studio so there's that but I agree with the skill and unorthodoxy to it. It was a great game. I loved poisoning bandits food with the death cap potion and waiting for them to stumble over dead.
It has a lot of good stuff but unfortunately it is just insulting as a game. Not every gamer is 15 years old with boatloads of free time, and the game's only true issue (i.e. isn't tied to actually learning its complex mechanics) is the saving system. It is fucking awful to lose hours of progress in what still is a glitchy, janky jewel made with genuine care and love. On PC you can get around it but on console you are fucked and the 30 FPS blurry image won't help either. Massive shame as this game deserved better accessibility and if you have kids or a full-time job don't even think about buying this game and completing it in less than a year.
@@OneLastScholar Sounds like this game isn't quite for you and perhaps you would enjoy more casual arcadey games that hold your hand? Me personally, I can say this, Bannerlord and the Total War Warhammer series are my favorite games of all time. Graveyard Keeper and Stardew Valley are quite different but also pretty high up on my list.
@@stopit3945 You can still save whenever you want outside of combat with savior schnaps. Really I think its better this way as it discourages save scumming forcing you to deal with less than ideal outcomes since some quests can fail and change the outcome. With a free save system you could save and load anytime until you get a perfect result.
Doing a drunk sermon the morning after a night out with Father Godwin was one of the funniest moments in gaming for me. If you look at the trophies for that mission, it's a shame how many players have missed it.
well to be fair I not knowing what that mission was turned down drinking with godwin because I honestly thought it could've been a trap lol. Him getting me wasted to dump me on the side of the road to leave or trying to kill me. Getting ambushed by Black Peter and characters pretending to help me then trying to stab me in the back scarred me lol
It’s a shame they made it impossible to play on console because of their locking system. I can’t believe they didn’t pay a single person to test their game . But that’s the state of modern gaming, release the slop to the masses and you’ll all eat it up.
@@Wetknees If you're whining about lockpicking on console. you're wrong. I said the same thing at first, now I don't mind it at all. This is ENTIRELY a skill issue on your part, and mine when I first started playing the game
@@SL4PSH0CK i love and hate the forests in the game because i remember one time where i had to murder my way through a forest just to get back to rattay because my horse cant get through and even worse was the fact that it was during night time. I was barely alive when I finally set foot Rattay
I had written a ginormous text about this video and this game. But UA-cam closed the text area and deleted it. So I'll rewrite it shortly: So, in short, I loved the way this video always surprised me by pointing out stuff I sure thought no one had noticed/cared about! It describes the mixed bag of great experiences this game brings. I hope this helps you to make more great reviews that we can share with our friends and get them to play amazing games like this one. I'm excited to see where this channel is heading, and that review to whatever Warhorse Studios does next!
Thanks for putting a spotlight on one of my favorite games of all time. As a history lover, I never played a more immersive Knight simulator that gave me the feeling and thrill of playing Oblivion for the first time all over again. I really hope they make a sequel.
The first time I played KCD I sprinted through it and didn’t really enjoy the full experience. My first run through took maybe 50 hours and my second play through was something in the 700-800 hour range. I was basically maxed out before the hunting trip with Capon. I started a new play through close to a year ago and I kinda sorta forgot about it until just now. I gotta go, bye!😅
If they do make a sequel look for it to be different. There were a lot of whiney woke ass complaints about no diversity in this game. Like there would be Chinese and black people living in Europe at this time. 🙄 So the next one will be more historically inaccurate to please the whiners.
This is that kind of a game, where you dont feel like a slave to the "question mark" button, grinding and grinding quests just because you need to clear the "?" on the map, not even knowing what the story behind it is. They should make more games like this, which make you think, enjoy and create your own perspectives.
Pentiment does that well. It's set in early Catholic Rome, I think. As such, religion is a huge part, but not so much to the point of pandering or shoving a message
Same here, go to the settings and change the lockpicking to easiest, it will allow you to rotate lock picking by pressing L1, it made all the difference for me.
@@romangural4 Same here :D I think the offer on PSN was the best move Warhorse could have made. I am so fucking addicted to this game right now. Greetings from Germany
This might very well be the first RPG that did the Medieval times right and stayed as close to history as possible. It's a gem with an amazing lvl of detail. I hope we get the sequel next year. The combat really encapsulates what being a peasant with no fighting experience is like in those time and how deadly combat in general is. And fighting multiple enemies is also done well in terms of realism. Enemies would try to surround you and you would "backpaddle" to prevent that. You'd probably also take out the weaker enemies first and quicky.
I think one specific thing thats especially praiseworthy was the alchemy system. Maybe not complex in execution, but its nice seeing Henry doing everything manually and every procedure having a different animation
This is such a rare game. When playing I felt like a kid again. The game is difficult, doesn’t hold your hand is often quite frustrating. But that is what makes this game so engaging and fun. I wasn’t bored a second playing this game. Johanka‘s dlc and A women’s lot were so emotional. I rarely cry, but both dlc triggered something in me. Just amazing.
Johanka's story is perhaps the best quest line ever made in any game. I didn't expect much (nobody ever expects the bohemian inquisition) but damn I was wrong! It's so well designed, your actions have consequences and even the bad guys are not comical cartoon villains but realistic characters with logical motives. Great DLC in general... Mercenary DLC was a bit disappointing tho, it was kinda rushed...
Yeah, the open world map especially the forests was very fascinating to explore. I never have experienced going somewhere so lush, from living in a polluted urban area my whole life.
@@Overclockthis there are also a lot of people who said that they can never play Warband again because Bannerlords was Better so, it's just a matter of opinion but whatever the opinion, i want the dev to keep making a great game, because Mount & blade is a one of a kind game
@@ConcedoNulli you only get bored with Bannerlords if you didn't know what to do or you like a game that handhold you, telling you what you should do next. i don't blame you, because this is not a game for everyone, of course this game is boring for you, because this is not for people who like Traditional RPG. this is for people who like war, Strategy and game of wit, this is a perfect game for them. after playing it long enough, you could start to appreciate the game for what it is the great thing about bannerlords is that it require you to create your own story, do your own adventure, live the life however you want, learn about the world. also, Bannerlords battle was easily one of the most epic battle, just pure art & chaos. you often have to fight outnumbered, fighting against army back to back 10+ time. fighting a hopeless battle. you really have to plan your attack beforehand, and this is the thing that made the game so much fun, because even after so much preparation, you still can get f*cked up by the enemy the only goal is to conquer the entire map, it's that simple but not easy, because everyone want you dead, the whole world is work against you. you felt like a badass after playing the game
I love this game so much. As it comes from my country I might be a bit biased, but I can’t wait for the second one. Also in my city and orchestra just played the soundtrack of the game and what an experience. Thanks for making this video ❤
also one of my most favourite games in a late medieval setting. it is so great to see somebody actually caring to do a great game which also is historically accurate and fun at the same time.
I will say though there were a few times where it felt like some enemies were a bit _too_ skilled. Like getting hit with a master strike by someone who looks like they’ve only used an axe on wood
@@karlwittenburg5868 back then being a bandit, would require good ability with weapons, as not knowing how to use one and trying to rob people wouldn't go very well.
You can feel the passion of the development team through the screen, incredible game and in my top five ever. I still remember my first meeting with a bandit whilst walking around and the real sense of danger and excitement was different to other games.
I never played similar game before and I was struggling with controls so when I've met first person in burned skalitz and he killed me I was so scared after that I was stealthing everywhere the first half of the whole game 😂 I will never forget how scared I was of the unknown the map wasn't visible yet and I had no idea what to expect and I didn't know if everybody was an enemy. I was travelling on rivers and streams away from roads so scared. looking back it's so funny to me 😂 and the OP Henry at the end 😂
There is something special about this game, realism, I passed by Rataje/Rattay on my way to Croatia. They did amazing job with re-creating medieval bohemia.
I played hardcore my first play through. Best decision ever. Among other things, not having the player marker on the minimap and no fast travel really situates you in the world. I felt like I was there, as I had to literally orient myself and travel the distances, making sure I look at landmarks etc to not veer off course. Just finding the abandoned village in far into the woods became somewhat of an achievement :).
I played Hardcore in my second playthrough (after getting all the DLCs) and yup, it made it so much more immersive. Regretted I didn't do it in my first playthrough.
One of my problems with From the Ashes was that it's so expensive to properly complete the village (church and everything) that by the time it's finished, you've clearly found a way to make enough money to never have to be bothered about the income the village gives you. I only ever really used Pribyslavitz as a sort of 'home base' where I could return to after a mission. Even that was a little inconvenient though, because it's so far to the edge of the map, and the path there isn't exactly the most obvious, I wish expanding the roads was one of the things you could have built. Plus, I'd very much have liked to customise the rathaus a little, since I'm using it as a home base, it would be nice to really make it 'home'. Maybe they could have had a catalogue of sorts with Marius, and after a few days, your furniture or whatever would arrive. Idk, I'd have liked a little more customisation.
One of the best games of my life for me too. When I watched your assassins creed mirage video where I saw you roasting the game completely when EVERY single video game journalists are giving it good grades, I told myself " I have to check this guy's channel" and now I watch this. Man we have the same vision of what a good game is. After 5 years i'm still completely in love with this game even though I havent returned to it since my first playthrough and i havent done the dlcs. It is just part of my memories and I remember it as if it actually happened, in an other life... This game feels REAL. The kind of immersion I had with RDR2 but even better. I hope you will review more games in the future because I will definitely follow your recommendations 😁
@@giovannimassa8881 taking all negative effects on hardcore mode in my opinion the only way the game should be played as it adds extra challange but also makes you so much better at the game in terms of map knowledge and just using negative effects to your adventage in certain parts of the game
There's a "village" of 2 houses (which isn't actually a village) which doesn't have any guards at night, so you can practice picking their doors and chests to the highest levels. Just sleep in the nearby field until dark, rinse and repeat. That's how you farm XP for lockpicking.
That's fucking hilarious cus if I was a medieval bum who needed to steal to get by, that is exactly how I would practice too lmao sleep in the fucking fields and pick on old people living a farm all alone lmfao beautiful
I agree so much with your opinions regarding the DLCs. As a City Builder fan, I was expecting so much more for From the Ashes. As a practicing Catholic, Johanka's story had so much theological nuance that resonated with me.
