At the time of its
early access release,
Bannerlord became the largest launch of the year on
Steam, achieving more than 170,000 concurrent players. Chris Bratt, writing for
Eurogamer, gave the game's early access a largely positive review in an article entitled "
Bannerlord is janky as hell, but I absolutely love it". He wrote: "
Bannerlord may not be finished and I suspect it won't be finished for a long time to come. It can be repetitive and unfair, many of its systems aren't up to scratch just yet and it's not uncommon to see the game crash or for you to run into some bizarre bug along the way. But at the same time, despite all of that, it is so much bloody fun." Fraser Brown for
PC Gamer shared similar sentiments in an article subheaded "It's not finished, it's still janky, but it's brilliant all the same." In a review for
Kotaku, Ethan Gach echoed the incomplete, yet enjoyable gameplay, writing "The action is clunky, the world is ugly ... and since it's an early access game, it's still far from fully fleshed out. And yet after spending several hours with the game I've been thoroughly won over by it."
IGN also gave the game a largely positive review. In their article, Leana Hafer stated "for an early access game, it's ambitious and reasonably well-polished, even if it still has a long way to go." Reviews published after the game's full release generally praised its combat gameplay and visual polish, with ''Jump Dash Roll's
Derek Johnson claiming "everything not only looks good, but sounds super and runs well, too". However, reviewers also criticized the lack of depth of the kingdom and diplomatic gameplay. Jon Bolding from IGN'' writes "The actual kingdom-management strategy is weak ... Bannerlord's world is busy enough, with caravans of traders, robber bands, parties of warriors, and peasants scurrying about between settlements like ants, but all that really only exists so you have something of your enemy's to raid, pillage, loot, and burn." ''GameGrin's'' Pezh J. describes the game's potential as "totally untapped. Though you may find fun in the campaign/sandbox battles, or enjoy the variety of multiplayer modes, it’ll take a lot more than that to justify
Mount & Blade II: Bannerlord in the current state it's in." ==References==