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Kingdom Come: Deliverance II
Kingdom Come: Deliverance II is a 2025 action role-playing game developed by Warhorse Studios and published by Deep Silver. The sequel to Kingdom Come: Deliverance (2018), the game was released for PlayStation 5, Windows, and Xbox Series X/S on 4 February 2025. The game received generally favorable reviews from critics and sold two million copies within two weeks of release.
Kingdom Come: Deliverance II is an open-world action role-playing game in which the protagonist is controlled from a first-person perspective. The game world is twice as large as that of Kingdom Come: Deliverance; whereas the latter features a single connected world, the former encompasses two larger, freely explorable areas. Missions and objectives are able to be managed in different ways, with NPCs and communities reacting respectively. In turn, the reactions to the player character influence his daily life and character development. The three skills Oratory, Charisma and Intimidation, that were applicable in dialogues with NPCs in the first game have been supplemented by Appearance, Coercion and Dominate. The game features crossbows and early forms of firearms. The former can also be fired while riding.
Kingdom Come: Deliverance II takes place in the year 1403 in the Kingdom of Bohemia, then part of the Lands of the Bohemian Crown and of the Holy Roman Empire, in what is now the Czech Republic. It features both the cultural landscape of Bohemian Paradise, and the city of Kutná Hora and its surroundings. The game reflects Kutná Hora's status in the late Middle Ages as the second largest city in Bohemia after Prague, and one of the richest economic centers in the country due to silver mining and coinage.
Kingdom Come: Deliverance II directly follows on from the end of Kingdom Come: Deliverance, and takes place in the "turmoil of a civil war", where Wenceslaus IV fights against the invading Sigismund, King of Hungary and Croatia and his allies. It concludes Henry's story.
Many characters featured in the game are based on real-life people from the time period. The protagonist is the fictional Henry of Skalitz (Tom McKay), a man-at-arms in service of Sir Radzig Kobyla (Michael Pitthan), his biological father. Henry leads a resistance in favor of the imprisoned King of Bohemia Wenceslaus IV, against the usurper King Sigismund of Luxembourg (George Lenz). In addition to his role as an envoy to Radzig, Henry seeks personal revenge against Sigismund and his emissaries for killing his mother and foster father. Henry is joined in his journey by the nobleman Sir Hans Capon of Pirkstein (Luke Dale). Sir Istvan Toth (Logan Hillier), the main antagonist of the first game, is also present in the sequel. Several other characters from Kingdom Come: Deliverance make appearances, including parish priest Father Godwin (Euan Macnaughton) and the lord Hanush of Leipa (Peter Hosking, Daniel Vávra).
Other historical figures characterized in the game include Jobst of Moravia, Jan Žižka, Otto von Bergow, Markvart of Úlice, John II of Liechtenstein, Hynek I Suchý Čert, Oldřich Vavák of Hradec, Petr Píšek, and Martin Oderin.
Sir Hans Capon, Henry, and an entourage travel from Rattay to Trosky Castle to question Otto von Bergow on his allegiance to King Sigismund. As the group camps, they are attacked and robbed by bandits. Henry and Capon escape and later arrive at Trosky Castle; they are denied entry when they are unable to prove their identities. At a nearby tavern, Capon starts a brawl and blames Henry for the incident; the two fall out and Capon leaves.
Henry learns that Bergow will attend a wedding in the village of Semine. Henry infiltrates the wedding but Bergow never arrives, and the groom, Olda Semine, secretly leaves. Henry meets Capon and they reconcile. A brawl breaks out, and Henry and Capon are imprisoned in Trosky Castle, with Capon sentenced to die for poaching. Bergow arrives before he can be executed, and Capon is released. He delivers the message, but Bergow fails to explain his allegiances and assigns Henry and Capon to help repress localized banditry.
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Kingdom Come: Deliverance II AI simulator
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Kingdom Come: Deliverance II
Kingdom Come: Deliverance II is a 2025 action role-playing game developed by Warhorse Studios and published by Deep Silver. The sequel to Kingdom Come: Deliverance (2018), the game was released for PlayStation 5, Windows, and Xbox Series X/S on 4 February 2025. The game received generally favorable reviews from critics and sold two million copies within two weeks of release.
Kingdom Come: Deliverance II is an open-world action role-playing game in which the protagonist is controlled from a first-person perspective. The game world is twice as large as that of Kingdom Come: Deliverance; whereas the latter features a single connected world, the former encompasses two larger, freely explorable areas. Missions and objectives are able to be managed in different ways, with NPCs and communities reacting respectively. In turn, the reactions to the player character influence his daily life and character development. The three skills Oratory, Charisma and Intimidation, that were applicable in dialogues with NPCs in the first game have been supplemented by Appearance, Coercion and Dominate. The game features crossbows and early forms of firearms. The former can also be fired while riding.
Kingdom Come: Deliverance II takes place in the year 1403 in the Kingdom of Bohemia, then part of the Lands of the Bohemian Crown and of the Holy Roman Empire, in what is now the Czech Republic. It features both the cultural landscape of Bohemian Paradise, and the city of Kutná Hora and its surroundings. The game reflects Kutná Hora's status in the late Middle Ages as the second largest city in Bohemia after Prague, and one of the richest economic centers in the country due to silver mining and coinage.
Kingdom Come: Deliverance II directly follows on from the end of Kingdom Come: Deliverance, and takes place in the "turmoil of a civil war", where Wenceslaus IV fights against the invading Sigismund, King of Hungary and Croatia and his allies. It concludes Henry's story.
Many characters featured in the game are based on real-life people from the time period. The protagonist is the fictional Henry of Skalitz (Tom McKay), a man-at-arms in service of Sir Radzig Kobyla (Michael Pitthan), his biological father. Henry leads a resistance in favor of the imprisoned King of Bohemia Wenceslaus IV, against the usurper King Sigismund of Luxembourg (George Lenz). In addition to his role as an envoy to Radzig, Henry seeks personal revenge against Sigismund and his emissaries for killing his mother and foster father. Henry is joined in his journey by the nobleman Sir Hans Capon of Pirkstein (Luke Dale). Sir Istvan Toth (Logan Hillier), the main antagonist of the first game, is also present in the sequel. Several other characters from Kingdom Come: Deliverance make appearances, including parish priest Father Godwin (Euan Macnaughton) and the lord Hanush of Leipa (Peter Hosking, Daniel Vávra).
Other historical figures characterized in the game include Jobst of Moravia, Jan Žižka, Otto von Bergow, Markvart of Úlice, John II of Liechtenstein, Hynek I Suchý Čert, Oldřich Vavák of Hradec, Petr Píšek, and Martin Oderin.
Sir Hans Capon, Henry, and an entourage travel from Rattay to Trosky Castle to question Otto von Bergow on his allegiance to King Sigismund. As the group camps, they are attacked and robbed by bandits. Henry and Capon escape and later arrive at Trosky Castle; they are denied entry when they are unable to prove their identities. At a nearby tavern, Capon starts a brawl and blames Henry for the incident; the two fall out and Capon leaves.
Henry learns that Bergow will attend a wedding in the village of Semine. Henry infiltrates the wedding but Bergow never arrives, and the groom, Olda Semine, secretly leaves. Henry meets Capon and they reconcile. A brawl breaks out, and Henry and Capon are imprisoned in Trosky Castle, with Capon sentenced to die for poaching. Bergow arrives before he can be executed, and Capon is released. He delivers the message, but Bergow fails to explain his allegiances and assigns Henry and Capon to help repress localized banditry.