Vampire: The Masquerade – Swansong (PC) Steam Key
A narrative RPG set in the World of Darkness where you play three distinct vampires untangling a political crisis. Heavy on dialogue, light on action.
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About Vampire: The Masquerade – Swansong (PC) Steam Key
Vampire: The Masquerade - Swansong is a choice-driven narrative RPG developed by Big Bad Wolf, set in the same rich, gothic World of Darkness that tabletop fans have obsessed over for decades. You control three vampires - Leysha, Galeb, and Emem - each tied to different clans and carrying their own agendas, traumas, and supernatural disciplines. The game unfolds mostly through conversation and investigation, with a skill-check system that should feel familiar to anyone who has spent time in classic WRPGs or the tabletop source material. Think less combat hack-and-slash, more tense boardroom interrogation where your Blood Potency score determines whether you can peel the truth out of someone's skull. The best thing Swansong does is commit to its setting. The political intrigue between Camarilla factions, the fragile Masquerade that keeps vampires hidden from human eyes, the texture of undead social hierarchy - it is all handled with genuine care. If you have any attachment to the VtM lore, there are moments here that genuinely land. Each of the three protagonists has a distinct voice and a personal arc that intersects with the central mystery in ways that occasionally reward patience. Emem especially is a standout, her coterie ties and personal history adding weight to choices that might otherwise feel mechanical. That said, the game has real problems you should know about before buying. The dialogue system can feel rigid compared to what the genre is capable of in 2023 and beyond. Skill investment decisions early in the run can effectively lock you out of content later, which is either compelling design or deeply frustrating depending on your tolerance for replaying chapters. Some players will find that refreshing - knowing a Persuasion-heavy Emem build plays differently from a Stealth-spec run is legitimately interesting. Others will hit a wall mid-chapter and feel punished rather than challenged. The pacing is also uneven: long stretches of walking through underlit environments to trigger the next conversation can test even the most committed narrative RPG players. Filler-adjacent sequences do exist, and they drag. The three-character structure is the strongest mechanical hook. Decisions you make as one vampire echo into scenes controlled by another, and piecing together how the timelines and motivations overlap gives the mystery a satisfying jigsaw quality when it works. The vampire disciplines - powers like Auspex for perception checks or Dominate for forcing confessions - integrate into the skill system in ways that feel true to the source rather than bolted on. Build variety is real, though it is front-loaded: you feel it most in the early and mid game. By the final act, the builds converge somewhat. Mixed Steam reviews at 64 percent positive tell a story of a game that will click hard for the right audience and disappoint everyone else. That audience is: World of Darkness fans, narrative RPG completionists, and players who find satisfaction in a story that trusts them to read between the lines. If you need combat feedback loops or open-world breadth to stay engaged, this is not built for you. If you can sit with a slow-burn political thriller in a world where everyone at the table is already dead, Swansong has enough genuine craft to justify the time. Monika, Scout Team
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Game Info
- Developer
- Big Bad Wolf
- Publisher
- Nacon
- Release Date
- May 30, 2023