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What to Know Before Playing the Kingdom Come: Deliverance 2

Kingdom Come: Deliverance II is a thrilling Action RPG, set amid the chaos of a civil war in 15th Century Bohem

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Kingdom Come: Deliverance II

Kingdom Come: Deliverance II is a thrilling Action RPG, set amid the chaos of a civil war in 15th Century Bohemia.

You are Henry of Skalitz, an ordinary man doing extraordinary things, caught in a gripping tale of revenge, betrayal and discovery as he embarks on an epic journey, ‘from a humble blacksmith’s forge to the court of Kings’, as he searches for purpose in this beautiful but brutal medieval world.

From bustling city streets to lush forests, discover this open-world Medieval Europe through an unforgettable adventure filled with action, thrill and wonder.

Kingdom Come: Deliverance is a 2018 action role-playing video game developed and published by Warhorse Studios, and co-published by Deep Silver. The game is set in the medieval Kingdom of Bohemia, an Imperial State of the Holy Roman Empire, with a focus on historically accurate content.

What happened in the first Kingdom Come Deliverance?

During a war in Bohemia in 1403, in the time of King Wenceslaus IV, on the orders of the Hungarian King Sigismund, half-brother of Wenceslaus, Cuman mercenaries raid the silver-mining village of Skalitz. The player’s character, Henry, survives the attack. Destitute and vengeful, Henry joins the service of Lord Radzig Kobyla, who leads a resistance movement against Sigismund’s invasion. In pursuit of justice and revenge for his murdered family, Henry becomes involved in an effort to restore Bohemia’s rightful king, Wenceslaus IV, to the throne. The game features branching quest lines, an open-world environment, and period-accurate weapons, clothing, combat techniques, and architecture (recreated with the assistance of architects and historians), which encourage immersive gameplay.

 Kingdom Come: Deliverance II | Deep Silver / PLAION

This game, despite experiencing a little pushback at release, became a cult classic, with people holding it in high regard for its attention to detail. The developers at Warhorse Studios kept details about the sequel under wraps for a long time, so it was a surprise to everyone when they announced the game with an epic trailer!

This game is highly anticipated, featuring returning mechanics from the first game as well as brand new ones! It’s rumoured to be released in late fall of 2024, so we don’t have long to wait!

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Everything We Know About Minecraft’s First Update of 2026

The first Minecraft drop of 2026 reshapes one of the most familiar parts of the game: baby mobs. Until now, they were simply shrunken versions of their adult counterparts with oversized heads.

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Minecraft

The first Minecraft drop of 2026 reshapes one of the most familiar parts of the game: baby mobs. Until now, they were simply shrunken versions of their adult counterparts with oversized heads. While iconic to Minecraft, the decision to finally address this makes a lot of sense. Baby mobs now have their own custom models, paired with new baby-specific sounds and adjusted bounding boxes.

  • The full lineup includes:
  • Cows (and Mooshrooms)
  • Pigs
  • Sheep
  • Chickens
  • Rabbits
  • Ocelots
  • Wolves
  • Cats

On Bedrock Edition, every baby mob also gets its own spawn egg. Just like on Java, Bedrock players can now use spawn eggs on adult mobs to spawn babies. This gives players more control than ever, especially when building farms, zoos, or custom environments.

Then there are craftable name tags. Before this drop, name tags were locked behind chest loot RNG, making them annoying to stockpile. Villager trading later made them easier to obtain, but at the cost of emeralds. Now, they’re even simpler. One metal nugget and some paper is all it takes, with gold, iron, or copper all working as valid options.

It feels like Mojang is doubling down on Minecraft’s cozy, comforting identity. This is a stark contrast to more scary themed updates like The Deep Dark and The Garden Awakens. You can already try these features through snapshots and experimental toggles, and while there’s no official name or release date yet, there’s still room for more to be added. As the first drop of 2026, it sets a tone that’s cute and cuddly. Minecraft, a game that turns 17 years old this year, shows no signs of slowing down and continues to deliver meaningful updates year after year.

