Developer Warhorse Studios has announced that Kingdom Come Deliverance 2 is set to receive it’s third major DLC titled Mysteria Ecclesiae on November 11, 2025, for PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X/S, and PC. The upcoming bonus story content for Kingdom Come Deliverance 2 will take place in the Sedletz Monastery where players will be investigating an intriguing mystery which features a completely new storyline with a fresh batch of quests, characters along with multiple endings.
The new DLC will see Henry, the protagonist of Kingdom Come Deliverance 2, taking the role of a detective unraveling the secrets of the monastery that’s also hit by a mysterious and sudden disease outbreak which is the central plot of the main questline. Also, the new area introduced by the DLC, Sedletz Monastery will be unlocked and remain accessible after the completion of the main story for future explorations by the players.
The upcoming DLC will also include new outfit, weapons, potions, and books which will further expand Henry’s in-game knowledge and abilities in many ways. So if you’ve loved Kingdom Come Deliverance 2, it’s safe to say that you’ll thoroughly enjoy the new DLC which will provide more of what you enjoyed in the base game.
Upon it’s release, Kingdom Come: Deliverance 2 was highly praised for it’s exceptional melee combat system and engrossing narrative along with some of the deeper gameplay elements that players just won’t find in most other titles in it’s genre. The game had also sold over 2 Million units after 2 months of it’s release, as reported earlier and just a month later it has surpassed the 3 Million mark and the number is expected to grow even further in the coming months.
Kingdom Come Deliverance 2 also has Cryengine running under it’s hoods which resulted in some of the most stunning and realistic looking vegetation and natural environmental renderings in the entire current-gen of gaming. What’s even more impressive is the fact that the game manages to look spectacular even without using any Ray-Tracing features, making it far more optimized and scalable across a wide range of GPUs out there.

