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rating
Ludopedia
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rating
BGG
Our Verdict
If you love a medieval adventure with open narrative, this board game will hook you. The highlight? The blend of deck building and flexible storytelling.
Highlights
- Engaging deck-building
- Flexible open narrative
- Realistic skill tests
- High-quality components
- Solid solo mode
Keep in mind
- Long playtime may tire
- Building deck requires patience
- Heavy components take space
- Not a high‑speed game
HIGHLY RECOMMENDED
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Kingdom Come: Deliverance – The Board Game brings the epic video game story to the tabletop, letting you live the life of a 1403 peasant in Bohemia amid the intrigues of kings and nobles. The game blends Euro‑style mechanics with narrative freedom: you build a deck, manage your hand, draft cards, and move across the map, spending resources to advance. Each turn presents choices that can lead you to train as an archer, negotiate as a speaker, or steal as a thief, all while keeping your health, money, and reputation in check.
At the start, you choose three major storylines—one for each city, each with three possible routes—and can mix them to create a mosaic of adventures. Attending weddings, investigating brutal attacks, or battling epidemics are just the beginning. Side quests let you help villagers, trade herbs, or outwit guards, and every decision shapes the story and the ending.
The deck‑building mechanic is central: skill cards are exchanged for experience points, and specializations such as archer, diplomat, or thief unlock in tests that determine success in actions. Resource‑to‑move adds strategic planning, while contracts offer quests with rewards ranging from valuable items to new cards.
Components are solid: a 48×48 cm board, over 200 cards, resource tokens, dice, wooden miniatures, and a 120‑page illustrated rulebook that explains the game flow clearly. The duration can range from 2 to 5 hours, depending on pace and player count. The solo mode works well, making it a great option for those who prefer single‑player adventures.
In short, Kingdom Come: Deliverance – The Board Game delivers a medieval adventure with open narrative, engaging deck building, and realistic skill tests, all set in a detailed historical world that ensures no two games are alike.
At the start, you choose three major storylines—one for each city, each with three possible routes—and can mix them to create a mosaic of adventures. Attending weddings, investigating brutal attacks, or battling epidemics are just the beginning. Side quests let you help villagers, trade herbs, or outwit guards, and every decision shapes the story and the ending.
The deck‑building mechanic is central: skill cards are exchanged for experience points, and specializations such as archer, diplomat, or thief unlock in tests that determine success in actions. Resource‑to‑move adds strategic planning, while contracts offer quests with rewards ranging from valuable items to new cards.
Components are solid: a 48×48 cm board, over 200 cards, resource tokens, dice, wooden miniatures, and a 120‑page illustrated rulebook that explains the game flow clearly. The duration can range from 2 to 5 hours, depending on pace and player count. The solo mode works well, making it a great option for those who prefer single‑player adventures.
In short, Kingdom Come: Deliverance – The Board Game delivers a medieval adventure with open narrative, engaging deck building, and realistic skill tests, all set in a detailed historical world that ensures no two games are alike.
GALLERY
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Mechanics
Categories
Families
Publisher
Czech Games Edition (CGE)
Designer
Tomáš Holek, Vlaada Chvátil
Artist
Filip Gyurkovský, Filip Storch, Jakub Politzer, Jiří Mikovec, Michal Řezníček, Mikuláš Podprocký, Ondřej Hrdina, Paweł Kurowski, Štěpán Drašťák, Tomáš Duchek
How long does a game last?
Playtime ranges from 2 to 5 hours, depending on pace and player count.
How many players can play?
The game supports 1 to 4 players.
What is the game's complexity?
It is of medium complexity, requiring resource planning, deck building, and strategic decision making.
What components are included?
A 48×48 cm board, over 200 cards, resource tokens, dice, wooden miniatures, and an illustrated rulebook.
Who is this game recommended for?
Fans of the video game, medieval history enthusiasts, and those who enjoy strategic narrative games.
Is there a solo mode?
Yes, there is a well‑developed solo mode for single‑player play.