The five factions, the Cossacks, the Crimeans, the Polish, the Swedish, and the Muscovites, each want to wipe out all of the others, and each have constantly shifting alliances and betrayals. (At least so it seems I’ve never read the novel.) The game is set in a vast stretch of Europe connecting several cities such as Warsaw and Moscow. A few of the missions and characters you can encounter over the course of the game indicate some inspiration from the novel the game’s based off of. The single-player campaign is as open-ended as can be there’s no real pre-written plot. I had to re-roll my character a few times at the beginning, but it was fine once I got used to how it all worked. The game throws you into the action right away, with little explanation of how the gameplay systems work, making the first few hours quite difficult for one new to the series. Does this new setting do enough to set With Fire and Sword apart from its predecessors? Or is it just Warband with guns? Read on to find out. The 1650’s were also a time of technological advancement, especially with the advent of the musket and its increased use in European warfare. The Mount and Blade series is known for providing a realistic (to a fault) approach to medieval RPG gameplay, so now the developers have made an expansion into one of the pivotal eras of Europe, with a five-sided war between countries, fraught with constantly shifting alliances and betrayals.
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