Sovereign Syndicate

Sovereign Syndicate

released on Jan 15, 2024

Sovereign Syndicate

released on Jan 15, 2024

Victorian steampunk RPG with tarot cards instead of dice. Investigate the disappearance of society’s most vulnerable to uncover a mysterious cult. Play as three characters, each with their own skills and motivations. Customize your characters with narrative choices to unlock new tarot cards.


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if you like disco elysium then I think you could get some enjoyment from this game. I liked the story and characters, once you start I will say I was confused of how these characters stories would intertwine but after a couple of chapters it started to make more sense. it's a fine game if you into this type of RPG.

This game has three protagonists, which could have been a great way of making it stand out from other CRPGs, especially Disco Elysium, however it ended up being my least favourite aspect of the game.

The characters don't interact or effect each other's sections enough for it to counteract the limited character development, player expression and choice that could have been much better if the game had a single character.

There is a lot of repeated areas and characters, which is fine given the games budget, but it probably would have been more bareable if the three protagonists were three seperate playthroughs, I think the pacing and repetition would have been more bareable if this was the case.

The writing is decent overall, but lacks a certain charm to make it enough to carry the game by itself.

I feel like three protagonists is kinda a cursed number. One or two protagonists is small enough to flesh out and really develop the main character(s) and five or more provides so many perspectives and enough variety that the same level of character depth is less important. But three is sort of an unsatisfying middle ground.

A longer review, since I'm the first one here: this game is great. Asolid 8/10, happily recommended, great. I'm saying that as someone who went into it...wary, to say the least.

Let's start with the minotaur in the room. The Disco Elysium comparisons were more of a red flag for me than a green one, if I'm being honest. Lightning rarely strikes the same place twice, and I was afraid that a game that so clearly is taking inspiration from one that's considered a masterpiece of it's genre would end up falling flat in comparison. And I still don't think that concern was entirely unfounded - in my opinion, the weakest parts of Sovereign are the ones that feel the most Disco. Of the three playable characters, it's Atticus who is the most Harrier-esque, and it's Atticus who I felt the least connected to. I still enjoyed his chapters but the comparisons felt a bit too easy, and not in a way that worked in Sovereign's favour. The character portraits, the way the skills narrate your thoughts, even just how the dialogue panel looks - when you're constantly being reminded of another game, you're going to start to compare. Unfortunately for Sovereign, the comparisons just aren't in its favour.

With that being said, all of the things that make Sovereign unique also happen to be the things it does the best. The idea of tarot cards instead of dice is fantastic, and it's implemented very well. It is, in my opinion, visually beautiful (especially for a CRPG, which often tend to be pretty...meh artistically imo). The three characters have their stories intersect in subtle ways (ones you don't often even notice until you move onto the next chapter and, oh! That one random thing I did with Teddy is helping me out with Atticus!), and that's very satisfying in action. While having three protagonists makes it harder to really connect with them, they're still interesting enough that it didn't bother me too much.

There’s a teeny but of jank, a few minor bugs, and it’s on the shorter end (not a negative for me, just a warning for some) - but overall the game is super solid at launch. If you're able to separate it from the game that clearly provided a decent amount of inspiration, Sovereign holds up really well on its own. It's more than worth the price, especially because I can see some replay value in it as well. Give it the chance it deserves, and it won't disappoint.