@@mladizivko Johanka is a woman who has dream-visions of Mary, who she thinks is giving her a message she needs to spread to the people, so she starts to preach in public areas, she is then investigated by an Inquisitor for heresy, and there are many different outcomes to the quest
The more people that discover this gem the better. This was such an incredibly ambitious and mostly well executed game for Warhorses first outing. KCD 2 could be something truly special if they build on the first game.
It’s not a gem. It’s boring. The combat is slow and clunky. The save system sucks. And you have to watch that stupid intro every time you start the game.
@@PeopleRTheProblem How far into the game did you make it? Specifically, how much of the combat skills to did you level up. That determines how responsively Henry is able to use his weapons.
@@MrLathor not far at all. I think I got to the second keep after his father was killed. If it weren’t for the limited saves and the nonsense intro you have to sit through each time you start the game I may have been more accepting of the terrible combat and lifeless world. The first time I gave up was when I was exploring and got stuck in bushes. Restarted….sat through the into….then realized how much I’d have to replay to get back to where I was. So I left it then and there. Years later I was going through my library…saw this game and thought I’d give it another shot…….then that f-(&ing intro started playing…..uninstalled the game right there. If you enjoy the game I’m not trying to take that from you….but this game sucks. I like the idea of a more grounded/realistic approach with no magic or fantasy elements. But why on earth would you have such an unforgiving save system on top of an unforgiving and clunky combat system?
@@PeopleRTheProblem This is absolutely a game that requires the player to be patient and make wise decisions to get the most out of it. You have to play the game with an understanding and acceptance of Henry’s current abilities. Also, I genuinely am not sure what you mean by “intro”. Are you talking about the Skalitz prologue? I do not recall at having to wait through anything to get into the game.
@@MrLathor yes the prologue. I can’t remember exactly how long it was but having to sit through it every time I started the game got old quick. I understand the the point was to progress from rookie to veteran. But for me it just got boring quick. The consumable saves meant I’d lose so much progress if I unexpectedly died. Progress that was pretty boring. Maybe the inclusion of fantasy elements would’ve been enough of a distraction for me.
I adored the combat. It perfectly reflected the growth of Hendry. At the start of the game I thought this is gonna be any other RPG so I smugly entered combat expecting a landslide victory... and was thoroughly humiliated. So when the cumans invaded, I was actually panic running away trying to save my life. That really put me in the shoes of a medieval peasant boy. And many hours later wearing fancy armour and taking 7 cumans down with only minor injuries to myself felt absolutely amazing!
There were many aspects of the game that I got sucked into and lost track of hours of time. Yet, there was nothing more compelling to me than learning to read and performing alchemy, and making your own potions. Idk why, but the methodical nature of it all was very enjoyable to me.
Same. I enjoy hunting where the dog does all the work lol 😅 I enjoy sitting and having some wine and reading at the inn.. Then sleeping in a tent on the floor. It's just so real. Picking flowers is my thing too. The game really sucked me In, playing for 10,12hrs at a time... I had to get enough money to buy new clothes for Henry. I couldn't take ppl keep telling me I look terrible!! 😂
My only problems with the game are the ending and basically nothing for years to come and the fact that you get all these attack combos to use but all the enemies just stop them or parry you so you basically just perfect block and then spam and that's not as cool or rewarding. Though I will say first time playing the game taking out bandit camps was so rewarding and fun because it's so hard
I don’t feel like I have a big problem with the ending now, but at the time I was totally not expecting it. When I first finished, I was like this is it there’s no resolution? I feel like the game was pretty obviously setting up a sequel just hope we don’t have to wait much longer in that. It will have a more rewarding ending.
@@Daniel-ih4zh A combo is not created until you chain all the attacks, which most of the times won't be completed since enemies will parry you before it. That's why almost no one uses them. If you manage to land a combo, probably you can just keep spam-hit the enemy until you break his block and kill him easily.
@@ocrgmsfyv8819what annoys me is that you miss one block and the enemies will basically instantly combo you losing all your stamina, while enemies never run out of stamina either. Perfect blocking with a blunt weapon and head cracker or using a bow is the only way to fight engagements where you don't have allies and it kinda gets old
@@ietsbram if you combine 5 different games and put their best attributes tgt then ofcourse it doesnt add up. So now... lets just look at it as a single game, then yes It IS a verry damn good game.
The combat is honestly next level and is easily my favorite part of the game. The key is to slow down and treat it like a real swordfight and not a button-masher. I always see people cheese it by walking backwards and spamming thrusts but getting into a proper longsword duel honestly just feels amazing. I also appreciate the realism. Sure, if you're a well-trained knight in full plate armor and you're fighting some peasant thug, you might get away without a scratch, but any time you fight another experienced swordsman, you're going to take a few hits, and it can truly be a gamble with your life. And fighting a 5v1 ends exactly the way it should end unless you train for days and become a legitimate badass.
This video has made me drastically reevaluate my experience with the game. I went in blind, and played for only two or three hours where a whole of nothing happened. I just walked around piloting a man best described as, if unflavored tapioca was a person, picking flowers and failing to lockpick. Eventually I picked a fight just to feel alive... and that resulted in my character feeling very dead... I didnt bother to wait for the reload and just left that as his cannonical ending.
The game doesn't really get particularly exciting, but the combat goes from "near impossible" to "braindead easy" if you just learn the masterstrike. The issue is you have to do the main story up to a certain point and talk to the trainer guy AGAIN after you already talked to him a first time in order to learn it. It's very stupid game design. But once you do, suddenly no enemy can even touch you and only large groupfights are potential threats anymore. You instantly go from clueless peasant to master warrior
I agree, but around the time I got my own horse is when things started picking up, pieces started falling into place. And yes I upgraded my stats obviously, but I also became better at things organically, like the combat...and it just felt so lifelike, the practice makes perfect idea
I remember playing this game during pandemic and it was so fun. It has the same economic problem as the witcher 3 tho. All the best equipment is found and there is nothing to spend money on except repairing that equipment. Also that sword that deals like 90 damage from spiking your opponents is too insane (the swing on it is only like 60). The spammer tactics go wroom
Renewing Pribyslavitz is what you want. It costs more gold for upkeep than you generate in the beginning. You might even find yourself struggling to keep up on gold in the reserves
There's some mods that help balance that out quite well. I do agree the economy has problems and mods don't help console users which sucks. But the pros still far outweigh the cons for me.
Especially on hardcore you cannot or shouldn’t just wait until you find adequate equipment. And of course you want a really good, fully equipped horse. Then you need a lot of money to repair and build up your own town. Etc..
What I love about the game is the landscape, setting and lighting. I am from Germany, we have many old castles, forests and churches standing around and if you are a photographer or movieperson like me, and you earn your money mostly with knowledge about light, then you ardore the realism of kingdom come deliverance. It is crazy how good this game looks even from todays standards and I can't wait to see the development team roll of a sequel.
Can confirm If you start From the Ashes as soon as the bandits are kicked out it's a good reason to explore some of the smaller towns to get the supplies you need, it puts a bit more of a time crunch on getting the place up and running if you don't have endless wealth because it costs money at the beginning, and once it is running, it's a good way to produce that endless supply of wealth as you move to the mid game and actually need money some times for new gear, repairs, a new horse maybe (sorry pebbles), and buying gifts for Theresa after you ride all the way back down to Rattay. My first Henry spends his days before going with Hans Capon riding between Pribislavitz, Skalitz, and Rattay killing Cumans and bandits and collecting gear to sell in Rattay cause he's a vigilante (read: Murder Hobo).
After clearing one of a thiefs camps I found a horse with much better statistics than Pebbles. I even could sit on it (not steeling it) and I ran to the Talamberk stapels. But I could not find a way how to keep it. Thus, I am keeping Pebbles. I am not spending money on a horse.
You should be basically mega-rich by the time you hit that questline. Unless you arent loading your horse full of the expensive stuff and selling it off after battles. Money in this game is a bit too easy. If you kill all the cumans leaving Skalitz youll net about 10k groschen from their gear. Ive seen people push it much harder though and leave skalitz with 50-100k. The main quest seems rushed but this game really does reward exploration and trying different things. Ive also never bought gear. All the best gear if found came from looting. Other than swords its rare to see the truly high end stuff in shops. Killing everyone durring the Pribislavitz scouting mission is another huge money making opportunity. Not very hard to pull off either. Pick off a couple at a time from horse back until theyre thin enough to just murder all of them. Haul the gear back before finishing the quest so the bodies dont disappear. You probably wont be able to fit it all in one go.
Hardcore is such an interesting way to play. There IS a map, it's the same map, but there is just no 'you are here' icon so you actually have to learn the landscape. It's somehow even more immersive.
I hated the hardcore mode. I usualy play then in any games witg the option. But the fact henry aparently doesnt know what direction he wants to move his own hands is just stupid. Or have any idea how much pain hes in. Or how tired he ism
It makes me angry that I have to share my love for the genre and setting with drooling r-words that don’t know how to read a map and use combos. These people are used to Skyrim/Witcher “question mark” exploration and “press LMB to win” combat. It is a shame, because the sequel will probably be influenced by these people’s complaints.
@@Avengerie 100% I expect it to be more "hand holding". Its the only way you get gen Z to like it, they need fast and easy stuff otherwise there is always something like that available and nudging. Or maybe they accept the niche life and keep it the same, but it won't be scalable to the demographic, so less $ to be gained.
@@adriancioroianu1704 games that are easy are so boring that's y I've always liked souls game and KCD and CK3 games where any progress is an accomplishment and has infinite replay ability.
I can't say enough how much I want this story to continue right where it left off. It felt so frustrating that you never get to complete the two big quests before the game just ends. I loved the actors performances. I'd like to see this story completed before any of them become unavailable.
As someone who did hardcore for his first play through, it’ll really make you appreciate how accurate the map is. I also got a really good sense of the roads by the end of the game, kind of like in real life
I remember trying hardcore as my first playthrough because I always like the challenge. Then I remembered I don't have time to spend in a mental asylum.
In hardcore there was so much getting lost in woods, but the roads I travel I know by heart. Also getting your dog to "stay" works pretty good as a marker.
Great game, might to a replay at some point. Also, hardcore is SUCH a good mode in this game, you can legit get lost in the forests and early on that gets scary when you know there are bandits around. Few games if any have had such good immersion for me, and I do think the UI changes in hardcore mode really added to that.
yup, made my first play through in hardmode and made +100 hours in the main campaign since i was getting lost every now and then, but at the same time getting lost made me discover a lot of secondary characters, camps and basically made my experience pretty much my own and thats fantastic
I know right! Bandits were legit scary, I'd rather just do my guard rounds, throw some dice at the local inn, flirt some with Theresa and live my life. When I first opened the alchemy book and realised I couldn't read I thought it was so funny, when I realised how far away the teacher lived I thought to myself "maybe not knowing how to read isn't such a bad thing".
