[ITEM]
09.04.2020

Knights Of Pen And Paper 2 Best Team

91

Knights of Pen & Paper - Game Introduction Knights of Pen & Paper is a role playing game from Behold Studios, where you will take on an adventure that will bombard you with enemies, have hundreds.

Nintendo Switch

Play a group of pen and paper gamers playing a pen and paper role playing game

Prepare to inhabit a world of chivalry, class warfare and off-beat pop references in the sequel for the successful and award winning game Knights of Pen & Paper! Knights of Pen & Paper 2 is a turn-based, retro style, pixel-art adventure full of danger, intrigue, death, and saving throws!
Assemble your party and control your group of pen and paper role-players as they are guided through their adventures by the Game Master. All the fun of pen and paper RP, none of the lost dice!
Now including races like Dwarf or Elf, assemble the party of your choice, choose quests and combat encounters, delve into dungeons, craft powerful items, and complain loudly to the GM.
Prepare to join Knights of Pen & Paper 2 in a turn-based, retro style, pixel-art adventure full of danger, intrigue, and semi-appropriate cultural references!
-Main features-
※ Punch a Panda! Explore your anger management issues!
※ Create your own characters, how about a Rocker Dwarf Warrior or a Cheerleader Elf Monk
※ More contemporary geeky jokes than you can stuff in a CAVE! Gotta catch them all!
※ Lots of monsters, equipment, a crafting system, and things to customize
※ The Deluxiest Edition of Knights of Pen & Paper 2 includes the following bonus items and expansions:
- Fist of +1 Fury
- Here Be Dragons
- Back To the Source
- Epic Mount
- Exclusive Grinding Farm Location

Read more
Players:
1 player
Genre:
Role-Playing, Adventure, Board Game, Strategy
Developer:
Seaven Studio
Supported Languages:
French, German, Italian, Spanish, Russian, English
Supported Play Modes:

TV mode

Tabletop mode

Handheld mode

ESRB Rating:

Play online, access classic Super NES™ games, and more with a Nintendo Switch Online membership.

This game supports:

© Plug In Digital. All pens reserved.


I’ve never paticipated in a serious game of Dungeons & Dragons. The handful of campaigns I played with my college roommates involved a lot of drinking, backstabbing, and other in-game scenes too graphic to write about here. During one memorable moment, someone in my group (playing as a madman) murdered dozens of helpless half-human, half-spider orphans we found in a cave.

So I can relate to some of the bickering between the characters in Knights of Pen and Paper 2 (out now on PC, Mac, Linux, iOS, and Android). Developed by Kyy Games, Knights of Pen and Paper 2 is a humorous turn-based role-playing game that parodies both tabletop RPGs like D&D and console RPGs from the ’80s and ‘90s.

Instead of having a party filled with elaborately dressed wizards and paladins, your characters are high school stereotypes simply pretending to be wizards and paladins. Sitting across a table from them is their Game Master, who narrates the story while the scenery unfolds around them.

It’s a unique concept that leads to a few really funny moments. But the dual storytelling approach isn’t strong enough to sustain the lengthy adventure. By the time I hit hour 10 on the PC version, I just wanted Knights of Pen and Paper 2 to be over.

Check out our Reviews Vault for past game reviews.

Above: Characters attack from their seats.

What you’ll like

Knights

Customizing your party members

Assembling your band of dice-wielding warriors is like a fun mini-game of its own. You get to choose the type of person (nerd, jock, cheerleader, etc.), the species of their character (humans, elves, or dwarves), and the class they play (paladins, ninjas, thieves, and more). Each person comes with their own passive abilities, like how the rich kid can make your team earn more gold after every battle.

The group I ended up with had the aforementioned wealthy teenager (he was my mage), a cheerleader warrior dwarf with blonde pigtails and a thick brown beard, a goth elf who was a life-restoring cleric, and a nerd barbarian who wore a wolf pelt over his head. They certainly aren’t your usual RPG heroes.

It has plenty of amusing gags

You’ll encounter all sorts of oddities as you chase the villainous Paper Knight in the world of Paperos. Early on, you meet the ugly troll who only talks in leet speak, and an alchemist who looks a lot like Mario. Other character appearances are more subtle, like the smirking Ecce Martinez, whose name and face come from the infamous restoration project (and fodder for memes) of an old Spanish fresco of Jesus Christ.

Knights of Pen and Paper 2 has a ton of these visual gags, pulling from both gaming and pop culture history. I can’t remember the last time a game referenced The Toxic Avenger.

