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Fans of good ol’ RPG adventures rejoice, you’ll be able to experience the world where evil won on November 10th. Paradox and Obsidian have put out a new trailer showing off more of the game.

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This is a game I’m personally very excited for. I enjoyed Pillars of Eternity a great deal – even if it had more than its fair share of kinks at launch. The premise for Tyranny is a world where the evil overlord has won and the player is entrusted to pacify and hand down judgment in the conquered lands. Developer diaries and videos emphasize that choices can have very far-ranging consequences on the game world and so this should be a title with plenty of replayability. The setting and lore also seem pretty interesting so I can’t wait until the game is out to explore it.

You can preorder directly on Paradox’s webshop, GOG or Steam if you’re so inclined. There’s a few small incentives for doing and Obsidian and Paradox have a good track record of Linux support but the same general warnings about preordering always apply!

Update: Liam reached out to the publisher and confirmed that the release will be day-1!

@gamingonlinux @PdxInteractive @YouTube The lord Kyros wouldn't have it any other way!

— Tyranny (@TyrannyGame) October 13, 2016


Thanks DrMcCoy for pointing out the news on IRC

Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
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About the author -
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History, sci-fi, technology, cooking, writing and playing games are things I enjoy very much. I'm always keen to try different genres of games and discover all the gems out there.

Oh and the name doesn't mean anything but coincidentally could be pronounced as "Buttery" which suits me just fine.
See more from me
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32 comments
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gojul Oct 14, 2016
Preordered it and installing it tonight (the basic edition, the deluxe is quite expensive). Pillars of Eternity is a great game !
Beamboom Oct 14, 2016
Another week, another turn-based rpg.

... :p

I'll still buy it though. But primarily cause I want Obsidian to notice Linux.
Stupendous Man Oct 14, 2016
@Swiftpaw: There's a difference between Paradox the developer and Paradox the publisher regarding DLC. With Paradox the developer I agree with you 100%, their games have WAY too many DLCs, and it's come to the point where I never even play their games I own any longer, as I'm so far behind in DLC and have no interest in continuing to throw money at them.
Many Paradox published games, though, are quite reasonable regarding DLC. Pillars of Eternity had 2 rather large expansions (yes, those are more akin to expansions that DLCs) that expanded the story but were in no way required for a complete play through. You might argue that the two expansions should have been combined as one, but I still think play time versus price was quite reasonable. Also, it was clear a lot of work had been put into them (it wasn't just some shit unit reskin and a new song!).
[email protected] Oct 14, 2016
My only gripe with PoE is no cloaks on Linux. They used Windows only middleware. Hopefully they don't make the same mistake this time.
STiAT Oct 14, 2016
Oh yeah.
From "it was not worth it" about the pillars port to "we don't know if we'll do a linux release on the next game" to "day-1"...

Really looking forward to this one.
emphy Oct 14, 2016
So far, the evil Paradox's influence seems to be non-existent.

The only things, so far, seem to be the two pre-order in-game bonus items.


Last edited by emphy on 14 October 2016 at 11:28 am UTC
Mountain Man Oct 14, 2016
Another Paradox game to be ruthlessly bombarded by DLC afterward (or have a huge portion of the game withheld during development) so if you want the complete game you have to fork over way more $$$$$ later on? No thank you, I'll wait for the GOtY edition, as with all Paradox games.
Oh, please, not this BS again. Pillars of Eternity is a complete game with two meaty expansion packs. It's actually a rather old school approach if you think about it. As for Paradox's other games like Crusader Kings II, Europa Universalis IV, etc., Paradox has always released the most critical gameplay features as part of their regular patches. Even if you never buy a single expansion, you will still have a complete game with substantial new content released for free with every major patch. If you want a little more then you're asked to pay a little more for the DLC which seems perfectly reasonable to me because we can't realistically expect Paradox to give everything away for free. Furthermore, since none of the DLC is essential, you're free to pick and choose only the DLC which actually appeals to you while ignoring the rest. If you're playing multiplayer against someone who has DLC that you don't, you will have access to the extra content for that play session. I find this approach to be the gold standard for DLC as far as I'm concerned.


Last edited by Mountain Man on 14 October 2016 at 1:24 pm UTC
Mountain Man Oct 14, 2016
Another week, another turn-based rpg.
We certainly seem to have a glut of "old school" RPGs in Linux, don't we? :D

I won't be buying Tyranny but only because I currently have Wasteland 2, Pillars of Eternity, and Shadowrun: Dragonfall in my backlog waiting to be played and/or finished. But once I'm done with those I will definitely consider it!
Salvatos Oct 14, 2016
Expansions are capable of being sequels, they have that much content, they are like the original game times two.
All I'm saying is that DLC has that same potential since everything that isn't the core game is marketed as DLC nowadays. Even the new Baldur's Gate title could have been sold as DLC for either BG1 or BG2 since it uses the same engine and game saves and expands on their storyline. Calling it that and linking its purchase to either game (who would play episode 1.5 of anything without playing the first anyway?) wouldn't have changed its nature and made it terrible business practice, would it?
Mountain Man Oct 14, 2016
If they actually needed more money for developing a bigger game, then ask for more money for the complete version.
And this is when the anti-DLC crowd has me scratching my head.

If you don't mind paying extra for "the complete version" (whatever that means to you) then why do you have a problem with paying extra for DLC? Either way, you're paying more to get more, so what's the problem?
Ne0 Oct 19, 2016
Damn it looks awesome but I have to pass for now, I still have to finish PoE with the expansions. Seriously there too many games on Linux available now. Not good for my productivity ;)
I used to play POE through wine... player trading is pretty much non-existent there.
So I left, at-least until it gets a Linux-Native version...

...To show your love for Linux to POE devs, Vote for your Favorite Unix distribution here :)


Last edited by Ne0 on 19 October 2016 at 10:24 am UTC
ZekThePenguin Oct 20, 2016
I've seen a lot of comparisons drawn between PoE and this game, which is exciting to me. I really like PoE, but it is not a Linux game. True, it runs okay on WINE, but I'd rather support games that acknowledge and support Linux. If this is exactly like PoE on Linux, I'll buy it.
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