Kingdom Come: Deliverance - Royal DLC Package (DLC)
Every story expansion for Kingdom Come: Deliverance in one package - more Henry, more Bohemia, more medieval grime. Worth it if the base game already has its hooks in you.
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About Kingdom Come: Deliverance - Royal DLC Package (DLC)
Kingdom Come: Deliverance is one of the most stubbornly committed historical RPGs ever made - no fantasy shortcuts, no dragons (sorry), just 15th-century Bohemia rendered with an almost obsessive attention to period detail. The Royal DLC Package bundles every major expansion released for the base game, which means you are getting From the Ashes, The Amorous Adventures of Bold Sir Hans Capon, Band of Bastards, and A Woman's Lot all in one go. That is a significant volume of additional content, and the quality varies in ways worth knowing before you commit. From the Ashes is the expansion that feels most mechanically substantial. You are put in charge of rebuilding the village of Pribyslavitz, which means managing resources, placing buildings, and watching an actual settlement grow over time. It scratches a light city-builder itch inside an RPG wrapper, and it gives Henry a sense of permanence in the world that the main campaign sometimes lacks. If you finished the base game wanting more agency over Bohemia's fate rather than just wandering through it, this is the one that delivers. Band of Bastards is leaner - a mercenary escort mission stretched across several hours - but it has sharp combat and some genuinely good character writing for the men you ride with. The Amorous Adventures of Bold Sir Hans Capon is exactly what it sounds like: a comedic side story built around Henry's nobleman companion and his catastrophically bad romantic judgment. The writing here is light and fun, a deliberate tonal contrast to the main game's grimness. It does not break any narrative ground but it is entertaining company for four or five hours. A Woman's Lot, by contrast, is the most emotionally serious DLC in the package. You play as Johanka and, separately, revisit events from the main story from a different perspective. The tonal shift is stark and it earns it. If you care about the base game's characters, this one lands. The package as a whole inherits all of Kingdom Come's well-documented strengths and frustrations. The first-person melee combat - directional strikes, master strikes, clinches - is one of the most demanding and rewarding sword systems in any RPG, and the DLC content does not water that down. The skill progression, the reading mechanic, the hunger and sleep systems, all of it carries over. So does the save system, which remains divisive (Saviour Schnapps are still the only reliable way to save mid-quest in several modes). Bugs that plagued launch have been largely addressed across patches, but this is not a game that ever fully shook its rough edges. Pathing, NPC behavior, and occasional quest logic can still surprise you in the wrong direction. For someone coming in fresh or returning after a break, the Royal Package is simply the sensible way to own the complete Kingdom Come experience. None of the DLC is filler in the traditional padded-XP-grind sense - the expansions mostly add focused story content with clear endpoints rather than dragging out playtime artificially. The weaker entries (Band of Bastards in particular) feel slight compared to From the Ashes or A Woman's Lot, but slight in this context means a few hours of decent content, not a waste of time. If you bounced off the base game early, no DLC is going to fix the underlying friction. But if Bohemia got under your skin, this package gives you every reason to stay longer. Monika, Scout Team
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Game Info
- Developer
- Warhorse Studios
- Publisher
- Deep Silver
- Release Date
- Feb 13, 2018