Kynseed cheat engine. Kyy Games also incorporated some humor into the mechanics. You can peruse fake tabletop magazines that flesh out the world and offer bonus content you can buy. One of them is an expansion called Fist of +1 Fury, which contains new areas and a new character class. I didn’t really think about the expansion until I accidentally triggered a story quest that lead into it. A character told me I had to buy Fist of +1 Fury to continue, so I went to the magazine and saw that it cost 4.99. I assumed that was in dollars.

I immediately thought, “How dare they charge five bucks to continue a quest I’m already on!” I clicked the buy button, but instead of Steam asking me for money, I saw my gold count at the top corner of the screen change. Yup, it costs 4.99 in gold pieces. I had almost 700 at the time. Well played, Kyy Games. Well played.

Above: Professor Mario and his mushroom pals.

What you won’t like

The rest of the jokes are hit-or-miss

Some jokes go a little too far, like the way the characters complain to the GM about fetching items for other people all the time. It would’ve been funny the first two or three times, but the game has a bunch of these quests. At one point, I had to keep fighting a group of monks just to prove I was “worthy” to speak to their leader — I fought them almost every time I returned to their temple. Again, the characters repeatedly complained how ridiculous this is, but that didn’t stop the battles from happening. It wasn’t fun at all.

Knights of Pen and Paper 2 also uses acronyms and other jargon that just flew over my head. But that probably has more to do with my limited experience with playing tabletop RPGs.

Falling asleep during battles

Except for a few boss fights, Knights of Pen and Paper 2 isn’t very challenging. Once I chose my first five characters, I didn’t really feel the need to swap them out with new people (you can store extra characters in a tavern). I quickly settled into a routine. I’d cast my mage’s spells to hit multiple enemies at the same time, use the cleric to heal anyone who’s hurt, and then use the other three characters’ physical attacks.

I actually started to fall asleep at certain points during the game because of how dull this became, especially in quests that had back-to-back battles. And once I got in that sleepy mindset, it was hard to break out of it. I skimmed the dialogue and clicked through the battles as fast as I could. I listened to podcasts just so I had something else to do other than stare at the screen.

Using new characters temporarily disrupted my hypnosis, but it didn’t take long to fall back into a rigid pattern. The flow of battle just isn’t very interesting, which is a shame because all the monsters and bad guys look pretty good.

Above: The world of Paperos.

Tabletop simulator download. Tabletop Simulator Review. Unfortunately, professional review of the Tabletop Simulator game is not yet ready. This game is on the list and will be reviewed in the nearest feature. Meanwhile, you can find more from the official description below. View all reviews. Tabletop Simulator is the only simulator where you can let your aggression out by flipping the table! There are no rules to follow: just you, a physics sandbox, and your friends. Make your own games and play how YOU want! Unlimited gaming possibilities! Create your own original games, import custom assets, automate games with scripting, set up complete RPG dungeons, manipulate the physics, create hinges & joints, and of course flip the table when you are losing the game. Play almost any tabletop game you can think of! Being a multiplayer-focused game, up to 10 players can play at any given time. Our downloadable content (DLCs) are different from other games, as we partner with developers and publishers to bring their games into Tabletop Simulator.

You can only take on one quest at a time

This isn’t the kind of RPG where you can walk around and explore, so the towns, fields, and dungeons are just backdrops for the story. Together, these areas form a reasonably sized world, but you’ll crisscross through the same places over and over because you can only go on one quest at a time. This gets really annoying when you start travelling between opposites sides of the map, often visiting the same places you were just in during an earlier quest.

An airship obtained later in the game somewhat mitigates this by providing a shortcut to specific places, but it’s not enough. The boring battles don’t help, either, as a simulated dice roll determines your chances of being in a random fight whenever you’re traveling. Backtracking sucks if you get a bad series of dice rolls. It’s such a pain. Carrying more than one quest would’ve made the game shorter, but that would’ve been a good thing.

Conclusion

I wish I liked Knights of Pen and Paper 2 a lot more than I did. It has a lot of charm and heart — I can see it in the gorgeous pixel art and in all the neat jokes and references built into Paperos. But it just isn’t very fun to play. If you happen to be in that cross-section of being both a tabletop player and an RPG fanatic, it might be worth checking out. For everyone else, however, your time is better spent elsewhere.

Score:60/100

Knights of Pen and Paper 2 is out now on PC, Mac, Linux, iOS, and Android. Publisher Paradox Interactive provided GamesBeat with a Steam code for the purpose of this review.

Gallery: Knights of Pen and Paper 2

Above: This game is kind of bizarre at times.

