Compare Kingdom Come: Deliverance + 2 DLC prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Warhorse Studios. Published by Koch Media. Released on 2/13/2018. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Adventure, RPG. Metacritic score: 76/100.

A brutally grounded medieval RPG set in 15th-century Bohemia where you play a blacksmith's son with no magic, no chosen-one destiny, and genuinely terrible sword skills at first.

Kingdom Come: Deliverance is a first-person action RPG that strips away fantasy trappings entirely. No elves, no fireballs, no world-ending prophecy. You are Henry, son of a blacksmith in 15th-century Bohemia, and the game opens by making absolutely sure you know you are nobody. The story is grounded in real history, the 1403 civil conflict following the death of King Wenceslas IV, and Warhorse Studios committed hard to that authenticity. You eat, you sleep, your clothes get dirty, and if you sprint across town in full plate armor you will pass out from exhaustion. This is either the most refreshing RPG design you have encountered in years, or the most irritating, depending entirely on your patience threshold. The RPG systems reward patience and genuine role-playing in ways that few games bother with anymore. Henry's skills improve by using them: lockpicking, alchemy, reading (yes, reading is a skill you unlock), swordsmanship, stealth. Early combat is deliberately clumsy. The directional parry-and-riposte system, built around five attack angles and a timing-based master strike mechanic, feels awkward for hours before it clicks into something that actually resembles historical swordsmanship. Once it clicks, fighting two opponents at once feels genuinely dangerous rather than a number-scaling inconvenience. The build variety is real: you can go full knight, full thief, full talker, or a chaotic mix, and the game accommodates all of it without punishing you with artificial gates. Choices in dialogue do matter, though not always in grand branching ways. More often they reflect who Henry is becoming, and that slow character formation is quietly satisfying. The writing is mostly strong. Henry himself is one of the better RPG protagonists of recent memory because he has actual opinions and a consistent voice rather than a blank slate with dialogue options. The main quest carries genuine momentum, and several side quests are memorable enough to recommend on their own merits. That said, the game is not free of filler. There are stretches where the pacing sags, courier tasks accumulate, and the open world can feel emptier than its size promises. The Cumans-and-bandits ambient encounter loop gets repetitive around hour 30. It is also worth noting upfront that the game launched in famously rough shape technically, though patches over the years have addressed most of the worst bugs. This bundle includes Band of Bastards, which sends Henry on a mission to escort a group of mercenaries and adds a compact, morally chewy quest line worth an evening, and From the Ashes, which hands you the rebuilding of a razed village as a management sub-game. From the Ashes is the more mechanically distinct of the two and scratches a light settlement-building itch without overstaying its welcome. Neither DLC reshapes the core experience, but both fit the tone without feeling bolted on. If you are buying in for the first time, having both included is simply the right way to play. Kingdom Come: Deliverance is for players who want to feel the weight of medieval life rather than a power fantasy version of it. If you bounced off it before, consider whether you gave the combat system enough hours to mature. If you love history, find yourself reading Wikipedia articles about the Holy Roman Empire at 1 AM, or just want an RPG that treats you like an adult who can handle losing a fistfight, this one has earned its reputation. Monika, Scout Team

Kingdom Come: Deliverance + 2 DLC

Kingdom Come: Deliverance + 2 DLC

Add-on / DLC for Kingdom Come: Deliverance — view full game
Feb 13, 2018Warhorse StudiosKoch Media
GamerScout Says

A brutally grounded medieval RPG set in 15th-century Bohemia where you play a blacksmith's son with no magic, no chosen-one destiny, and genuinely terrible sword skills at first.

PC
Steam Deck PlayableProtonDB Gold
Best Price Available
€0.00
at N/A
Historical low: €7.13

GamerScout Verdict

Best for patient RPG fans who want historical authenticity and earned progression over power fantasy shortcuts.

Compare Prices(0 stores)

Loading prices...

We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.

Price History

Historical low
€7.135 Jun 2026
Keyshops
€6.56€6.94€7.32€7.705 Jun15 Jun26 Jun6 Jul16 Jul
5 Jun — 16 Jul
Create alert

