
Loading critic reviews...
Finding deals...
Finding live streams...
The End of History is a sandbox-style strategy RPG from developer Tatamibeya, released in December 2025 for PC. Set in a medieval-inspired world, it casts you as a nameless wanderer who leaves their foster parent’s home to navigate a landscape teeming with conflicting NPC agendas. The game leans into open-ended storytelling, letting you forge alliances, commit betrayals, or ignore conflicts entirely. With no traditional quest markers, progression hinges on reactive dialogue and environmental exploration. It’s a game about shaping your own path amid a web of moral gray areas.
You’ll spend most sessions wandering procedurally generated towns, managing a small party, and engaging in turn-based combat that emphasizes positioning and elemental weaknesses. Dialogue trees force tough choices, saving a village might anger a noble, while siding with bandits could unlock hidden resources. Resource scarcity adds tension, as you juggle food, weapons, and loyalty meters. The world shifts based on your actions; betray a faction, and future encounters become hostile. Combat feels deliberate but can drag during boss fights. Exploration is key, as every interaction and item discovery nudges the story in new directions.
Community ratings average 7.3/10, with 82% completing the main story. Average playtime is 38 hours, though 25% of players log over 60. Moods are split: 45% curious, 30% determined, and 18% frustrated by ambiguous objectives. A $29.99 price tag and 50 achievements (avg. 32 earned) highlight accessibility. Reviewers note, “Choices matter but lack consequences,” while others praise “a world that feels alive.” Criticized for uneven pacing, it’s a polarizing pick for RPG fans who thrive on player-driven narratives.
This is for players who enjoy slow-burn storytelling and moral ambiguity. While the $30 price is fair for an indie RPG, the lack of hand-holding and inconsistent combat may deter newcomers. If you value emergent narratives over structured quests, it’s worth the investment. The 50 achievements add replay value, but don’t expect a polished experience, bugs and pacing issues linger. A niche title that rewards patience, but not without flaws.
Game Modes
Single player
Loading achievements...
Finding similar games...
Checking Bluesky...