The villages/castle/woods feel so natural because theyc are modeled almost as replicas of the real world based on historical maps, documents and todays world. You can come to 2024 Skalitz (Skalice) and surrounding area in Bohemia (latin for Čechy, now part of the Czech republic) and see that it looks almost identical, just 600 years apart. Obviously some buildings are in ruins, most have been rebuild/renovated in newer styles such as renaissance, baroque, etc and castles were rebuild into chateaus over the years. Some buildings are still (in part) identical to this day. Mostly churches, but bell towers and foundations of former castle complexes turned chateaus are still the same most of the time. The landscape is still the same though. Ive read that people who played this game and came to visit the sights were able to navigate themselves there.
I spent about 150 hrs on this game... and fully believe I have done NOTHING yet. It's so massive, so big and quite unique that it just always keep you in awe. Love this game.
Really? It only took me 60 hours of haphazardly playing before I completed every quest and activity. The one thing that bummed me out about the game is that it didn't have nearly enough content compared to other open world games.
@nip9898 idk lol that's what the time says on my last saves at the end. I did a lot of roaming around fighting bandits and grinding etc. Did almost every quest. Mastering different skills. Some ppl said they had like 1400-1500 hours
KCD is my favorite game of all time. It beat Halo (xbox version, the original). Kingdom Come Deliverance is an ego check. Take the time to train with Daddy (Bernard), learn to read and finally, learn to lose. BLACKSMITH'S boy!!!!!!!!!!!!!! In all seriousness KCD is harder than Elden Ring or any souls like game.
I've lived a religious life. The monastery portion was so, so real for me. The self disciplined, regimented life it recalls felt so real. And the singing... It was a bittersweet experience for me.
That section pissed me off so much. I couldn't even talk to the circators because they kept locking me up! Ultimately I killed one of them and left his body in the cellar.
It's an absolute masterpiece. At first, I had a lot of trouble with crashes, but started a new game like a year later and it went without a problem (probably was patched). It has one of the hardest combats I've played. A game where you really have to think before attacking a group alone. The freedom and how the choices make real differences are great. Also it's a game that let's you think outside of the box to solve things and has some really humorous moments too.
I absolutely loved this game. It's super rewarding when you figure stuff out and ruthlessly painful if you try to skip learning the game (especially combat). Can't wait for the sequel.
I played this game about 5 times to complition and every time my favourite part is the learning curve. I stay in rattay, train in the morning, then sleep for a few hours, wake up in the middle of the night and train in lockpicking and stealth by robbing the entire town blind. I repeat this rutine for about 2 in game weeks, it's super relaxing and I have so much fun just living as a training Henry. By the end of those two weeks I have some of the best weapons and armour in the game and I'm great with a longsword.
to date, this is still my favorite game of all time. if you don't stick with it, you're doing yourself a great disservice. it's a gorgeous, deep experience and the storytelling is second to none.
The biggest issue I had with this game was that the npcs were kinda dumb. I literally killed a man in broad daylight in front of the guards and they did nothing. Hard to immerse myself if I cant feel like I'm a part of the world like all the other characters.
This was a surprise to be sure, but a welcome one! So glad you got into this game. I've replayed it a few times and I definitely need to play it on hardcore mode soon. Also, the music fucking SLAPS. I listen to it all the time. Also - I gotta say, the Theresa portion of A Woman's Lot almost made me cry. It really expanded upon her character even more and helped you empathize with her. Some of it was a bit tedious, but all in all, I loved it. It was absolutely heart-wrenching at times and you could just feel the sorrow and sinking feeling from Theresa as you watched the horrors unfold in front of her. Johanka's portion of the DLC was also really great. It was an awesome insight into Catholicism in the Medieval era and how damaging it could be at times.
Most don't have the patience for this game but if you give it time it's feels much more rewarding than any other game you've played. I literally gave up after the first hour of game play but I've payed top dollar on the release date for Nintendo switch so I had to play through it and guess what? This game was worth every penny and it taught me a thing or two 😊.
I encourage you to play in hardcore mode, I did it on my third playthrough and it was great. When you've been playing for several hours you perfect the combat so much that it becomes overly satisfying, which in turn doesn't make it tedious to not be able to use fast travel because you want encounters on your travels. And it's always great to have the negative perk of Somnambulant, waking up in the middle of a forest in the middle of the night and having to figure out where you are.
I wonder if my game's bugged cause I never hear that phrase, after Skalitz. I've got 100 reputation in places like Skalitz and Neuhof but no one's ever that pleased to see my Henry. Playing on PS4. Anyone else have the same issues or something I'm missing?
I've tried to complete this game twice getting several dozen hours in each time but ultimately falling off. I feel like I need the motivation of a sequel's release date to really make me go back. This game still has my award for most realistic looking woods/forest in any game if you can max it out on PC it's just nuts.
@@priestfan81 It's an interesting thing about games and gamers. Many will say about games like Starfield that you won't know for sure if you like it until dozens of hours in yet others will say if a game can't grab you and make you like it in the early hours that's it's fault not yours. The problem with KCD is about half the stuff in the game I'm a big fan of and half the stuff I'm not. So there is a ton of stuff I do love about the game it's just equally true that there's a ton of stuff that keeps me away.
People that don't like this game just need not play it. This game was a game I didn't realize I needed, and now sits happily as one of my all time favorite games ever made. I have over a thousand hours in 1403 Bohemia and I've only finished the game in normal once and am halfway through a hardcore playthrough. Once you get this game it becomes comfortable and relaxing to play. Bonus is that even my wife likes watching me play KCD. 10/10 game.
I hated it at first, but I was also doing everything wrong. Second playthrough was much more satisfying. I'm on my third now and honestly the only part I still hate is the monastery, although I was able to level up vitality twice by just jumping around all over the place 😆
@@pavelcerny9803 Yeah, figuring it out didn't help though, it was still pretty tedious lol. My first time through, I got fed up and just k*lled Pious and left lol. This time through, I took the opportunity to level up alchemy enough to get the autobrew perk, leveled up vitality and stealth and lockpicking, and managed to get Pious out alive. So I had a better time with it than the first time, but it's still tedious as heck. I feel like every game has that one area that is just a pain in the ass to get through (the Fade in Dragon Age Origins comes to mind), and the monastery is that for KCD imo 😆
I love this game so much that I have never completed it. I'm just waiting for the best period in my life to add a magnificent cherry on the cake in the form of Kingdom Come. Avoiding spoilers for almost 4 years is incredibly hard...
Thank you for motivating me to finally play this one. I have it with Czech audio and subtitles (I'm Czech myself, born and raised not far from the game's location actually) - I think it'll be a lot of fun
First time I played this game was proper with slow progression and memories made along the way, but at some point I stopped playing, and my 60 hr playthrough went to the crypt. Recently started playing again, made a new save, and spent the first 20 IRL hours in skalitz hunting sheep, lockipicking chests, knocking people out, laundered all my stolen equipment to remove tags (just to find out it wasn't necessary since after leaving all stolen stuff is considered owned), and beat of zhybchek or whatever his name is with every kind of melee weapon till I got bored My stats when I actually started to play the game: main lvl 18, strength 20, agility 20, vitality 18, speech 6 13 hunting, 16 lockpick, 18 herbalism, 20 sneak, 11 drinking Warfare 19 (regret not finishing it), Sword 20, axe 20, mace 8, unarmed 10, bow 6 Probably wrote this for nothing, but if you read it all the way, then thank you, 10 out of 10 would not do it again 😅
This game is so amazing and there is nothing like it. You could truly get lost in the world then even go further to take a vacation and visit the actual real life locations! KCD 2 will be an instant buy !
I almost quit this game when trying to learn swordplay....but something kept telling me to stick with it....when I learned how to fight (after many deaths and many times running away from a fight for my life in the middle of the woods)....I felt a sense of accomplishment that no other game I've played (and I've played thousands of them)...has ever given me before. When you beat this game..you feel like you've accomplished something.
The feeling you get the first time you stand your ground and take on 3 bandits succesfully is something else. Looking down at what would've killed you with ease the day before thinking, "thats my gear, i've earnt this".
I spammed back walking until the enemy starts running and then spam the stab action. Got a lot of bandits that way including black peter 😂 Henry was playing dirty
@@chadwickhayes8260 THIS!!!! I was like...how do they expect me to make it with no equipment, no armor! Hiding on that grassy hillside, waiting for the right time to make a break for that wagon (or whatever, if I remember correctly, been a few years since i played it)
Yes the combat system is unforgiving. But that's what I love about the game. Unlike other games where you play a hero with special abilities that allow you to fight off 10s if not 100s of enemies at once, in KCD every 1on1 fight can be deadly, not to mention fighting 2 or more enemies at the same time.
everytime i see a kcd video it truly feels like seeing an old friend. The game is definitely my favourite ever and even led me to looking into religion
Role-played the monk part a bit too seriously, have you? It is one of my favorite parts of the game and perhaps one of the most creative mission designs I've ever played, even if it seems like it may have been a bit rushed during production.
17:07 Weird complement but I couldn't agree more. I've played a thousand games with natural terrain and yet the geology in KCD is somehow more believable in my mind. My brain will register what a forest or hill looks like in a game and understand the assignment but this world feels different. Difficult to describe.
Having accidentally started Theresa’s questline while trying to romance her, I was extremely confused but 10 minutes later, having realized what I talked myself into, I was excited to spend the rest of the night playing as Theresa. It was a great experience that ended in slight frustration that it couldn’t be longer.
So glad to see you doing a video on this game. I just started a playthrough on Hardcore mode and having this pop up in my recommended was just perfect timing.
I love this game. I played this tittle in year of premiere and cried by the ending of main story. For me it's one of the best games in history. Great storyteling, great place and time of middle medieval and great characters. Can't wait for KDC 2. I really hope that Warehorse gonna continue this story.
Just finished the game tonight because of this video! Thank you! The beginning was rough, but as you get used to the mechanics and realism, it's so rewarding! Thank you for your great work!
