The Bloodline sounds like the prototype of the perfect game for our GlobalESportNews community. We show you what the new release has to offer.
Open world, role-playing, medieval, crafting, base-building, magic – if you had fed the GlobalESportNews target audience game generator (not that we own one, cough…) with these terms, the result would have been The Bloodline.
This game is just crying out for our community. And that’s why we won’t miss the opportunity to introduce you to the little indie title in more detail. By the way: The Bloodline will enter Early Access on October 5. So if you’re itching to play it after reading this article, you’ll soon be able to play it yourself.
~ (The Bloodline on Steam) ~
0815-World rescue meets diverse gameplay
What’s The Bloodline about? Now hold on tight to the back of your office chair, school desk (you’d better follow the lessons, you slyboots!) or the commuter train pole. Because I guarantee you’ve never heard a plot like this in a fantasy game before!
As a descendant of a legendary heroic family, the so-called Herald bloodline, it’s up to you to save the world of Eudros from a sinister threat. To do so, he receives the power of foresight from an ancient god to best prepare you for what’s to come.
What does the gameplay offer? It gets really exciting when it comes to the gameplay, because here The Bloodline seems to offer a bit of everything.
- Open World: You can freely travel the game world of Eudros and help its inhabitants or simply make your own plans. Different biomes with different flora and fauna should provide long-lasting variety. And yes: you can ride a horse.
- Base building: Build your own village, plant fields, and prepare for a rainy day.
- Crafting: Make your own weapons, such as a medieval flamethrower, catch fish, prepare meals, brew potions – and more.
- Combat system: According to the developers, you’ll have over 500 skills and hundreds of weapons to customize your character. Thus, it should be possible to play any role from an assassin to a paladin and necromancer to a druid who can transform into a beast.
Optically, you can expect a mixture of low-poly objects and pretty lighting here. The Bloodline doesn’t pull any trees out of the ground technically, but it definitely has its own unique look.
Are you interested in The Bloodline now? What aspect of the jack-of-all-trades role-playing game do you like the most? Are there things that bother you now, before you’ve even seen a minute of gameplay or played it yourself? If so, we’d like to be enlightened by you, so feel free to write your opinions in the comments!