Image Credit: Giancarlo Valdes/GamesBeat
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09.04.2020

Knights Of Pen And Paper 2 Best Team

24

Knights of Pen & Paper - Game Introduction Knights of Pen & Paper is a role playing game from Behold Studios, where you will take on an adventure that will bombard you with enemies, have hundreds.

Nintendo Switch

Play a group of pen and paper gamers playing a pen and paper role playing game

Prepare to inhabit a world of chivalry, class warfare and off-beat pop references in the sequel for the successful and award winning game Knights of Pen & Paper! Knights of Pen & Paper 2 is a turn-based, retro style, pixel-art adventure full of danger, intrigue, death, and saving throws!
Assemble your party and control your group of pen and paper role-players as they are guided through their adventures by the Game Master. All the fun of pen and paper RP, none of the lost dice!
Now including races like Dwarf or Elf, assemble the party of your choice, choose quests and combat encounters, delve into dungeons, craft powerful items, and complain loudly to the GM.
Prepare to join Knights of Pen & Paper 2 in a turn-based, retro style, pixel-art adventure full of danger, intrigue, and semi-appropriate cultural references!
-Main features-
※ Punch a Panda! Explore your anger management issues!
※ Create your own characters, how about a Rocker Dwarf Warrior or a Cheerleader Elf Monk
※ More contemporary geeky jokes than you can stuff in a CAVE! Gotta catch them all!
※ Lots of monsters, equipment, a crafting system, and things to customize
※ The Deluxiest Edition of Knights of Pen & Paper 2 includes the following bonus items and expansions:
- Fist of +1 Fury
- Here Be Dragons
- Back To the Source
- Epic Mount
- Exclusive Grinding Farm Location

Read more
Players:
1 player
Genre:
Role-Playing, Adventure, Board Game, Strategy
Developer:
Seaven Studio
Supported Languages:
French, German, Italian, Spanish, Russian, English
Supported Play Modes:

TV mode

Tabletop mode

Handheld mode

ESRB Rating:

Play online, access classic Super NES™ games, and more with a Nintendo Switch Online membership.

This game supports:

© Plug In Digital. All pens reserved.


I’ve never paticipated in a serious game of Dungeons & Dragons. The handful of campaigns I played with my college roommates involved a lot of drinking, backstabbing, and other in-game scenes too graphic to write about here. During one memorable moment, someone in my group (playing as a madman) murdered dozens of helpless half-human, half-spider orphans we found in a cave.

So I can relate to some of the bickering between the characters in Knights of Pen and Paper 2 (out now on PC, Mac, Linux, iOS, and Android). Developed by Kyy Games, Knights of Pen and Paper 2 is a humorous turn-based role-playing game that parodies both tabletop RPGs like D&D and console RPGs from the ’80s and ‘90s.

Instead of having a party filled with elaborately dressed wizards and paladins, your characters are high school stereotypes simply pretending to be wizards and paladins. Sitting across a table from them is their Game Master, who narrates the story while the scenery unfolds around them.

It’s a unique concept that leads to a few really funny moments. But the dual storytelling approach isn’t strong enough to sustain the lengthy adventure. By the time I hit hour 10 on the PC version, I just wanted Knights of Pen and Paper 2 to be over.

Check out our Reviews Vault for past game reviews.

Above: Characters attack from their seats.

What you’ll like

Knights

Customizing your party members

Assembling your band of dice-wielding warriors is like a fun mini-game of its own. You get to choose the type of person (nerd, jock, cheerleader, etc.), the species of their character (humans, elves, or dwarves), and the class they play (paladins, ninjas, thieves, and more). Each person comes with their own passive abilities, like how the rich kid can make your team earn more gold after every battle.

The group I ended up with had the aforementioned wealthy teenager (he was my mage), a cheerleader warrior dwarf with blonde pigtails and a thick brown beard, a goth elf who was a life-restoring cleric, and a nerd barbarian who wore a wolf pelt over his head. They certainly aren’t your usual RPG heroes.

It has plenty of amusing gags

You’ll encounter all sorts of oddities as you chase the villainous Paper Knight in the world of Paperos. Early on, you meet the ugly troll who only talks in leet speak, and an alchemist who looks a lot like Mario. Other character appearances are more subtle, like the smirking Ecce Martinez, whose name and face come from the infamous restoration project (and fodder for memes) of an old Spanish fresco of Jesus Christ.

Knights of Pen and Paper 2 has a ton of these visual gags, pulling from both gaming and pop culture history. I can’t remember the last time a game referenced The Toxic Avenger.

