Compare Paladin Duty - Knights and Blades prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Sabrina Aridi. Published by Sabrina Aridi. Released on 1/28/2020. Available on PC, Mac, Linux. Genres: Action, Adventure, Casual, Indie, Strategy.

Claiming Skyrim and Thief as inspirations is a bold move. What arrived is a bare-bones first-person melee game with two mouse buttons and a mostly negative Steam rating to show for it.

My first honest thought when loading Paladin Duty - Knights and Blades was that the combat system could fit on a sticky note: left mouse button attacks, right mouse button blocks, and sneaking up behind enemies or landing headshots deals instant kills. That is the complete mechanical inventory. There are no weapon upgrade trees, no skill progression, no build decisions to weigh. For someone who color-codes Paradox patch notes, the absence of any systemic depth is jarring, but I'll try to be fair about what kind of experience is actually on the table here. The game structures itself around discrete levels where the goal is simply to eliminate all enemies before moving on. Patience is the intended core loop: the design nudges you to walk slowly, stay undetected, and pick enemies off from behind rather than charging in. That is a functional, if extremely thin, stealth-adjacent rhythm. The problem is that the AI punishes carelessness but doesn't reward much else. There is no alert system with granular states, no patrol logic worth mapping, and no environmental complexity that would make route planning interesting. The tactical ceiling is low enough that even casual players will hit it within the first couple of levels. The developer cites Elder Scrolls: Skyrim and Thief as direct influences, which sets expectations that the game cannot meet by any realistic measure. Neither the production fidelity nor the systemic richness of either title is present here. Community feedback on Steam has been consistently critical, with the overall rating sitting in mostly negative territory across roughly 50 reviews. Several players noted that the product feels unfinished and rough around the edges, and the title itself has drawn comment for misrepresenting the fantasy of playing a Paladin when the actual playstyle is pure opportunistic back-stabbing. Those are fair observations. Who might still get something out of this? Completionist achievement hunters chasing a very short checklist, or players who genuinely want the most stripped-back possible version of first-person medieval combat with zero friction to entry. There is no tutorial to sit through because there is essentially nothing to learn. On that narrow axis, the accessibility is real. But anyone expecting depth of any kind, meaningful AI, multiple weapons with distinct handling, or progression systems will come away disappointed. There is no mod ecosystem, no community content pipeline, and no post-launch development activity visible that would change that picture. Diego, Scout Team

Paladin Duty - Knights and Blades
ActionAdventureCasualIndieStrategy

Paladin Duty - Knights and Blades

Jan 28, 2020Sabrina Aridi
GamerScout Says

Claiming Skyrim and Thief as inspirations is a bold move. What arrived is a bare-bones first-person melee game with two mouse buttons and a mostly negative Steam rating to show for it.

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About Paladin Duty - Knights and Blades

My first honest thought when loading Paladin Duty - Knights and Blades was that the combat system could fit on a sticky note: left mouse button attacks, right mouse button blocks, and sneaking up behind enemies or landing headshots deals instant kills. That is the complete mechanical inventory. There are no weapon upgrade trees, no skill progression, no build decisions to weigh. For someone who color-codes Paradox patch notes, the absence of any systemic depth is jarring, but I'll try to be fair about what kind of experience is actually on the table here. The game structures itself around discrete levels where the goal is simply to eliminate all enemies before moving on. Patience is the intended core loop: the design nudges you to walk slowly, stay undetected, and pick enemies off from behind rather than charging in. That is a functional, if extremely thin, stealth-adjacent rhythm. The problem is that the AI punishes carelessness but doesn't reward much else. There is no alert system with granular states, no patrol logic worth mapping, and no environmental complexity that would make route planning interesting. The tactical ceiling is low enough that even casual players will hit it within the first couple of levels. The developer cites Elder Scrolls: Skyrim and Thief as direct influences, which sets expectations that the game cannot meet by any realistic measure. Neither the production fidelity nor the systemic richness of either title is present here. Community feedback on Steam has been consistently critical, with the overall rating sitting in mostly negative territory across roughly 50 reviews. Several players noted that the product feels unfinished and rough around the edges, and the title itself has drawn comment for misrepresenting the fantasy of playing a Paladin when the actual playstyle is pure opportunistic back-stabbing. Those are fair observations. Who might still get something out of this? Completionist achievement hunters chasing a very short checklist, or players who genuinely want the most stripped-back possible version of first-person medieval combat with zero friction to entry. There is no tutorial to sit through because there is essentially nothing to learn. On that narrow axis, the accessibility is real. But anyone expecting depth of any kind, meaningful AI, multiple weapons with distinct handling, or progression systems will come away disappointed. There is no mod ecosystem, no community content pipeline, and no post-launch development activity visible that would change that picture. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementstier:sub-5Minimal MechanicsLevel-Clear StructureStealth-AdjacentNo Progression SystemLow Skill Ceiling

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck Playable

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7
Memory
2 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
500 MB available space
Graphics
Nvidia 625m or higher
Processor
Core i3

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Game Info

Developer
Sabrina Aridi
Publisher
Sabrina Aridi
Release Date
Jan 28, 2020

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What platforms is Paladin Duty - Knights and Blades available on?

Paladin Duty - Knights and Blades is available on PC, Mac, Linux.

When was Paladin Duty - Knights and Blades released?

Paladin Duty - Knights and Blades was released on 28 January 2020.

Who developed Paladin Duty - Knights and Blades?

Paladin Duty - Knights and Blades was developed by Sabrina Aridi.