Great moments in PC gaming are bite-sized celebrations of some of our favorite gaming memories.
Crusader Kings 3
Developer: Paradox
Year: 2020
Death and betrayal aren’t new concepts in Crusader Kings 3—you probably spent the majority of its predecessor doing much the same—but the random events that can occur make some deaths that extra bit special. What made this particular death even more memorable is that it’s definitely something that’s happened during Scotland’s tumultuous feudal history, or maybe even last weekend. Let me set the scene:
After clawing back more land from the English and Nords, King Malcolm III of Scotland decides, “You know what? I’m going to have a party!” Inviting his nearest and dearest to celebrate his success, he puts on a great spread. As King, he has ample good booze for the festivities. Malcolm can be a little hot-headed at times—OK, he has the Wrathful, Cynical, and Arrogant traits, so bear with me here—but overall, he’s enjoying the vibes. Except that Malcolm’s shitty cousin, the gobby Gospatric, has decided to come over to tease him while he’s trying to have a royal piss.
This is where things get ever-so-slightly out of hand. Gospatric doesn’t even get to finish calling Malcolm a “rattling coxcomb” before Malcolm stabs him—in the FACE. Mid-piss, this guy stabs his cousin right in the coupon. Didn’t even hesitate. What’s worse—the game didn’t even give me a choice. I had no part in the face-stabbing bonanza. It took a solid five minutes of wheezing laughter before I could make the next decision.
This next decision was slightly less shocking, but made sense given the circumstances. You see, Malcolm’s son, Malcolm IV, watched the whole thing go down. You can either beg him not to tell anyone, which he will begrudgingly do, or you can kill him as well while quipping, “Talk about being in the wrong place at the wrong time!” The casual humour around this affair and others like it is what makes Crusader Kings 3’s random events so enjoyable.
A split-second decision like this can change the course of your entire game. Though he was sworn to silence, Malcolm IV was a dick to the King from then on, so he had everything taken off him and was practically excommunicated from the family.
Sounds about right for Scotland in 20—I mean, 1066.