Kynseed cheat engine. Kyy Games also incorporated some humor into the mechanics. You can peruse fake tabletop magazines that flesh out the world and offer bonus content you can buy. One of them is an expansion called Fist of +1 Fury, which contains new areas and a new character class. I didn’t really think about the expansion until I accidentally triggered a story quest that lead into it. A character told me I had to buy Fist of +1 Fury to continue, so I went to the magazine and saw that it cost 4.99. I assumed that was in dollars.

I immediately thought, “How dare they charge five bucks to continue a quest I’m already on!” I clicked the buy button, but instead of Steam asking me for money, I saw my gold count at the top corner of the screen change. Yup, it costs 4.99 in gold pieces. I had almost 700 at the time. Well played, Kyy Games. Well played.

Above: Professor Mario and his mushroom pals.

What you won’t like

The rest of the jokes are hit-or-miss

Some jokes go a little too far, like the way the characters complain to the GM about fetching items for other people all the time. It would’ve been funny the first two or three times, but the game has a bunch of these quests. At one point, I had to keep fighting a group of monks just to prove I was “worthy” to speak to their leader — I fought them almost every time I returned to their temple. Again, the characters repeatedly complained how ridiculous this is, but that didn’t stop the battles from happening. It wasn’t fun at all.

Knights of Pen and Paper 2 also uses acronyms and other jargon that just flew over my head. But that probably has more to do with my limited experience with playing tabletop RPGs.

Falling asleep during battles

Except for a few boss fights, Knights of Pen and Paper 2 isn’t very challenging. Once I chose my first five characters, I didn’t really feel the need to swap them out with new people (you can store extra characters in a tavern). I quickly settled into a routine. I’d cast my mage’s spells to hit multiple enemies at the same time, use the cleric to heal anyone who’s hurt, and then use the other three characters’ physical attacks.

I actually started to fall asleep at certain points during the game because of how dull this became, especially in quests that had back-to-back battles. And once I got in that sleepy mindset, it was hard to break out of it. I skimmed the dialogue and clicked through the battles as fast as I could. I listened to podcasts just so I had something else to do other than stare at the screen.

Using new characters temporarily disrupted my hypnosis, but it didn’t take long to fall back into a rigid pattern. The flow of battle just isn’t very interesting, which is a shame because all the monsters and bad guys look pretty good.

Above: The world of Paperos.

Tabletop simulator download. Tabletop Simulator Review. Unfortunately, professional review of the Tabletop Simulator game is not yet ready. This game is on the list and will be reviewed in the nearest feature. Meanwhile, you can find more from the official description below. View all reviews. Tabletop Simulator is the only simulator where you can let your aggression out by flipping the table! There are no rules to follow: just you, a physics sandbox, and your friends. Make your own games and play how YOU want! Unlimited gaming possibilities! Create your own original games, import custom assets, automate games with scripting, set up complete RPG dungeons, manipulate the physics, create hinges & joints, and of course flip the table when you are losing the game. Play almost any tabletop game you can think of! Being a multiplayer-focused game, up to 10 players can play at any given time. Our downloadable content (DLCs) are different from other games, as we partner with developers and publishers to bring their games into Tabletop Simulator.

You can only take on one quest at a time

This isn’t the kind of RPG where you can walk around and explore, so the towns, fields, and dungeons are just backdrops for the story. Together, these areas form a reasonably sized world, but you’ll crisscross through the same places over and over because you can only go on one quest at a time. This gets really annoying when you start travelling between opposites sides of the map, often visiting the same places you were just in during an earlier quest.

An airship obtained later in the game somewhat mitigates this by providing a shortcut to specific places, but it’s not enough. The boring battles don’t help, either, as a simulated dice roll determines your chances of being in a random fight whenever you’re traveling. Backtracking sucks if you get a bad series of dice rolls. It’s such a pain. Carrying more than one quest would’ve made the game shorter, but that would’ve been a good thing.

Conclusion

I wish I liked Knights of Pen and Paper 2 a lot more than I did. It has a lot of charm and heart — I can see it in the gorgeous pixel art and in all the neat jokes and references built into Paperos. But it just isn’t very fun to play. If you happen to be in that cross-section of being both a tabletop player and an RPG fanatic, it might be worth checking out. For everyone else, however, your time is better spent elsewhere.

Score:60/100

Knights of Pen and Paper 2 is out now on PC, Mac, Linux, iOS, and Android. Publisher Paradox Interactive provided GamesBeat with a Steam code for the purpose of this review.

Gallery: Knights of Pen and Paper 2

Above: This game is kind of bizarre at times.

Image Credit: Giancarlo Valdes/GamesBeat