Warhorse Studios’ gritty medieval RPG is trading the joystick for cardboard. Czech Games Edition (CGE) has revealed Kingdom Come: Deliverance – The Board Game, a full-scale adaptation of the acclaimed open-world saga set in 15th-century Bohemia. The tabletop version comes courtesy of two award-winning designers, and it’s shaping up to be one of the more ambitious video-game-to-board-game translations we’ve seen in a while.
The numbers alone hint at the scope. This is a heavyweight box in every sense, packing more than 700 cards and supporting 1 to 4 players. If you’re eyeing a solo campaign or a group crawl through the Kingdom of Bohemia, either works. The physical footprint is equally serious: the box measures 15.63 x 12.87 x 4.33 inches (39.7 x 32.7 x 11.0 cm), and it unfolds onto a sprawling map board of 27.16 x 14.96 inches (69 x 38 cm). That’s a lot of Bohemian countryside to conquer across your dining table.
CGE isn’t a random name attached to a licensed cash-in. The studio behind hits like Codenames knows how to build systems that last, and pairing that pedigree with the Kingdom Come license — a series celebrated for its stubborn commitment to historical realism — makes this one of the more intriguing crossovers on the calendar.
Here’s what we know about availability:
- Pre-orders are open now, running from July 1st to August 16th, 2026.
- The game makes its public debut at Essen SPIEL 2026 in October, one of the largest board game fairs on the planet.
- A full retail release from CGE follows in Q4 2026.
Pricing hasn’t been officially posted, so we won’t guess — though the game sits comfortably below the free-shipping thresholds of €199/US$229, which gives you a rough ceiling to plan around. Given the card count and the physical scale, expect a premium, campaign-style experience rather than a quick pick-up-and-play filler.
For fans of the games, the appeal is obvious: a chance to inhabit Henry’s world without a loading screen in sight, trading swordplay for card-driven strategy and map-based exploration. For board game collectors, it’s a chance to see how two seasoned designers handle a demanding, lore-rich property. Either way, the boxed edition of Bohemia lands later this year, and the window to lock in a pre-order is already open.