KCD is undoubtedly one of the greatest games ever made. It is a mind-blowing achievement by Daniel Vavra and his team, bringing to life in an accessible manner some fascinating aspects of medieval life. I played it briefly at launch and boy was it janky, but even then it was incredibly charming. After a few patches, it came together really quite quickly to become as polished as you'd want it to be (you've gotta have some fun bugs here and there). I'm currently on my 3rd playthrough (1st on PC, after a 2- or 3-year hiatus), and it's just everything I could want in a game. Diablo 4 can wait (indefinitely); Starfield can wait; I'm gonna finish this again first. And I can't wait to see what Warhorse brings us next.
On the first time playing on PC I rage quit the game on the Monastery segment. It was pitch-dark at night, when most of the action had to be undertaken; violence only made everything worse; and my hard-earned skill levels melted away as I did monastery jail time for doing things I didn't even know were wrong. On my second playthrough, however, it turned out to be one of my favorite parts of KCD. Such brilliance in having the rug pulled from under your feet just when you start to feel you can bulldoze your way through all the Cumans and scale-amored bandits medieval hell could throw at you. Truly a humbling experience both for Henry and for me, and a magnificent way to force players not to create unidimensional characters and really enjoy all the game has to offer.
I enjoyed it a lot. My main issue was for a "historically accurate game" it was riddled with historical inaccuracies - especially regarding armour and weapon combos, bows on peoples backs and the archery itself (the worst part of combat).
Here's my video on Kingdom Come Deliverance 2, if you're interested! ua-cam.com/video/y9SxsK6DNL8/v-deo.htmlsi=oBbVNX_Rd0N0ZMa6
yippy
@@levelovixorbut does it have vr yet?
I played like 1/4 on this on release. Just repurchased it for a console for 5$ for full game/DLC. Worth it. Woman's lot gets hate because out of all the DLC it's the one that got polished while the mercenary one was just just epic build up to just one big F-U.
Thx for the Spoiler mate
I find it hilarious that Henry has only level 1 in strength and maintenance at the game start, despite being a blacksmith's apprentice. He's such a fuck up he couldn't even learn one thing from helping his dad.
Yet he's a fully grown adult. Most peeps start their apprenticeship at 12 and are fully fletched artisans at the age of 15.
His parents complain about him being bad at stuff quite a bit in the beginning tho
I'm under the impression that he just started blacksmithing
I actually thought it was cool that he can use the grindstone and sharpen weapons himself right from the start, while he can't really do anything with the clothes outside of very minor fixes at first. I took it as a nod to him learning at least some stuff from his dad. But the level 1 strength...yeah, that's pretty funny 😂
Well, the “Henry age thing” is kind of a doozy. Technically it was confirmed to be 27, but at the same time, people in the game constantly regard him as a child/teenager and he is the same age as Hans Capon, who is a teenager that is unable to actually rule because he’s too young
The Hans bromance was epic. You really are lead down this path that makes you think you'll become bitter rivals, but then he turns out to be one of your best friends. It was great to see that twist.
Agreed - at the start of the game I assumed I was gonna end up killing this guy.
@@incurableromantic4006 Modern sensibilities have lead down this path that makes people think anyone that disagrees with you needs to be destroyed. It's pretty sad. No chance for redemption at all.
problem is, you're forced to become his best friend. I appreciated the fact that he turned out to be an okay guy, but didn't really want to become his buddy.
@@98cents It's a bit more than "disagree" though - doesn't he tell his mates to beat Henry up?
@@incurableromantic4006 Reminds me of a scene from Boardwalk Empire when Meyer Lansky is telling the story about how he met Charlie Luchiano. As a kid, Charlie and his friends would rob him of his lunch money and beat him up, but Meyer would never stand down and give up without a fight. After a few times of that happening, Charlie invited him to join his gang. May or may not be based on a true story, though.
As for the game, I don't really remember. It's mostly the sentiment that matters. Two unlikely friends is a better story than rivals, imo.
I like how brutal KCD is towards the player at times. Me and a friend of mine was discussing our playthroughs and instead of typical "yeah, i sided with X faction, kicked the Y faction's ass and got the bittersweet ending" we were talking about how we fucked things up in many different ways because our Henry wasn't really that competent or the quest was secretly on a timer. KCD is defined by the mistakes player makes and i fucken love it
dont think I ever thought something was on a secret timer, if it was portrayed as urgent I did it urgently
Me and my boss at work use "being a Henry" to describe being incompetent or loser-ish
Can't relate. I'm invincible and I didn't even use guides 😐
i cant agree more there are only two games (or game franchises) that did it similar for me and are still faves that would be gothic one and two and Fallout one and two
@@Cov1ngtonsGhOst Damn, everyone here wishes they were as cool as you! You must be awesome and have a great life!
teresa being a beast was my favorite gag. I love the idea of little ol henry’s girlfriend having a higher kill count than henry for most of the game
Wait what I don't think I killed more than one or two in her woman's lot dlc
@@Bassalicious its not fun when u don't know that it will lead u to it lol. and also im quite shocked to see that the game has explicit scene lol.
@@Bassalicious is the game r18+?
@@-joker2010oh yeah it is. There’s plenty of foul language and of course violence, as well as a few sex scenes here and there
@@-joker2010 The game has drinking as a skill. So not only swearing and tits and blood, but also glamorization of alcohol.
I give this game my personal award: "The most beatuful forest in games history"
Did you ever play Red Dead 2?
@@rja9784 Yeah. It's far away from KCD. Not even close. It's bigger, has more biomes. But it's not that immersive and does not have that hand crafted level of details.
@@XSmile2008have you played red dead 2?
The forests have alot of hand crafted details like old cabins
Or indian death rituals
@@Sir_Fres Yes, I spend 40+ hours in RDR2 on PS4 Pro. What I mean by hand crafted is not cabins or other "people-made" objects. I mean the forest itself - terain, caverns, rocks, grass, bushes, trees, nature sounds, etc. I had no this feeeling in RDR that I am in forest. In KCD I choosed to not use fast travel entirely and often switch horse from running to slow gallop because of how good forest is, especially when you have home theather surrond sound at home.
@rja9784 red dead 2 sucked, the most boring, overrated game in history
This was such an incredible game. The story is compelling. The world is alive. The gameplay is really really good. This game rewards the player for playing the game. If you put the time into it you will inevitably start to understand and flourish in combat and money making. Great review. This game absolutely ruined a whole year for me. No other game could quite fill that itch. I had to quit cold turkey lol.
Why?? Why should you stop playing something you enjoy so much? Gaming isn’t like a drug lol
@@raidermaxx2324 ikr?
The gameplay is not good. The world is not alive. Every game rewards the player for playing….we call those progression systems.
@MrReee-xq4yz lol.. what are you shrieking about, incel????🤣🤣🤣🤣
@MrReee-xq4yznah Witcher 3 def best game of the 2010-2020 decade
Tbh I think this is hands down the most realistic open world map ever designed, usually things are so crammed and scaled back in open world games to make them feel even more massive, but the dense forests and rolling hills and path layouts are just so true to life no game can top it.
Well your thoughts about it being realistic are actually truth, you should look up real world locations of Skalitz, Rattau, etc. and compare it to the in game map, Im sure there's a video on UA-cam here that shows it
@@Downerfunk It's not a perfect copy of the real world; they did pull Skalitz and Rattay closer together, yeeting a lot of land (and villages) in between. But it is very realistic, and every individual place is just like it might have been in real life.
RDR2
@@sirpeterbaum4695i feel like kcd has more of a realism commitment - having played both
The witcher 3 comes close for me!
This game ruined skyrim for me.. such a deep game
Same here!!
That’s unfortunate . I was planning to play Skyrim after I finished the game.
@@aight3565Do it. It's immensely fun and the lore pulls you in.
Morrowind ruined Skyrim for me. Skyrim was never a good game. I hated it when I first played it. I've tried to play it again, but I can't get into it. One of the worst games I've ever played.
@@Evan_Horvathwhen you play it as your first experience in elder scrolls it hit different tho
My favourite thing about KCD is that the world just continues with or without Henry's input. Time sensitive quests are something that really makes you feel like you're in a living world where things don't just wait for you.
I love artificial timers that pigeon hole me to play the game in a certain order or I just fail...
@@alexhulk6you could just not do the quests, but then you'd complain that there isn't enough content. If someone in a game tells me "please hurry" and I don't I wouldn't be surprised to not get anything if I show up two weeks late.
@@alexhulk6
I do not understand why people get upset over a game having a mechanic that does not accommodate their personal playstyle. Why the need to bash it? Just play something else.
@@danielflanard8274I guess what they want is a game that incorporates a freedom to choose a playstyle, not just putting everyone into a bottleneck until all KCD players are just the exact same humans.
@@S0n0fG0D
It is fine if that is what they are looking for in a game but it is not a mark against a game that does not fulfill that criteria.
"Putting everyone into a bottleneck until all KDC players are just the exact same humans."
You just described nearly every game in existence. People play KDC because it has what they are looking for. No one is forcing anyone to play it. The solution is as simple as everyone looking for media that suits them rather than trying to make things change to suit them. If I like the idea of a game but do not enjoy playing it, I do not get bitter over being excluded from the experience, I either make an effort to appreciate it or I find something else to play.
This game has been largely under appreciated and under the radar since it’s release. Remember playing it back when it dropped and it truly was some of the most fun solo gaming I had over the years
Any game with realistic combat garners hate. "Wow I cant just jump 5 fully armored soldiers like this is Skyrim? 0/10! Give me my power fantasy! Stop trying to make me think about stuff!"
@@Tinylittledansonman I thought combat was cool cuz u really did suck until u spent time in the game, by like 40 hours or some shit Henry is saucing up on the battlefield with some wicked armor
Good thing about kcd is that your own skill matters, not only henrys skill
@@vapinggranny2474
A lot of the lack of appreciation comes from many people not liking how the devs addressed issues at release
Also a small EU studio so there's that but I agree with the skill and unorthodoxy to it.
It was a great game. I loved poisoning bandits food with the death cap potion and waiting for them to stumble over dead.
My absolute favorite RPG! So glad you made a vid on it
It has a lot of good stuff but unfortunately it is just insulting as a game. Not every gamer is 15 years old with boatloads of free time, and the game's only true issue (i.e. isn't tied to actually learning its complex mechanics) is the saving system.
It is fucking awful to lose hours of progress in what still is a glitchy, janky jewel made with genuine care and love. On PC you can get around it but on console you are fucked and the 30 FPS blurry image won't help either. Massive shame as this game deserved better accessibility and if you have kids or a full-time job don't even think about buying this game and completing it in less than a year.
