Compara los precios de Tainted Grail: The Fall of Avalon en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Questline. Publicado por Awaken Realms. Lanzado el 23/5/2025. Disponible en PC, Xbox. Géneros: Action, Adventure, Indie, RPG. Puntuación Metacritic: 80/100.

Fifty-plus hours of grim Arthurian open-world RPG from a board-game studio that probably had no business pulling this off, yet mostly did. Rough at the edges, haunting at the core.

I went in expecting a curiosity and came out genuinely unsettled by how much Questline managed to build. The world of Avalon is locked in a permanent autumnal rot, the mists of the Wyrdness creeping in at night and turning every after-dark excursion into something tense and atmospheric in ways that pure mechanical difficulty rarely achieves. The Menhir system, ancient standing stones you must keep lit or watch the surrounding land descend into monster-infested chaos, creates a quiet, persistent dread that runs under everything else you do. That texture alone sets the tone apart from the Skyrim comparisons that critics keep reaching for, even if those comparisons are not entirely unfair. Character creation happens in a prison cell, through a conversation with a guard who asks what you were doing before you were caught. Your answer determines your archetype: Warrior, Archer, Mage, or Rogue, each branching further into subtypes. Stay silent both times and you start Classless, a blank slate with all attributes at base ten and no early safety net. The system is light on ceremony and heavy on implication, and the passive skills like Archery, One-Handed, Alchemy, and Sneak level up automatically through use, which means your build drifts organically toward how you actually play. Combat lets you mix a melee weapon with a spell in the off-hand, swap between preset loadouts mid-fight, and even summon creatures if you lean into certain spell trees. The catch is that the melee impact never quite convinces. Swinging a two-handed sword often feels weightless, and several reviewers noted that fights can devolve into a trading contest decided by whoever runs out of health bar first rather than by skill expression. Mage builds are potent but skew toward straight damage dealing; the stealth Archer rewards patience and critical-hit fishing; the Warrior is the most forgiving place to learn the timing. Generous respec potions mean you are not punished hard for experimenting. The story is where Tainted Grail earns its hours. You are carrying a fragment of King Arthur's soul, an Arthur who is not the romantic legend you remember but a complicated, divisive figure whose return the locals view with suspicion bordering on hostility. The main questline deals in moral grey areas, ancient eldritch threats called the Foredwellers, clan politics, and the slow unravelling of Kamelot. Side quests veer into something closer to Monty Python territory, complete with direct references to the Holy Grail film, which creates a tonal whiplash that somehow works more often than it should. Dialogue choices carry actual weight, branching the narrative in ways you feel across tens of hours rather than just in the moment. The first region, Horns of the South, is the most detailed and carefully crafted part of the game. The second region, Cunacht, feels comparatively thinner, and the general consensus is that quality tapers as the game progresses into its later acts. Crashes and UI shifts mid-playthrough are still showing up in reviews written months after launch, which signals a studio still actively patching toward the game it envisioned. Technically, the visual style sits somewhere between original Oblivion and something that ran short on polish budget right before shipping. The nights are legitimately beautiful, ruin-strewn and fog-threaded in a way that quiet screenshot-takers will love. The voice acting is decent and the world is dense with discoverable dungeons hidden in plain sight. What it lacks in graphical ambition it compensates with atmosphere, which is the right trade for a game about a dying kingdom and a king nobody wants back. For first-person RPG fans who have worn the map of Skyrim to a transparency and want something that carries that same spirit through darker, stranger corridors, this is a compelling fifty-plus hours, bugs and all. Approach it as a living work that the developers are still actively improving and the rough spots become easier to sit with. Kai, Scout Team

Tainted Grail: The Fall of Avalon

Tainted Grail: The Fall of Avalon

23 may 2025QuestlineAwaken Realms
GamerScout opina

Fifty-plus hours of grim Arthurian open-world RPG from a board-game studio that probably had no business pulling this off, yet mostly did. Rough at the edges, haunting at the core.

