

You can get Crusader Kings 2: A Game of Thrones from ModDB. With so many options, this mod is the foremost simulation of the relationships between the characters in A Song of Ice and Fire throughout the series’s history. You can drop into Westeros before the Seven Kingdoms were united, experience the rebellion against the Mad King Aerys Targaryen by Robert Baratheon and Ned Stark, or be plunged into the war that occurred after Robert’s death. You may want to watch some videos of others playing it - like the one above - before you give it a try.Ī Game of Thrones for Crusader Kings 2 has full maps of both Westeros and Essos and has several time periods you can pick to play in. Even if you’re used to playing the base Crusader Kings 2 game, the Game of Thrones mod can be intimidating. If you’re looking for a ton of action, Crusader Kings 2 isn’t the game for you, but if you want the ability to truly experience the tangled web of relationships between the various characters from Game of Thrones, this is the game for you. There's a full changelog at that link above.Game of Thrones is as much about the political intrigue as it is about the battles and brutality of life in Westeros. It doesn't necessarily mean the end of development, but it's everything the developers wanted to have in for a 1.0 release. It's been a great, polished mod for a while, but version 1.0 brings finishes "integration of World of Ice and Fire" material, improves the White Walkers and otherwise rounds off the package.

That means you can take control of Ned Stark and try to survive, or any of the more minor characters in any of the series' houses of assholes. The Game of Thrones mod switches the game's real world setting for Westeros, and switches out its nobles and royals for the nobles and royals of the Song of Ice and Fire novels. That's just one of the reasons why the Game of Thrones mod is so good - and it's just hit version 1.0. It's brilliant, but you might be a little intimidated by its setting. Crusader Kings 2 is a grand strategy game about human beings instead of armies, and it spins gripping Shakespearean yarns about medieval social climbing, full of murder, betrayal and bastards.