@@OneLastScholar I take it you're not going to play it on hardcore mode then?
@@OneLastScholar Sounds like this game isn't quite for you and perhaps you would enjoy more casual arcadey games that hold your hand?
Me personally, I can say this, Bannerlord and the Total War Warhammer series are my favorite games of all time.
Graveyard Keeper and Stardew Valley are quite different but also pretty high up on my list.
@@SolWayward-Dark Souls does not hold my hand but I still like it, issue is the save system from kcd.
@@stopit3945 You can still save whenever you want outside of combat with savior schnaps. Really I think its better this way as it discourages save scumming forcing you to deal with less than ideal outcomes since some quests can fail and change the outcome. With a free save system you could save and load anytime until you get a perfect result.
Doing a drunk sermon the morning after a night out with Father Godwin was one of the funniest moments in gaming for me. If you look at the trophies for that mission, it's a shame how many players have missed it.
Right? I got the 'Sinner' trophy and was shocked that it was rare.
well to be fair I not knowing what that mission was turned down drinking with godwin because I honestly thought it could've been a trap lol. Him getting me wasted to dump me on the side of the road to leave or trying to kill me. Getting ambushed by Black Peter and characters pretending to help me then trying to stab me in the back scarred me lol
I was thinking that when I got the achievement
It’s a shame they made it impossible to play on console because of their locking system.
I can’t believe they didn’t pay a single person to test their game . But that’s the state of modern gaming, release the slop to the masses and you’ll all eat it up.
@@Wetknees If you're whining about lockpicking on console. you're wrong. I said the same thing at first, now I don't mind it at all. This is ENTIRELY a skill issue on your part, and mine when I first started playing the game
Most immersive RPG I've ever played, nothing really comes close. Incredible.. so much more than it appears to be at first.
true, the forrest are even well portrayed in game and seeing an irl stream was surreal
@corvus8638 I never thought of it like that before but it sort of is like that and a rpg mix
@corvus8638 It's an RPG like Oblivion with immersive sim elements, like hunger and sleep.
@corvus8638In a way, yes
@@SL4PSH0CK i love and hate the forests in the game because i remember one time where i had to murder my way through a forest just to get back to rattay because my horse cant get through and even worse was the fact that it was during night time. I was barely alive when I finally set foot Rattay
I am glad this game is getting more spotlight. It's often overlooked as being a steep learning curve.
true that, slow and steady race
And by the late game you just go unga bunga and are exclusively using maces and bonking people on the head left and right! It feels so good!
as opposed to games like dark souls 😂🤣😂
because it is
Poor outdated combat scheme. Modern games don't need to use that scheme anymore.
A KCD NEON KNIGHT VIDEO????? SIGN ME UP A MILLION TIMES! Time to watch, rewatch and re-rewatch because I love em BOTH!
YOURE IN MEDIEVAL BOHEMIA BABY, YOURE GONNA DIEEEEE!!!
I had written a ginormous text about this video and this game. But UA-cam closed the text area and deleted it. So I'll rewrite it shortly:
So, in short, I loved the way this video always surprised me by pointing out stuff I sure thought no one had noticed/cared about! It describes the mixed bag of great experiences this game brings.
I hope this helps you to make more great reviews that we can share with our friends and get them to play amazing games like this one.
I'm excited to see where this channel is heading, and that review to whatever Warhorse Studios does next!
I cant wait for the second part, and i hope it will continue the mission in which Henry and Hans are on way to the next city.
Thanks for putting a spotlight on one of my favorite games of all time. As a history lover, I never played a more immersive Knight simulator that gave me the feeling and thrill of playing Oblivion for the first time all over again. I really hope they make a sequel.
Oh yeah, the least interesting Elder Scrolls title, I remember that one.
Exactly how I felt - like Cyrodiil it was a really beautiful, charming world to get immersed in
The first time I played KCD I sprinted through it and didn’t really enjoy the full experience. My first run through took maybe 50 hours and my second play through was something in the 700-800 hour range. I was basically maxed out before the hunting trip with Capon. I started a new play through close to a year ago and I kinda sorta forgot about it until just now. I gotta go, bye!😅
It's really immersive until you get your noggin rocked by a bread baker and a couple farmers
If they do make a sequel look for it to be different. There were a lot of whiney woke ass complaints about no diversity in this game. Like there would be Chinese and black people living in Europe at this time. 🙄 So the next one will be more historically inaccurate to please the whiners.
This is that kind of a game, where you dont feel like a slave to the "question mark" button, grinding and grinding quests just because you need to clear the "?" on the map, not even knowing what the story behind it is. They should make more games like this, which make you think, enjoy and create your own perspectives.
Pentiment does that well. It's set in early Catholic Rome, I think. As such, religion is a huge part, but not so much to the point of pandering or shoving a message
After the sequel trailer announcement, I decided to finally give this a try.
Royal Edition was $4 on PSN.
Same here, go to the settings and change the lockpicking to easiest, it will allow you to rotate lock picking by pressing L1, it made all the difference for me.
@@romangural4 Same here :D I think the offer on PSN was the best move Warhorse could have made. I am so fucking addicted to this game right now. Greetings from Germany
Dangerously close to becoming my favourite youtuber. Don’t ever stop your amazing work.🎉
This might very well be the first RPG that did the Medieval times right and stayed as close to history as possible.
It's a gem with an amazing lvl of detail.
I hope we get the sequel next year.
The combat really encapsulates what being a peasant with no fighting experience is like in those time and how deadly combat in general is.
And fighting multiple enemies is also done well in terms of realism.
Enemies would try to surround you and you would "backpaddle" to prevent that.
You'd probably also take out the weaker enemies first and quicky.
KCD was back then, and still is today, a breath of fresh air in the gaming scene. I feel -quite- terribly hungry for the sequel.
I think one specific thing thats especially praiseworthy was the alchemy system. Maybe not complex in execution, but its nice seeing Henry doing everything manually and every procedure having a different animation
Really? But no food animations.... 😂
The story is beautiful, the DLCs are emotional and the SIDE QUESTS ARE HILARIOUS
How many hours of gameplay is all of it?
@@happypuppy-i4k Regular gameplay may be around 70hs-120hs
Including Side Quests 100hs-200hs
Including all DLCs 200hs-300hs
@@SymphonicrockfranAre you sure? I have about 90 hours in total and finished the quest, sides, DLC, and activities several hours ago
@@nip9898play on hard core man, don’t fast travel best part of the game.
the game is garbage, world is empty and boring wtf are you talking about lol
This is such a rare game. When playing I felt like a kid again. The game is difficult, doesn’t hold your hand is often quite frustrating. But that is what makes this game so engaging and fun. I wasn’t bored a second playing this game.
Johanka‘s dlc and A women’s lot were so emotional. I rarely cry, but both dlc triggered something in me. Just amazing.
Johanka's storny was the most touching thing in the entire game! Definitely worth these few euros
Johanka's story is perhaps the best quest line ever made in any game. I didn't expect much (nobody ever expects the bohemian inquisition) but damn I was wrong! It's so well designed, your actions have consequences and even the bad guys are not comical cartoon villains but realistic characters with logical motives. Great DLC in general... Mercenary DLC was a bit disappointing tho, it was kinda rushed...
@bdleo300 I haven't played Hans Capon's DLC nor Radzig's DLC yet. Will do tomorrow to wrap this game up.
Dude I was so sad when Theresa's dog died. :(
I unironically love this game, it consumed my life when I first played it....really gives you that "one - more - turn" feeling.
until you play Mount & Blade 2 Bannerlords,
which will suck your life even more, and you don't even regret it
Yeah, the open world map especially the forests was very fascinating to explore. I never have experienced going somewhere so lush, from living in a polluted urban area my whole life.
@@jensenraylight8011 bannerlords was a huge disappointment. I play Warband over it to this day.
@@Overclockthis there are also a lot of people who said that they can never play Warband again because Bannerlords was Better
so, it's just a matter of opinion
but whatever the opinion, i want the dev to keep making a great game, because Mount & blade is a one of a kind game
@@ConcedoNulli you only get bored with Bannerlords if you didn't know what to do or you like a game that handhold you, telling you what you should do next.
i don't blame you, because this is not a game for everyone,
of course this game is boring for you, because this is not for people who like Traditional RPG.
this is for people who like war, Strategy and game of wit, this is a perfect game for them.
after playing it long enough, you could start to appreciate the game for what it is
the great thing about bannerlords is that it require you to create your own story, do your own adventure, live the life however you want, learn about the world.
also, Bannerlords battle was easily one of the most epic battle, just pure art & chaos.
you often have to fight outnumbered, fighting against army back to back 10+ time. fighting a hopeless battle.
you really have to plan your attack beforehand, and this is the thing that made the game so much fun, because even after so much preparation, you still can get f*cked up by the enemy
the only goal is to conquer the entire map, it's that simple but not easy, because
everyone want you dead, the whole world is work against you.
you felt like a badass after playing the game
I Love how the music kicks in when I’m frolicking in a field
I love this game so much. As it comes from my country I might be a bit biased, but I can’t wait for the second one. Also in my city and orchestra just played the soundtrack of the game and what an experience.
Thanks for making this video ❤
You guys should be proud, this game did so much with so little money it's insane. VERY underrated game
also one of my most favourite games in a late medieval setting. it is so great to see somebody actually caring to do a great game which also is historically accurate and fun at the same time.
I had fun finding all the places on Google maps, that says a lot about the games good points.
Also Vavra is an absolute animal!
Bůh s tebou
I always really enjoyed how random soldiers would be extra skilled randomly. Very realistic
Yup because in those times more times than not I’d assume the soldiers were actually extremely skilled.. their life depended on it lol
I will say though there were a few times where it felt like some enemies were a bit _too_ skilled. Like getting hit with a master strike by someone who looks like they’ve only used an axe on wood
@@karlwittenburg5868 lmao true that’s why I only swing after knocking them off balance never while they’re on guard
@@karlwittenburg5868 back then being a bandit, would require good ability with weapons, as not knowing how to use one and trying to rob people wouldn't go very well.
Yhea also peasants máster strike U very realístic.
Imperfect game, great experience!
I love to play a thief in KCD, I'm surprised to see people experiencing pain with it.
You can feel the passion of the development team through the screen, incredible game and in my top five ever. I still remember my first meeting with a bandit whilst walking around and the real sense of danger and excitement was different to other games.
