Kingdom Come Deliverance screenshot 2

Kingdom Come: Deliverance is now available on GOG and is DRM-free

Warhorse Studios and GOG have announced that Kingdom Come: Deliverance is now available on GOG and, like all GOG releases, is DRM-free. This basically means that the game does not require any activation or online connection in order to be played.

Furthermore, Warhorse Studios revealed that a new update for the game, patch 1.3, is just around the corner (so we may see it hitting both GOG and Steam later this week).

Kingdom Come: Deliverance is powered by CRYENGINE and features a huge and realistic open world, a non-linear story, a dynamic world and challenging battles. The game also allows players to complete quests via multiple choices.

In Kingdom Come: Deliverance, players take the role of Henry, a simple blacksmith’s son who must become a soldier, avenge the death of his parents and build a new life in a ravaged world.

Those interested can read our PC Performance Analysis article here!

32 thoughts on “Kingdom Come: Deliverance is now available on GOG and is DRM-free”

    1. It won’t. The steam version only has steam protecting it.

      I am hoping update 1.3 helps performance and adds a few more gfx options.

      What is your setup?

        1. What settings? There is a shadow tweak mod that gives you closer to high/ultra look for low or med shadows. I have post process on low, shadows med, rest ultra with 3770k @4.3 and a 1080.

          1. Hight Apart from lightning and shadows they are low .
            Yeah i seen it . But i stoped playing . I cant enjoy the game in this state i wait it out until its pached .

          2. I’m luckily not having many issues, few frame drops in some towns, but no stutter or other major lag. Fun game, but you can get powerful and tons of money pretty early into the game.

          3. Yeah . You have a i7 and its have HT . I was looking at some used ones online but it i am gona upgrade then its gona be top of the line

      1. oh my bad. I always thought of this as a closet community. When you got KKW in the comments section. People are gonna be scared off.

        Imagine if a new reader comes here and sees the comment section lmao.

    1. No, Steam acts as DRM for games, you have to run Steam all the time to play your games, that includes in offline mode.

    2. No it’s not, Steam is the DRM and Denuvo isn’t actually DRM, it’s anti-tamper. People need to learn the difference.

      1. Well why don’t you try it, detete Steam and try playing your games, it’s a myth it’s just a store front, it also protects games. also try putting your steam games on another computer without Steam see if they work.

  1. Hey, don’t trigger people by using “casuals”, They all came out of the wood work when I said it. I’m sure the casuals will love the save on exit, Whooops, it will allow the casuals to power game, Whooops said again, and as you know the casual hate us hardcore players, whooops sorry about that.

    1. It’s the old vocal minority because the rest of us enjoy the game and saving via sleeping or Savior Schnapps and lockpicking on M+KB are non-issues. I’d rather have Warhorse concentrate on performance and bugfixing than spending time on the mechanics that cater to a small group of people and don’t really bring anything to the game.

      1. Looks like it’s just a save and exit anyway, not a save anytime so the people busting my a*s about it didn’t get what they wanted.

          1. Yeah but the argument put at my feet so to say was that people wanted to save anytime like other games because of power failures and all sort of all other excuses, “we want options”. They didn’t like the idea of Saviour Schnapps and “hardcore” players like me for doing so. All the arguing they did and all they get is a save on exit, they acted so high and mighty ,the casuals didn’t get what they wanted.

          2. There were a few of valid points made by people with families that also play KCD so that they could save&exit when real life kick in and they have to stop playing. But I guess more of those “save anytime” folks jumped on that bandwagon and there were actully more of them than the first group.

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