As someone who lives for 100% completion, I thought I knew what to expect from Kingdom Come: Deliverance II. I expected deep systems and historical accuracy.
I didn't expect a single Main Quest to be so dense, so branching, and so reactive that it practically demands two full playthroughs just to see every possibility.
Wedding Crashers is a top-notch example of an immersive RPG design that puts modern 'choice-based' games to shame.
The 20-Hour Setup
Most players will see the wedding as a transition from the Prologue into meeting Otto von Bergow. For a completionist, it's a 20-hour tactical operation.
Before you even set foot at the ceremony, the game forces a choice: The Radovan Route (combat and craftsmanship) or the Kreyzl Route (stealth and thievery).
Both routes take several hours to complete and are filled with incredible quests, characters and memorable moments.
But here's the kicker for achievement hunters: To truly 'see' everything, you have to play the middle-man. I found myself completing the Miller's quests right up to the point of no return, then pivoting to the Blacksmith to squeeze every drop of XP and lore out of the Trosky open world before the ceremony even started.
A Four-Stage Sandbox of Chaos
The wedding ceremony itself is divided into four distinct stages, and for a completionist, this is where the 'sweat' begins. Each stage has a Mandatory Activity that progresses the clock, but if you trigger it too early, you lose out on a dozen optional secrets.
I spent my afternoon:
- Rigging a three-tier Dice Tournament to secure the Gold Wedding Badge.
- Defeating the groom and Sir Jan Semine in a swordfighting ring.
- Playing 'sober-up' with Vostatek across all four phases.
Even romancing a bridesmaid just to see how it affected my reputation with the village.
Freedom vs. Consequence
The level of detail is staggering. Depending on who you arrived with, and what you did in previous side quests like The Jaunt, the NPCs react to Henry with genuine memory. If you stole the Cooking scraps for the beggars, the kitchen staff remembers. If you fueled a Moravian drinking binge, the Captain won't look you in the eye.
It's rare to find a quest that feels this 'alive.' It doesn't just track your objectives; it tracks your behavior, and it does it in such an immersive way every achievement hunter, gamer and completionist should experience.
The Verdict: The New Gold Standard
By the time the inevitable fistfight broke out and Henry was hauled off to the Trosky dungeons, I was impressed. Warhorse Studios has created a quest that rewards the obsessive player. It's a 100% completion challenge that feels like a living, breathing medieval festival.
If you're a trophy hunter or a checklist fanatic, Wedding Crashers is the moment KCD2 proves it's one of the best RPG games to complete even in 2026.