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I went in expecting a curiosity and came out genuinely unsettled by how much Questline managed to build. The world of Avalon is locked in a permanent autumnal rot, the mists of the Wyrdness creeping in at night and turning every after-dark excursion into something tense and atmospheric in ways that pure mechanical difficulty rarely achieves. The Menhir system, ancient standing stones you must keep lit or watch the surrounding land descend into monster-infested chaos, creates a quiet, persistent dread that runs under everything else you do. That texture alone sets the tone apart from the Skyrim comparisons that critics keep reaching for, even if those comparisons are not entirely unfair. Character creation happens in a prison cell, through a conversation with a guard who asks what you were doing before you were caught. Your answer determines your archetype: Warrior, Archer, Mage, or Rogue, each branching further into subtypes. Stay silent both times and you start Classless, a blank slate with all attributes at base ten and no early safety net. The system is light on ceremony and heavy on implication, and the passive skills like Archery, One-Handed, Alchemy, and Sneak level up automatically through use, which means your build drifts organically toward how you actually play. Combat lets you mix a melee weapon with a spell in the off-hand, swap between preset loadouts mid-fight, and even summon creatures if you lean into certain spell trees. The catch is that the melee impact never quite convinces. Swinging a two-handed sword often feels weightless, and several reviewers noted that fights can devolve into a trading contest decided by whoever runs out of health bar first rather than by skill expression. Mage builds are potent but skew toward straight damage dealing; the stealth Archer rewards patience and critical-hit fishing; the Warrior is the most forgiving place to learn the timing. Generous respec potions mean you are not punished hard for experimenting. The story is where Tainted Grail earns its hours. You are carrying a fragment of King Arthur's soul, an Arthur who is not the romantic legend you remember but a complicated, divisive figure whose return the locals view with suspicion bordering on hostility. The main questline deals in moral grey areas, ancient eldritch threats called the Foredwellers, clan politics, and the slow unravelling of Kamelot. Side quests veer into something closer to Monty Python territory, complete with direct references to the Holy Grail film, which creates a tonal whiplash that somehow works more often than it should. Dialogue choices carry actual weight, branching the narrative in ways you feel across tens of hours rather than just in the moment. The first region, Horns of the South, is the most detailed and carefully crafted part of the game. The second region, Cunacht, feels comparatively thinner, and the general consensus is that quality tapers as the game progresses into its later acts. Crashes and UI shifts mid-playthrough are still showing up in reviews written months after launch, which signals a studio still actively patching toward the game it envisioned. Technically, the visual style sits somewhere between original Oblivion and something that ran short on polish budget right before shipping. The nights are legitimately beautiful, ruin-strewn and fog-threaded in a way that quiet screenshot-takers will love. The voice acting is decent and the world is dense with discoverable dungeons hidden in plain sight. What it lacks in graphical ambition it compensates with atmosphere, which is the right trade for a game about a dying kingdom and a king nobody wants back. For first-person RPG fans who have worn the map of Skyrim to a transparency and want something that carries that same spirit through darker, stranger corridors, this is a compelling fifty-plus hours, bugs and all. Approach it as a living work that the developers are still actively improving and the rough spots become easier to sit with.

Kai
Kai · Scout Team

Indie & narrative

Etiquetas

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supporttrading-cardscloud-savestier:aaaArthurian SettingMenhir SurvivalArchetype FlexibilityMorally Grey NarrativeFirst-Person MeleeAtmospheric Open WorldWyrdness MechanicsBranching DialogueStamina-Based CombatHybrid Builds

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
Windows 10 64-bit
Memory
12 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
31 GB available space
Graphics
GTX 1060 6GB or AMD equivalent
Processor
i5 8th gen or AMD equivalent

Recomendados

OS
Windows 10/11 (64-bit)
Memory
16 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
31 GB available space
Graphics
RTX 2070 Super
Processor
i7 13th gen

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Reseñas y valoraciones

Metacritic
80

Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Questline
Distribuidora
Awaken Realms
Fecha de lanzamiento
23 may 2025

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible Tainted Grail: The Fall of Avalon?

Tainted Grail: The Fall of Avalon está disponible en PC, Xbox.

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Tainted Grail: The Fall of Avalon se lanzó el 23 de mayo de 2025.

¿Quién desarrolló Tainted Grail: The Fall of Avalon?

Tainted Grail: The Fall of Avalon fue desarrollado por Questline y publicado por Awaken Realms.

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Tainted Grail: The Fall of Avalon tiene una puntuación Metacritic de 80/100, lo que lo convierte en uno de los títulos destacados de Action. Mira las reseñas completas, las valoraciones y los tiempos de duración en esta página para decidir.