

It’s simple enough to get to grips with and rewarding to play, though loses steam from time to time due to it’s repetitive and interprative nature. Merchants Of Kaidan is a charming dive into the world of trading. The game at this point was growing a little stagnant, but there is still plenty to do and a welcome addition to my Switch collection as a title I can revisit as soon as the itch returns. Luckily the game is simple and easy enough to dip in and out of so I very much expect to revisit and finish up. I made way with my quest for answers about my father but didn’t quite see it through all the way until the end. But the reward of finally breaking through is equally rewarding so I urge you to persevere. The one before also involved trading between the games vaguely laid out interior borders, as I mentioned earlier it can be a little hard to follow certain instructions since you need to pay due care and attention to the in-game text. The quest is particularly challenging as it requires you to trade within cities where profit margins are tighter. These quests increase your standing as a trader and allow you to buy and sell in a wider variety of goods. Where I left the game, I was still trying to make way with a Guild Quest. Though you can always refer back to the games Journal if needed. That and the fact that the story serves mostly as punctuation between hours of trading and exploring made me quickly lose focus of what I had to do to get ahead in the story. The overarching tale of avenging your father does become a little difficult to follow, I found myself losing track of a lot of the finer detail as it’s told using text. It’s a charming setting that lends itself to the games formula, it takes a little digging and an eye for detail to truly appreciate it but I quite enjoy that about it. Also dotted around are various places of interest such as mines and towers where you can plunder for goods or explore to discover hidden treasures (and hidden foes). Kaidan is a fictitious world set in an medieval time, the map hosts a land of many cities, towns and villages.

Again however, with enough persistance I am sure I would’ve made the necessary progress over a longer period of time so it isn’t as if the standard mode is completely unreasonable. I found the standard difficulty a little unforgiving in fact, so much so that I switched to the easier mode so that I may make enough progress to formulate my review. The game does leave a lot of your progress down to luck, after all the market algorithms are random and there are certain events that may trigger as you travel from place to place which may help or hinder you. But the rewards of your efforts are never far off so its easy to spend hours caught up in your adventures, keen to see the fruition of your actions. At first its almost overwhelming, but soon as you acclimate it does grow a little predictable and eventually repetitive in the long run. The game, though simple, quickly draws you in to its world and its various stories and secrets. Using this you can then expand your inventory to futher your entrepeneuric designs, hire folk to assist in plundering old ruins and mines or take part in guild quests to further your place in the games trade world. As you travel from place to place, each towns market will offer different prices so it’s up to you to buy and sell and drive profit. You are given an initially modest wagon in which to trade goods. Buy low and sell high as you increase your trading fleet and explore the worlds many deep and dark secrets.įrom the very beginning, you are walked through the games deceivingly simple controls and before long set off on your way to grandure.

Merchants Of Kaidan puts you in the role of a simple tradesman with dreams of grandure and revenge.
MERCHANTS OF KAIDAN GETTING ABOVE THE TRADER RANK CODE
Review code kindly provided by Forever EntertainmentĪdventure across the land as a trader of goods and learn the ways of the world as you also quest to avenge your father. Developer/ Publisher: Forever Entertainment
