There’s only one dead cert videogame for me this year:
Dragon Age Inquisition. But, there’s another which has caught my eye (pencilled
in for 2015).
Kingdom Come: Deliverance is an RPG billed as “Dungeons and
no dragons”. It aims to be a highly realistic game set in medieval Europe,
with landscapes and castles based heavily on reality. Similarly, the clothing
and combat is designed to be as accurate as possible.
The game’s development has been backed by a private
investor, but when no major publisher would back it the makers went to
Kickstarter. Thankfully, their target was reached and the game is planned to be
released for PC and the most recent consoles in 2015.
The initial dialogue is fairly Shakespearean. It’s not
impenetrable, and I rather like it, but it seems they’re likely to modernise it
a bit. If you want to hear what it’s like, the dialogue’s part of the hour or
so streamed here:
Clothing seems highly customisable, with 16 slots for
various bits and pieces (including neckwear and rings). It’s reminiscent of
Dragon’s Dogma, which had some good layering and armour that looked good right
from the start. Unlike Dragon’s Dogma, I don’t think silk underwear will be
available.
Combat involves six areas to be targeted (body, head and the
limbs) with timing being useful for parrying (opens the enemy up to attack). It
sounds like fights will be less common than in many RPGs, and more serious.
As well as fighting, cooking, alchemy (not in the magical
Skyrim way, but in the way people actually tried to use it), fishing and
forging/improving your weapons and armour will all be possible.
The world will be open, and you can ride horses. It sounds
like they’re going for a first person version of what Red Dead Redemption did
(ie making the horse control like a horse rather than a four-legged car). It’ll
also have some limited intelligence, so you won’t be able to make it charge off
a cliff.
I really like the look of Kingdom Come: Deliverance, and
it’s slightly surprising and depressing no major publisher would back it. If it
can live up to expectations it will sell by the cartload. I hope it does, and
that way we might end up with more such games.
Thaddeus
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