I never played similar game before and I was struggling with controls so when I've met first person in burned skalitz and he killed me I was so scared after that I was stealthing everywhere the first half of the whole game 😂 I will never forget how scared I was of the unknown the map wasn't visible yet and I had no idea what to expect and I didn't know if everybody was an enemy. I was travelling on rivers and streams away from roads so scared. looking back it's so funny to me 😂 and the OP Henry at the end 😂
There is something special about this game, realism, I passed by Rataje/Rattay on my way to Croatia. They did amazing job with re-creating medieval bohemia.
I played hardcore my first play through. Best decision ever. Among other things, not having the player marker on the minimap and no fast travel really situates you in the world. I felt like I was there, as I had to literally orient myself and travel the distances, making sure I look at landmarks etc to not veer off course. Just finding the abandoned village in far into the woods became somewhat of an achievement :).
Same man best hard core mode ever.
Only thing preventing me is that this way of playing costs so much more time...
Only reason I don’t Alayna play hard core is fast traveling actually is better to get ambushed or seeing and talking to wandering people or knights
I played Hardcore in my second playthrough (after getting all the DLCs) and yup, it made it so much more immersive. Regretted I didn't do it in my first playthrough.
It also makes you know the woods inside and out. I travel from city to city without using the map at all. I know the route in my backbone.
One of my problems with From the Ashes was that it's so expensive to properly complete the village (church and everything) that by the time it's finished, you've clearly found a way to make enough money to never have to be bothered about the income the village gives you. I only ever really used Pribyslavitz as a sort of 'home base' where I could return to after a mission. Even that was a little inconvenient though, because it's so far to the edge of the map, and the path there isn't exactly the most obvious, I wish expanding the roads was one of the things you could have built. Plus, I'd very much have liked to customise the rathaus a little, since I'm using it as a home base, it would be nice to really make it 'home'. Maybe they could have had a catalogue of sorts with Marius, and after a few days, your furniture or whatever would arrive. Idk, I'd have liked a little more customisation.
One of the best games of my life for me too. When I watched your assassins creed mirage video where I saw you roasting the game completely when EVERY single video game journalists are giving it good grades, I told myself " I have to check this guy's channel" and now I watch this. Man we have the same vision of what a good game is.
After 5 years i'm still completely in love with this game even though I havent returned to it since my first playthrough and i havent done the dlcs.
It is just part of my memories and I remember it as if it actually happened, in an other life... This game feels REAL. The kind of immersion I had with RDR2 but even better.
I hope you will review more games in the future because I will definitely follow your recommendations 😁
I will pay good money to see you do a "Hardcore Henry" + passive run. Quite possibly the hardest thing I've done in gaming 😂
What is a "hardcore Henry"?
@@giovannimassa8881 taking all negative effects on hardcore mode in my opinion the only way the game should be played as it adds extra challange but also makes you so much better at the game in terms of map knowledge and just using negative effects to your adventage in certain parts of the game
@@Bassalicious thats what im doing finishing the game 1 last time before KCD2
@Bassalicious really inspiring that henry can still do everything as the literal worst possible version of himself
@@giovannimassa8881 A first person perspective movie
There's a "village" of 2 houses (which isn't actually a village) which doesn't have any guards at night, so you can practice picking their doors and chests to the highest levels. Just sleep in the nearby field until dark, rinse and repeat. That's how you farm XP for lockpicking.
That's fucking hilarious cus if I was a medieval bum who needed to steal to get by, that is exactly how I would practice too lmao sleep in the fucking fields and pick on old people living a farm all alone lmfao beautiful
Where’s it by?
The woods were fucking amazing. Best woods in any game I've played.
this game is a masterpiece, the atmosphere and immersion is just unmatch
I agree so much with your opinions regarding the DLCs. As a City Builder fan, I was expecting so much more for From the Ashes. As a practicing Catholic, Johanka's story had so much theological nuance that resonated with me.
what about henry´s speech in church, did it awaken some early reformation thoughts in you?
Curious to hear an elaboration regarding this, being an Orthodox Christian and someone who has yet to play the game (it is at the top of my list)
I always kill Johanka so I don’t have to help her for the siege.
@@Pyrochemik007I don’t think so 😂
@@mladizivko Johanka is a woman who has dream-visions of Mary, who she thinks is giving her a message she needs to spread to the people, so she starts to preach in public areas, she is then investigated by an Inquisitor for heresy, and there are many different outcomes to the quest
The more people that discover this gem the better. This was such an incredibly ambitious and mostly well executed game for Warhorses first outing. KCD 2 could be something truly special if they build on the first game.
It’s not a gem. It’s boring. The combat is slow and clunky. The save system sucks. And you have to watch that stupid intro every time you start the game.
@@PeopleRTheProblem How far into the game did you make it? Specifically, how much of the combat skills to did you level up. That determines how responsively Henry is able to use his weapons.
@@MrLathor not far at all. I think I got to the second keep after his father was killed. If it weren’t for the limited saves and the nonsense intro you have to sit through each time you start the game I may have been more accepting of the terrible combat and lifeless world. The first time I gave up was when I was exploring and got stuck in bushes. Restarted….sat through the into….then realized how much I’d have to replay to get back to where I was. So I left it then and there. Years later I was going through my library…saw this game and thought I’d give it another shot…….then that f-(&ing intro started playing…..uninstalled the game right there. If you enjoy the game I’m not trying to take that from you….but this game sucks. I like the idea of a more grounded/realistic approach with no magic or fantasy elements. But why on earth would you have such an unforgiving save system on top of an unforgiving and clunky combat system?
@@PeopleRTheProblem This is absolutely a game that requires the player to be patient and make wise decisions to get the most out of it. You have to play the game with an understanding and acceptance of Henry’s current abilities. Also, I genuinely am not sure what you mean by “intro”. Are you talking about the Skalitz prologue? I do not recall at having to wait through anything to get into the game.
@@MrLathor yes the prologue. I can’t remember exactly how long it was but having to sit through it every time I started the game got old quick. I understand the the point was to progress from rookie to veteran. But for me it just got boring quick. The consumable saves meant I’d lose so much progress if I unexpectedly died. Progress that was pretty boring. Maybe the inclusion of fantasy elements would’ve been enough of a distraction for me.
I adored the combat. It perfectly reflected the growth of Hendry.
At the start of the game I thought this is gonna be any other RPG so I smugly entered combat expecting a landslide victory... and was thoroughly humiliated. So when the cumans invaded, I was actually panic running away trying to save my life. That really put me in the shoes of a medieval peasant boy. And many hours later wearing fancy armour and taking 7 cumans down with only minor injuries to myself felt absolutely amazing!
There were many aspects of the game that I got sucked into and lost track of hours of time. Yet, there was nothing more compelling to me than learning to read and performing alchemy, and making your own potions. Idk why, but the methodical nature of it all was very enjoyable to me.
Same. I enjoy hunting where the dog does all the work lol 😅 I enjoy sitting and having some wine and reading at the inn.. Then sleeping in a tent on the floor. It's just so real. Picking flowers is my thing too. The game really sucked me In, playing for 10,12hrs at a time... I had to get enough money to buy new clothes for Henry. I couldn't take ppl keep telling me I look terrible!! 😂
Man the alchemy system is the best known to man. It's incredible ! I choose realism and immersion over Quality of life improvement anytime !
My only problems with the game are the ending and basically nothing for years to come and the fact that you get all these attack combos to use but all the enemies just stop them or parry you so you basically just perfect block and then spam and that's not as cool or rewarding. Though I will say first time playing the game taking out bandit camps was so rewarding and fun because it's so hard
I don’t feel like I have a big problem with the ending now, but at the time I was totally not expecting it. When I first finished, I was like this is it there’s no resolution? I feel like the game was pretty obviously setting up a sequel just hope we don’t have to wait much longer in that. It will have a more rewarding ending.
enemies can't parry attack combos, that was the point. You can use them to break blocks (without shields)
@@Daniel-ih4zh A combo is not created until you chain all the attacks, which most of the times won't be completed since enemies will parry you before it. That's why almost no one uses them.
If you manage to land a combo, probably you can just keep spam-hit the enemy until you break his block and kill him easily.
@@ocrgmsfyv8819what annoys me is that you miss one block and the enemies will basically instantly combo you losing all your stamina, while enemies never run out of stamina either. Perfect blocking with a blunt weapon and head cracker or using a bow is the only way to fight engagements where you don't have allies and it kinda gets old
@@jam8539 Would you be able to pull off a combo right in the middle of being barraged by hits?
factor paid me squiventy flozen groschen for the ad
Jesus christ be praised!
That much? Alright, I'll go...
@@ietsbram if you combine 5 different games and put their best attributes tgt then ofcourse it doesnt add up. So now... lets just look at it as a single game, then yes It IS a verry damn good game.
@@evobsm2328 in my humble opinion dos2, outer wilds, witcher 3, bannerlord and darktide are all better than kkd, on their own
Im surprised this game is still getting reviews. It's quite old. Good, but old.
The combat is honestly next level and is easily my favorite part of the game. The key is to slow down and treat it like a real swordfight and not a button-masher. I always see people cheese it by walking backwards and spamming thrusts but getting into a proper longsword duel honestly just feels amazing. I also appreciate the realism. Sure, if you're a well-trained knight in full plate armor and you're fighting some peasant thug, you might get away without a scratch, but any time you fight another experienced swordsman, you're going to take a few hits, and it can truly be a gamble with your life. And fighting a 5v1 ends exactly the way it should end unless you train for days and become a legitimate badass.
This video has made me drastically reevaluate my experience with the game.
I went in blind, and played for only two or three hours where a whole of nothing happened. I just walked around piloting a man best described as, if unflavored tapioca was a person, picking flowers and failing to lockpick.
Eventually I picked a fight just to feel alive... and that resulted in my character feeling very dead...
I didnt bother to wait for the reload and just left that as his cannonical ending.
Got into a fight just to feel alive.. lmfao
The game doesn't really get particularly exciting, but the combat goes from "near impossible" to "braindead easy" if you just learn the masterstrike. The issue is you have to do the main story up to a certain point and talk to the trainer guy AGAIN after you already talked to him a first time in order to learn it. It's very stupid game design. But once you do, suddenly no enemy can even touch you and only large groupfights are potential threats anymore. You instantly go from clueless peasant to master warrior
I agree, but around the time I got my own horse is when things started picking up, pieces started falling into place. And yes I upgraded my stats obviously, but I also became better at things organically, like the combat...and it just felt so lifelike, the practice makes perfect idea
Good ending tho
I remember playing this game during pandemic and it was so fun. It has the same economic problem as the witcher 3 tho. All the best equipment is found and there is nothing to spend money on except repairing that equipment. Also that sword that deals like 90 damage from spiking your opponents is too insane (the swing on it is only like 60). The spammer tactics go wroom
Unless you’re ignoring Pribyslavitz From the Ashes you should always have a money sink/goal
@@monkyk1ngit definitely helps but it’s not enough. Besides, the village growth is realistic ie modest. It’s good but not great.
