Testseek.com have collected 90 expert reviews of the Kingdom Come: Deliverance and the average rating is 76%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Kingdom Come: Deliverance.
February 2018
(76%)
90 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Kingdom Come: Deliverance deserves a lot of credit for succeeding in its highly ambitious and original realism-driven approach to role-playing game design, though the amount of broken quests and general lack of polish in combination with an ill-conceived...
Solid and definitely has an audience. There could be some hard-to-ignore faults, but the experience is fun.How we score: The destructoid reviews guide...
Incredible attention to historical detail, Extensive, lifelike quests, Strong storytelling and voice-acting brings Henry and his world to life, Impressively rendered world immerses you in the setting, Smartly relies on both stat growth and skill developme
Overly rigorous core mechanics can get in the way of your enjoyment, Bugs and glitches can unfairly halt progress, Frustrating save system
Published: 2018-02-17, Author: Jennifer , review by: wmpoweruser.com
Abstract: Kingdom Come: Deliverance is a game that I admittedly didn't keep close tabs on before launch. Aside from the occasional news article, my knowledge of it was fairly basic. Without submersing myself in hours of gameplay videos or dozens of trailers, I esse...
There's a shining suit of mail underneath Kingdom Come: Deliverance's authentically medieval grime. Strong characters and storytelling, one of my favorite first-person melee combat systems ever, and special attention given to building moment-to-moment imm...
There's a shining suit of mail underneath Kingdom Come: Deliverance's authentically medieval grime. Strong characters and storytelling, one of my favorite first-person melee combat systems ever, and special attention given to building moment-to-moment imm...
Kingdom Come: Deliverance is not that unsimilar to The Witcher 3 or Skyrim, maybe with the exception of there being no dungeons, dragons or magic. Rather, the game tries to be a somewhat realistic "middle-ages simulator"; you start out as a lowly son of...
Abstract: When Kingdom Come: Deliverance is at its best, I'm lost in the most detailed forest I've ever seen in a video game, low on food, drinking alcohol for nourishment, all so I can reach the next town to sell my wares. because the last town hates me for steal...