Compare Unforetold: Witchstone prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Spearhead Games. Published by Spearhead Games. Released on 1/25/2024. Available on PC. Genres: Adventure, Indie, RPG, Strategy.

If you've ever wished a CRPG would let you play the villain, the diplomat, or the chaos agent all in one run, Witchstone is built exactly for that itch - just know you're buying into an unfinished world.

My first reaction to Unforetold: Witchstone was something like cautious excitement. Here is a turn-based CRPG sandbox that launched into Early Access in January 2024 with a genuinely unusual promise: less a game that hands you a quest journal and more one that drops you into the frontier continent of Kalsundia and says, figure it out. The creative backbone comes from an unlikely source - Ed Greenwood, the mind behind the Forgotten Realms - and the world carries that weight. Factions jostle for power, NPCs carry their own motivations, and the game's Influence System lets you pit groups against each other, recruit strangers through sheer intimidation, or watch a whole town tear itself apart without you ever drawing a weapon. That last part is not hyperbole: the turn-based combat, which mixes magic and technology in a fairly standard tactical format, is almost optional in some encounters. Social manipulation and stealth are treated as equally valid paths through most of the game's challenges. Character creation leans hard on tabletop RPG conventions. You pick a race, class, and background, and those choices shape what options surface in dialogue and how factions perceive you from the start. The Influence System is where Witchstone earns its identity: rather than branching dialogue trees that funnel you toward preset outcomes, the game tracks your decisions through interconnected narrative systems and adjusts NPC behavior and faction relationships accordingly. In practice, broad goals replace rigid quest chains - you decide the approach and the game responds. It is an ambitious design, closer to the freeform spirit of a tabletop session than most CRPGs manage. The rough edges, though, are real. Early Access reviews from the community have landed in mixed territory, and the criticism is consistent: NPC behavior feels mechanical and scattered at times, higher-level spells and class content are incomplete, and party members outside your main character are handled with less granularity than you might want. The player count tells its own story - the launch peak was modest and activity has been quiet since. Some players bounced off it quickly, deciding to wait for more updates rather than push through the gaps. That is a fair read. This is an Early Access game that is ambitious enough to be genuinely interesting but raw enough that patience is a prerequisite. What Witchstone does exceptionally well - even in its current state - is make cause-and-effect feel weighty. The idea that you can resolve conflicts through social pressure, stealth, or outright combat, and that each path changes the world's response, is not just a bullet point here. It shows up in actual play. The faction system has enough teeth that choosing sides feels consequential, and the open-ended milestone structure keeps the game from holding your hand in ways that most genre entries do. If you are the kind of player who builds a character concept and wants the world to accommodate it rather than fight it, that quality is present even now. Who should actually play this right now? CRPG fans with a tolerance for early-stage jank, an interest in systemic storytelling over cinematic polish, and enough patience to accept an incomplete skill tree. If you bounced off Baldur's Gate 3 because it felt too authored, Witchstone's sandboxier approach might scratch the itch - just go in knowing the world is still under construction. Alex, Scout Team

Unforetold: Witchstone

Unforetold: Witchstone

Jan 25, 2024Spearhead Games
GamerScout Says

If you've ever wished a CRPG would let you play the villain, the diplomat, or the chaos agent all in one run, Witchstone is built exactly for that itch - just know you're buying into an unfinished world.

PC
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GamerScout Verdict

Best for patient CRPG fans who want systemic freedom and faction politics more than cinematic polish or a finished product.

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About Unforetold: Witchstone

My first reaction to Unforetold: Witchstone was something like cautious excitement. Here is a turn-based CRPG sandbox that launched into Early Access in January 2024 with a genuinely unusual promise: less a game that hands you a quest journal and more one that drops you into the frontier continent of Kalsundia and says, figure it out. The creative backbone comes from an unlikely source - Ed Greenwood, the mind behind the Forgotten Realms - and the world carries that weight. Factions jostle for power, NPCs carry their own motivations, and the game's Influence System lets you pit groups against each other, recruit strangers through sheer intimidation, or watch a whole town tear itself apart without you ever drawing a weapon. That last part is not hyperbole: the turn-based combat, which mixes magic and technology in a fairly standard tactical format, is almost optional in some encounters. Social manipulation and stealth are treated as equally valid paths through most of the game's challenges. Character creation leans hard on tabletop RPG conventions. You pick a race, class, and background, and those choices shape what options surface in dialogue and how factions perceive you from the start. The Influence System is where Witchstone earns its identity: rather than branching dialogue trees that funnel you toward preset outcomes, the game tracks your decisions through interconnected narrative systems and adjusts NPC behavior and faction relationships accordingly. In practice, broad goals replace rigid quest chains - you decide the approach and the game responds. It is an ambitious design, closer to the freeform spirit of a tabletop session than most CRPGs manage. The rough edges, though, are real. Early Access reviews from the community have landed in mixed territory, and the criticism is consistent: NPC behavior feels mechanical and scattered at times, higher-level spells and class content are incomplete, and party members outside your main character are handled with less granularity than you might want. The player count tells its own story - the launch peak was modest and activity has been quiet since. Some players bounced off it quickly, deciding to wait for more updates rather than push through the gaps. That is a fair read. This is an Early Access game that is ambitious enough to be genuinely interesting but raw enough that patience is a prerequisite. What Witchstone does exceptionally well - even in its current state - is make cause-and-effect feel weighty. The idea that you can resolve conflicts through social pressure, stealth, or outright combat, and that each path changes the world's response, is not just a bullet point here. It shows up in actual play. The faction system has enough teeth that choosing sides feels consequential, and the open-ended milestone structure keeps the game from holding your hand in ways that most genre entries do. If you are the kind of player who builds a character concept and wants the world to accommodate it rather than fight it, that quality is present even now. Who should actually play this right now? CRPG fans with a tolerance for early-stage jank, an interest in systemic storytelling over cinematic polish, and enough patience to accept an incomplete skill tree. If you bounced off Baldur's Gate 3 because it felt too authored, Witchstone's sandboxier approach might scratch the itch - just go in knowing the world is still under construction.

Alex
Alex · Scout Team

Catch-all

Tags

tier:no-steam-matchenriched-from-kinguinTurn-Based TacticalReactive WorldFaction SystemSandbox RPGInfluence SystemOpen-Ended QuestsEarly AccessTabletop-InspiredStealth Options

System Requirements

Minimum

Processor
Intel Core i7-6700 / AMD Ryzen 5 1400
Memory
8 GB RAM
Graphics
Nvidia GeForce GTX 1060 6GB / AMD RX 580
Storage
15 GB available space

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Game Info

Developer
Spearhead Games
Publisher
Spearhead Games
Release Date
Jan 25, 2024

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How much does Unforetold: Witchstone cost?

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What platforms is Unforetold: Witchstone available on?

Unforetold: Witchstone is available on PC.

When was Unforetold: Witchstone released?

Unforetold: Witchstone was released on 25 January 2024.

Who developed Unforetold: Witchstone?

Unforetold: Witchstone was developed by Spearhead Games.