Renewing Pribyslavitz is what you want. It costs more gold for upkeep than you generate in the beginning. You might even find yourself struggling to keep up on gold in the reserves
There's some mods that help balance that out quite well. I do agree the economy has problems and mods don't help console users which sucks. But the pros still far outweigh the cons for me.
Especially on hardcore you cannot or shouldn’t just wait until you find adequate equipment. And of course you want a really good, fully equipped horse. Then you need a lot of money to repair and build up your own town. Etc..
What I love about the game is the landscape, setting and lighting. I am from Germany, we have many old castles, forests and churches standing around and if you are a photographer or movieperson like me, and you earn your money mostly with knowledge about light, then you ardore the realism of kingdom come deliverance. It is crazy how good this game looks even from todays standards and I can't wait to see the development team roll of a sequel.
Great video. Although when you said light spoilers I didn’t expect to hear about Henry’s dad… that part I didn’t get to yet in game. 😂
This is a great game and it definitely deserves a sequel!
Can confirm If you start From the Ashes as soon as the bandits are kicked out it's a good reason to explore some of the smaller towns to get the supplies you need, it puts a bit more of a time crunch on getting the place up and running if you don't have endless wealth because it costs money at the beginning, and once it is running, it's a good way to produce that endless supply of wealth as you move to the mid game and actually need money some times for new gear, repairs, a new horse maybe (sorry pebbles), and buying gifts for Theresa after you ride all the way back down to Rattay. My first Henry spends his days before going with Hans Capon riding between Pribislavitz, Skalitz, and Rattay killing Cumans and bandits and collecting gear to sell in Rattay cause he's a vigilante (read: Murder Hobo).
After clearing one of a thiefs camps I found a horse with much better statistics than Pebbles. I even could sit on it (not steeling it) and I ran to the Talamberk stapels. But I could not find a way how to keep it. Thus, I am keeping Pebbles. I am not spending money on a horse.
@@WHOPPER_JR11117pursuit predator-maxxing
You should be basically mega-rich by the time you hit that questline. Unless you arent loading your horse full of the expensive stuff and selling it off after battles. Money in this game is a bit too easy. If you kill all the cumans leaving Skalitz youll net about 10k groschen from their gear. Ive seen people push it much harder though and leave skalitz with 50-100k. The main quest seems rushed but this game really does reward exploration and trying different things. Ive also never bought gear. All the best gear if found came from looting. Other than swords its rare to see the truly high end stuff in shops. Killing everyone durring the Pribislavitz scouting mission is another huge money making opportunity. Not very hard to pull off either. Pick off a couple at a time from horse back until theyre thin enough to just murder all of them. Haul the gear back before finishing the quest so the bodies dont disappear. You probably wont be able to fit it all in one go.
pebbles is a skittish pansy little bastard and has gotten me killed plenty of times, but I wouldn't trade him for the world
Hardcore is such an interesting way to play. There IS a map, it's the same map, but there is just no 'you are here' icon so you actually have to learn the landscape. It's somehow even more immersive.
You can actually get lost in the woods.
I hated the hardcore mode. I usualy play then in any games witg the option. But the fact henry aparently doesnt know what direction he wants to move his own hands is just stupid. Or have any idea how much pain hes in. Or how tired he ism
It makes me angry that I have to share my love for the genre and setting with drooling r-words that don’t know how to read a map and use combos. These people are used to Skyrim/Witcher “question mark” exploration and “press LMB to win” combat.
It is a shame, because the sequel will probably be influenced by these people’s complaints.
@@Avengerie 100% I expect it to be more "hand holding". Its the only way you get gen Z to like it, they need fast and easy stuff otherwise there is always something like that available and nudging. Or maybe they accept the niche life and keep it the same, but it won't be scalable to the demographic, so less $ to be gained.
@@adriancioroianu1704 games that are easy are so boring that's y I've always liked souls game and KCD and CK3 games where any progress is an accomplishment and has infinite replay ability.
if you don't want to be bombarded by plastics, don't heat your meals in a plastic tray (1:55)
Real
I can't say enough how much I want this story to continue right where it left off. It felt so frustrating that you never get to complete the two big quests before the game just ends. I loved the actors performances. I'd like to see this story completed before any of them become unavailable.
As someone who did hardcore for his first play through, it’ll really make you appreciate how accurate the map is. I also got a really good sense of the roads by the end of the game, kind of like in real life
I remember trying hardcore as my first playthrough because I always like the challenge. Then I remembered I don't have time to spend in a mental asylum.
In hardcore there was so much getting lost in woods, but the roads I travel I know by heart. Also getting your dog to "stay" works pretty good as a marker.
Hardcore makes you appreciate not traveling at night, that's for damn sure, especially if you can't find Polaris due to the clouds.
Great game, might to a replay at some point. Also, hardcore is SUCH a good mode in this game, you can legit get lost in the forests and early on that gets scary when you know there are bandits around. Few games if any have had such good immersion for me, and I do think the UI changes in hardcore mode really added to that.
Indeed. The hardcore mode added enormously to the fun and immersion, much more than in any other game I have played on hardcore before.
yup, made my first play through in hardmode and made +100 hours in the main campaign since i was getting lost every now and then, but at the same time getting lost made me discover a lot of secondary characters, camps and basically made my experience pretty much my own and thats fantastic
too real bro, this was the only non-horror game where i was scared to travel at night because i might encounter bandits while i can't see shit
I know right! Bandits were legit scary, I'd rather just do my guard rounds, throw some dice at the local inn, flirt some with Theresa and live my life.
When I first opened the alchemy book and realised I couldn't read I thought it was so funny, when I realised how far away the teacher lived I thought to myself "maybe not knowing how to read isn't such a bad thing".
The only way to play is hardcore with all negative traits.
The villages/castle/woods feel so natural because theyc are modeled almost as replicas of the real world based on historical maps, documents and todays world. You can come to 2024 Skalitz (Skalice) and surrounding area in Bohemia (latin for Čechy, now part of the Czech republic) and see that it looks almost identical, just 600 years apart. Obviously some buildings are in ruins, most have been rebuild/renovated in newer styles such as renaissance, baroque, etc and castles were rebuild into chateaus over the years. Some buildings are still (in part) identical to this day. Mostly churches, but bell towers and foundations of former castle complexes turned chateaus are still the same most of the time. The landscape is still the same though. Ive read that people who played this game and came to visit the sights were able to navigate themselves there.
This game left a huge hole in my life. I felt empty and depressed when I finished it.
And then you started your 10th playthrough
This, skyrim, and fallout 4 are my go-to’s
@@BeanieDoggerson based
Pretty much the case with every great game, TV series etc.
I spent about 150 hrs on this game... and fully believe I have done NOTHING yet. It's so massive, so big and quite unique that it just always keep you in awe. Love this game.
Really? It only took me 60 hours of haphazardly playing before I completed every quest and activity. The one thing that bummed me out about the game is that it didn't have nearly enough content compared to other open world games.
I had like almost 800 hours in one play through. Some ppl said they had more.
@@Jbev-cz4cn What have you been doing the whole time? There is not enough content to even fill a fourth of that time.
@nip9898 idk lol that's what the time says on my last saves at the end. I did a lot of roaming around fighting bandits and grinding etc. Did almost every quest. Mastering different skills. Some ppl said they had like 1400-1500 hours
@@Jbev-cz4cn I'm at 2800 hours. Granted, that's more than one playthrough.
This game is great!
This is not a RPG, this is a medieval life simulator!
Sequel probably being announced next week!!!!! LETS GO
I've never been less ashamed to admit I got pleb filtered by a game. Sometimes you just gotta accept your limitations.
KCD is my favorite game of all time. It beat Halo (xbox version, the original). Kingdom Come Deliverance is an ego check. Take the time to train with Daddy (Bernard), learn to read and finally, learn to lose. BLACKSMITH'S boy!!!!!!!!!!!!!! In all seriousness KCD is harder than Elden Ring or any souls like game.
Until, you become something bigger than a peasant!
USE A FUCKING SPEAR YOUR UNCULTURED SWINE
If you gonna get pleb filtered by one game, this isn't a shameful choice at all. But I'd give it another go anyway if I were you ;)
WOW, so like, you only play call of duty or whatever?
I've lived a religious life. The monastery portion was so, so real for me. The self disciplined, regimented life it recalls felt so real. And the singing... It was a bittersweet experience for me.
Interesting perspective for that quest!
After i finished the game and quest, i went back there any murdered everyone.
@@Bullminator just don't mention this to the Inquisitor...
That section pissed me off so much. I couldn't even talk to the circators because they kept locking me up! Ultimately I killed one of them and left his body in the cellar.
@@mappingshaman5280 You never have to enter the monastery though. you can just snipe 1 of the novices from the roof top... or 3..
It's an absolute masterpiece.
At first, I had a lot of trouble with crashes, but started a new game like a year later and it went without a problem (probably was patched). It has one of the hardest combats I've played. A game where you really have to think before attacking a group alone. The freedom and how the choices make real differences are great. Also it's a game that let's you think outside of the box to solve things and has some really humorous moments too.
The archery feels like controlling someone who’s playing the game in vr
I absolutely loved this game. It's super rewarding when you figure stuff out and ruthlessly painful if you try to skip learning the game (especially combat). Can't wait for the sequel.
Soon my man!
I played this game about 5 times to complition and every time my favourite part is the learning curve. I stay in rattay, train in the morning, then sleep for a few hours, wake up in the middle of the night and train in lockpicking and stealth by robbing the entire town blind. I repeat this rutine for about 2 in game weeks, it's super relaxing and I have so much fun just living as a training Henry. By the end of those two weeks I have some of the best weapons and armour in the game and I'm great with a longsword.
to date, this is still my favorite game of all time. if you don't stick with it, you're doing yourself a great disservice. it's a gorgeous, deep experience and the storytelling is second to none.
Yeah. It is a great game. It has plenty of flaws, but it is still great and pretty immersive if you let it.
