If you have spent more than five minutes in either Chivalry 2 or Mordhau, you already know...
Chivalry
The Chivalry series scratches a very particular itch, the one where you want to sprint across a muddy battlefield with a sword raised and absolutely no guarantee you will keep your head. These games mix chaotic medieval combat with a playful sense of brutality, turning every clash into a noisy mess of steel, shouting, and last-second heroics. They never pretend to be serious simulations. Instead they lean into the thrill of timing a perfect parry or landing a wild overhead swing that somehow connects. It is loud, messy, and strangely addictive, and that is exactly why the series has built such a loyal fanbase.
There are heroic deaths in Chivalry 2. Noble last stands. Brave charges. Desperate duels beneath burning siege...
There’s a moment in Chivalry 2 where you sprint headfirst into a screaming mob, swing wildly, and...
Chivalry 2 looks like chaos at first glance. Steel everywhere, teammates screaming, someone throwing a chicken at...
If you have spent more than ten minutes in Chivalry 2, you already know one thing. Every...
If you have ever been flattened by a man spinning with a polearm or deleted by a...
Tournament Grounds feels like the moment Chivalry 2 stops messing around. The map strips away all the...
Free-For-All in Chivalry 2 is chaos, blood, and comedy rolled into one medieval brawl. It’s where etiquette...
Chivalry 2 is chaotic, cinematic, and gloriously messy. It’s the kind of game where someone can lose...
If Chivalry 2 has taught me anything, it’s that subtlety is overrated. You can keep your dainty...