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Vernearth Review: Slipknot’s Minecraft Server Is Weird and Metal

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Vernearth

When you spawn into Vernearth, you’re immediately floating in space. Literally. Big planets hang in the distance, stars surround you on all sides, and you’re standing in a custom hub that feels more like a sci-fi movie than Minecraft. A floating flame guides you forward toward a fantastically designed hub that transports you to the server’s survival world. This isn’t your typical Minecraft server.

Dropping into this hub feels more like entering a metal concert than logging into a survival world. Custom models everywhere, LED-style screens that Minecraft desperately needs in vanilla, and a distinct lack of traditional tutorial hand-holding. You’re thrown into “Oblivion,” the main survival realm, spawning in a starting village every time you log on until you claim land.

Here’s where Vernearth gets interesting: the terrain generation is genuinely impressive. We’re talking custom biomes with hanging rock formations, colour-shifted water using what appears to be Biome Painter, and naturally generated concrete powder creating salt-flat aesthetics. One location featured layered cliffs that looked like something from an amplified world. You’ll find yourself stopping for screenshots constantly.

The custom mob reskins add character. Chameleons, deer, and rats roam the landscape alongside reskinned villagers and modified trees. These big trees just beg for the Vein Miner mod.

Now for some concerns. The repetitive login messages about claiming land can get annoying quickly. The coin system from daily streaks exists, but good luck figuring out where to spend them. We tried. The tutorial throws information at you but doesn’t explain core mechanics like how different worlds connect or what those war tokens actually do beyond “buy legendary weapons.”

With only six players online during our visit, performance was smooth, but the server holds over a thousand Discord members.

If you’re into modded Minecraft and want something that feels like a passion project from someone who clearly loves both Slipknot and blocky adventures, Vernearth is worth checking out.ne who clearly loves both Slipknot and blocky adventures, Vernearth is worth checking out. 


Server: Vernearth
Platform: Java Edition
Access: Free (server address available through Slipknot community channels)
Note: Family-friendly despite the metal aesthetic – NSFW content is prohibited

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Rune Factory: Guardians of Azuma Brings Its Village-Building Magic to PS5 and Xbox

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Rune Factory: Guardians of Azuma

Half a million people have already lost themselves in the fields and festivals of Azuma, and now PlayStation and Xbox players finally get their chance. Rune Factory: Guardians of Azuma is making the jump to PS5 and Xbox Series X|S on February 13, 2026, and if you’ve been waiting for a game where you can spend hours perfecting your village layout, wooing a literal god, and purifying corrupted lands with sacred dance powers, this might be exactly what you’ve been looking for.

While the game launched on Switch and PC back in June 2025, the PlayStation and Xbox versions aren’t just straight ports. You’re getting all the free post-launch content baked right into the base game from day one. Marvelous Europe is also throwing in the Rune Factory 4 Hero Outfit Bundle as a bonus for all digital versions.

Rune Factory: Guardians of Azuma

The game drops you into Azuma, a sprawling Japanese-inspired world where you play as an Earth Dancer, essentially a mystical farmer with combat skills and the power to literally dance corruption away. But you’re not just tending your own plot of land, you’re rebuilding entire villages from the ground up, strategically placing buildings to bring people back and restore the land. You can recruit the villagers you’ve befriended to fight alongside you or help manage your growing empire.

What caught my attention is the sheer variety packed in here. You’ve got monster collecting, village construction, exploration across seasonal-themed areas, dynamic combat with new weapons like bows and talismans, and the classic Rune Factory romance options where you can court gods and mortals alike. The anime-style graphics look gorgeous, with each village drawing from different aspects of Japanese culture and festivals.

Rune Factory: Guardians of Azuma

The digital editions start at €59.99 for standard, €69.99 for Digital Deluxe with the Seasons of Love and Festive Attire bundles, and €79.99 for Super Digital Deluxe that adds a soundtrack and art book. Physical editions for PS5 will be up for pre-order soon. If you’re planning to dive deep, you could easily sink a hundred hours into perfecting your villages, maxing out relationships, and hunting down every secret tucked away in those seasonal landscapes.

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