@@markodern789 k
Such a pleasure it was for history fans, got it right on launch and still revisit the thing from time to time.
The biggest issue I had with this game was that the npcs were kinda dumb. I literally killed a man in broad daylight in front of the guards and they did nothing. Hard to immerse myself if I cant feel like I'm a part of the world like all the other characters.
WRONG
In this game we're not a gigachad terminator we're a normal knight turned peasant
This was a surprise to be sure, but a welcome one! So glad you got into this game. I've replayed it a few times and I definitely need to play it on hardcore mode soon. Also, the music fucking SLAPS. I listen to it all the time.
Also - I gotta say, the Theresa portion of A Woman's Lot almost made me cry. It really expanded upon her character even more and helped you empathize with her. Some of it was a bit tedious, but all in all, I loved it. It was absolutely heart-wrenching at times and you could just feel the sorrow and sinking feeling from Theresa as you watched the horrors unfold in front of her. Johanka's portion of the DLC was also really great. It was an awesome insight into Catholicism in the Medieval era and how damaging it could be at times.
Wow, an actually balanced review of this game with good editing and audio. Subbed, easy.
Have you seen a review on this game by a channel called ranton?
The presentation deserves a special mention I think. IMHO this game is the closest we've ever been to actual time travel.
Most don't have the patience for this game but if you give it time it's feels much more rewarding than any other game you've played. I literally gave up after the first hour of game play but I've payed top dollar on the release date for Nintendo switch so I had to play through it and guess what? This game was worth every penny and it taught me a thing or two 😊.
I encourage you to play in hardcore mode, I did it on my third playthrough and it was great. When you've been playing for several hours you perfect the combat so much that it becomes overly satisfying, which in turn doesn't make it tedious to not be able to use fast travel because you want encounters on your travels.
And it's always great to have the negative perk of Somnambulant, waking up in the middle of a forest in the middle of the night and having to figure out where you are.
Henry has come to see us!
Feel quite hungry
Gods be praised!
@@galedex5661 Jesus Christ be praised
I wonder if my game's bugged cause I never hear that phrase, after Skalitz. I've got 100 reputation in places like Skalitz and Neuhof but no one's ever that pleased to see my Henry. Playing on PS4. Anyone else have the same issues or something I'm missing?
I've tried to complete this game twice getting several dozen hours in each time but ultimately falling off. I feel like I need the motivation of a sequel's release date to really make me go back. This game still has my award for most realistic looking woods/forest in any game if you can max it out on PC it's just nuts.
Maybe you just don't like the game. You shouldn't need motivation to play a game. It's supposed to be fun.
@@priestfan81 It's an interesting thing about games and gamers. Many will say about games like Starfield that you won't know for sure if you like it until dozens of hours in yet others will say if a game can't grab you and make you like it in the early hours that's it's fault not yours. The problem with KCD is about half the stuff in the game I'm a big fan of and half the stuff I'm not. So there is a ton of stuff I do love about the game it's just equally true that there's a ton of stuff that keeps me away.
People that don't like this game just need not play it. This game was a game I didn't realize I needed, and now sits happily as one of my all time favorite games ever made. I have over a thousand hours in 1403 Bohemia and I've only finished the game in normal once and am halfway through a hardcore playthrough. Once you get this game it becomes comfortable and relaxing to play. Bonus is that even my wife likes watching me play KCD. 10/10 game.
“I have over a thousand hours in 1403 Bohemia” ☝️🤓
I hated it at first, but I was also doing everything wrong. Second playthrough was much more satisfying. I'm on my third now and honestly the only part I still hate is the monastery, although I was able to level up vitality twice by just jumping around all over the place 😆
That damn monastery....
At the start I pick every single herb in Skalitz before the raid to level herbology and get that vitality bonus for picking lots of nettles.
@@pavelcerny9803 Yeah, figuring it out didn't help though, it was still pretty tedious lol. My first time through, I got fed up and just k*lled Pious and left lol. This time through, I took the opportunity to level up alchemy enough to get the autobrew perk, leveled up vitality and stealth and lockpicking, and managed to get Pious out alive. So I had a better time with it than the first time, but it's still tedious as heck. I feel like every game has that one area that is just a pain in the ass to get through (the Fade in Dragon Age Origins comes to mind), and the monastery is that for KCD imo 😆
I absolutely love 99% of this game and absolutely hate 1% of this game. So overall, one of the best games I've ever played.
I love this game so much that I have never completed it. I'm just waiting for the best period in my life to add a magnificent cherry on the cake in the form of Kingdom Come.
Avoiding spoilers for almost 4 years is incredibly hard...
it will be worth it!
not really a spoiler but the story doesn't actually have an ending, because the true ending will be in the sequel, Kingdom come: retribution
better name is kingdom come: vengeance@@__________.....
Kingdom Come: Climax?
@@Syaniiti Kingdom Cum?
Thank you for motivating me to finally play this one. I have it with Czech audio and subtitles (I'm Czech myself, born and raised not far from the game's location actually) - I think it'll be a lot of fun
Akorát to české audio je takové divné, jako by to nahrávali někde v jeskyni. 😂 Některé postavy skoro ani není slyšet.
First time I played this game was proper with slow progression and memories made along the way, but at some point I stopped playing, and my 60 hr playthrough went to the crypt.
Recently started playing again, made a new save, and spent the first 20 IRL hours in skalitz hunting sheep, lockipicking chests, knocking people out, laundered all my stolen equipment to remove tags (just to find out it wasn't necessary since after leaving all stolen stuff is considered owned), and beat of zhybchek or whatever his name is with every kind of melee weapon till I got bored
My stats when I actually started to play the game: main lvl 18, strength 20, agility 20, vitality 18, speech 6
13 hunting, 16 lockpick, 18 herbalism, 20 sneak, 11 drinking
Warfare 19 (regret not finishing it), Sword 20, axe 20, mace 8, unarmed 10, bow 6
Probably wrote this for nothing, but if you read it all the way, then thank you, 10 out of 10 would not do it again 😅
This game is so amazing and there is nothing like it. You could truly get lost in the world then even go further to take a vacation and visit the actual real life locations! KCD 2 will be an instant buy !
I did that this year. In the Sasau monastery they even have game screenshots to show what the interiors used to look like!
easily one of the best, most immersive games I have ever played.
I almost quit this game when trying to learn swordplay....but something kept telling me to stick with it....when I learned how to fight (after many deaths and many times running away from a fight for my life in the middle of the woods)....I felt a sense of accomplishment that no other game I've played (and I've played thousands of them)...has ever given me before. When you beat this game..you feel like you've accomplished something.
Most fights you can win by spamming the poke and slashings randomly 😂
The feeling you get the first time you stand your ground and take on 3 bandits succesfully is something else. Looking down at what would've killed you with ease the day before thinking, "thats my gear, i've earnt this".
I spammed back walking until the enemy starts running and then spam the stab action. Got a lot of bandits that way including black peter 😂 Henry was playing dirty
Running from the castle in the beginning and getting crushed by those guys when I didn’t even know how to use a sword almost broke me 😅
@@chadwickhayes8260 THIS!!!! I was like...how do they expect me to make it with no equipment, no armor! Hiding on that grassy hillside, waiting for the right time to make a break for that wagon (or whatever, if I remember correctly, been a few years since i played it)
Yes the combat system is unforgiving. But that's what I love about the game. Unlike other games where you play a hero with special abilities that allow you to fight off 10s if not 100s of enemies at once, in KCD every 1on1 fight can be deadly, not to mention fighting 2 or more enemies at the same time.
I randomly bought this game and played it 3 months later, This was the most fun i had in a while for that, and was sad that i reached the end.
One of the all time greatest games. Been waiting years for a sequel
everytime i see a kcd video it truly feels like seeing an old friend. The game is definitely my favourite ever and even led me to looking into religion
Role-played the monk part a bit too seriously, have you? It is one of my favorite parts of the game and perhaps one of the most creative mission designs I've ever played, even if it seems like it may have been a bit rushed during production.
17:07 Weird complement but I couldn't agree more. I've played a thousand games with natural terrain and yet the geology in KCD is somehow more believable in my mind. My brain will register what a forest or hill looks like in a game and understand the assignment but this world feels different. Difficult to describe.
Having accidentally started Theresa’s questline while trying to romance her, I was extremely confused but 10 minutes later, having realized what I talked myself into, I was excited to spend the rest of the night playing as Theresa. It was a great experience that ended in slight frustration that it couldn’t be longer.
So glad to see you doing a video on this game. I just started a playthrough on Hardcore mode and having this pop up in my recommended was just perfect timing.
I love this game. I played this tittle in year of premiere and cried by the ending of main story. For me it's one of the best games in history. Great storyteling, great place and time of middle medieval and great characters. Can't wait for KDC 2. I really hope that Warehorse gonna continue this story.
Just finished the game tonight because of this video! Thank you!
The beginning was rough, but as you get used to the mechanics and realism, it's so rewarding!
Thank you for your great work!
If you call that ending rewarding you find pleasure in pain
KCD is undoubtedly one of the greatest games ever made. It is a mind-blowing achievement by Daniel Vavra and his team, bringing to life in an accessible manner some fascinating aspects of medieval life. I played it briefly at launch and boy was it janky, but even then it was incredibly charming. After a few patches, it came together really quite quickly to become as polished as you'd want it to be (you've gotta have some fun bugs here and there). I'm currently on my 3rd playthrough (1st on PC, after a 2- or 3-year hiatus), and it's just everything I could want in a game. Diablo 4 can wait (indefinitely); Starfield can wait; I'm gonna finish this again first. And I can't wait to see what Warhorse brings us next.
On the first time playing on PC I rage quit the game on the Monastery segment. It was pitch-dark at night, when most of the action had to be undertaken; violence only made everything worse; and my hard-earned skill levels melted away as I did monastery jail time for doing things I didn't even know were wrong. On my second playthrough, however, it turned out to be one of my favorite parts of KCD. Such brilliance in having the rug pulled from under your feet just when you start to feel you can bulldoze your way through all the Cumans and scale-amored bandits medieval hell could throw at you. Truly a humbling experience both for Henry and for me, and a magnificent way to force players not to create unidimensional characters and really enjoy all the game has to offer.
I enjoyed it a lot. My main issue was for a "historically accurate game" it was riddled with historical inaccuracies - especially regarding armour and weapon combos, bows on peoples backs and the archery itself (the worst part of combat).