Screenshots & Media

About Kingdom Come: Deliverance + 2 DLC

Kingdom Come: Deliverance is a first-person action RPG that strips away fantasy trappings entirely. No elves, no fireballs, no world-ending prophecy. You are Henry, son of a blacksmith in 15th-century Bohemia, and the game opens by making absolutely sure you know you are nobody. The story is grounded in real history, the 1403 civil conflict following the death of King Wenceslas IV, and Warhorse Studios committed hard to that authenticity. You eat, you sleep, your clothes get dirty, and if you sprint across town in full plate armor you will pass out from exhaustion. This is either the most refreshing RPG design you have encountered in years, or the most irritating, depending entirely on your patience threshold. The RPG systems reward patience and genuine role-playing in ways that few games bother with anymore. Henry's skills improve by using them: lockpicking, alchemy, reading (yes, reading is a skill you unlock), swordsmanship, stealth. Early combat is deliberately clumsy. The directional parry-and-riposte system, built around five attack angles and a timing-based master strike mechanic, feels awkward for hours before it clicks into something that actually resembles historical swordsmanship. Once it clicks, fighting two opponents at once feels genuinely dangerous rather than a number-scaling inconvenience. The build variety is real: you can go full knight, full thief, full talker, or a chaotic mix, and the game accommodates all of it without punishing you with artificial gates. Choices in dialogue do matter, though not always in grand branching ways. More often they reflect who Henry is becoming, and that slow character formation is quietly satisfying. The writing is mostly strong. Henry himself is one of the better RPG protagonists of recent memory because he has actual opinions and a consistent voice rather than a blank slate with dialogue options. The main quest carries genuine momentum, and several side quests are memorable enough to recommend on their own merits. That said, the game is not free of filler. There are stretches where the pacing sags, courier tasks accumulate, and the open world can feel emptier than its size promises. The Cumans-and-bandits ambient encounter loop gets repetitive around hour 30. It is also worth noting upfront that the game launched in famously rough shape technically, though patches over the years have addressed most of the worst bugs. This bundle includes Band of Bastards, which sends Henry on a mission to escort a group of mercenaries and adds a compact, morally chewy quest line worth an evening, and From the Ashes, which hands you the rebuilding of a razed village as a management sub-game. From the Ashes is the more mechanically distinct of the two and scratches a light settlement-building itch without overstaying its welcome. Neither DLC reshapes the core experience, but both fit the tone without feeling bolted on. If you are buying in for the first time, having both included is simply the right way to play. Kingdom Come: Deliverance is for players who want to feel the weight of medieval life rather than a power fantasy version of it. If you bounced off it before, consider whether you gave the combat system enough hours to mature. If you love history, find yourself reading Wikipedia articles about the Holy Roman Empire at 1 AM, or just want an RPG that treats you like an adult who can handle losing a fistfight, this one has earned its reputation.

Monika
Monika · Scout Team

RPGs

Tags

steamHistorical RPGFirst-Person MeleeSkill ProgressionRealistic CombatSettlement BuildingOpen WorldStory-DrivenSlow Burn

System Requirements

Minimum

Processor
Intel CPU Core i5-2500K 3.3GHz, AMD CPU Phenom II X4 940
Memory
8 GB RAM Graphi…

Recommended

Processor
Intel CPU Core i7 3770 3,4 GHz, AMD CPU AMD FX-8350 4 GHz
Memory
16 GB RAM…

Keep exploring

Community Discussion

Be the first to comment on Kingdom Come: Deliverance + 2 DLC.

Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
76
Steam
84%(181,121)

Game Info

Developer
Warhorse Studios
Publisher
Koch Media
Release Date
Feb 13, 2018

Features

Single-playerSteam AchievementsFull controller supportSteam Trading CardsSteam CloudRemote Play on TVFamily Sharing

Price Alert

Get notified when the price drops below your target!

Create Alert

No card? Pay another way

Top up your Steam Wallet or buy crypto with any card — instant delivery, no bank account needed.

More from Warhorse Studios

Buy smarter: helpful guides

Frequently asked questions about Kingdom Come: Deliverance + 2 DLC

How much does Kingdom Come: Deliverance + 2 DLC cost?

Kingdom Come: Deliverance + 2 DLC pricing changes often and varies by store, edition and region. The live price table on this page compares the cheapest in-stock offers from trusted key stores like Eneba and Kinguin, so you always see the current lowest price before you buy.

Where can I buy Kingdom Come: Deliverance + 2 DLC cheapest?

Compare Kingdom Come: Deliverance + 2 DLC prices across every verified store in the price table on this page. We list the cheapest in-stock key and store offers, updated regularly, so you always see the best current deal before you buy.

What platforms is Kingdom Come: Deliverance + 2 DLC available on?

Kingdom Come: Deliverance + 2 DLC is available on PC.

When was Kingdom Come: Deliverance + 2 DLC released?

Kingdom Come: Deliverance + 2 DLC was released on 13 February 2018.

Who developed Kingdom Come: Deliverance + 2 DLC?

Kingdom Come: Deliverance + 2 DLC was developed by Warhorse Studios and published by Koch Media.

Is Kingdom Come: Deliverance + 2 DLC worth buying?

Kingdom Come: Deliverance + 2 DLC holds a Metacritic score of 76/100, making it one of the standout Action titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.