The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt – Blood and Wine
The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt – Blood and Wine is the second and final expansion pack for the 2015 video game The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt, following the first expansion, Hearts of Stone. Developed by CD Projekt Red, the expansion follows Geralt of Rivia as he travels to Toussaint, a duchy untouched by the war taking place in the base game, as he hopes to track down a mysterious beast terrorizing the region.
Blood and Wine was released for Windows, PlayStation 4, and Xbox One on 31 May 2016, and later released for the Nintendo Switch on 15 October 2019, with PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X/S versions released on 14 December 2022. The expansion received widespread acclaim from critics, winning a number of awards. Many consider it to be one of the best downloadable content packs of all time.
Plot
After the events of the base game, Geralt is offered a contract by Duchess Anna Henrietta, the ruler of Toussaint, a vassal duchy under the Nilfgaardian Empire. Two knights of Toussaint were murdered in strange circumstances, and Geralt is tasked with killing the monster responsible.When Geralt arrives in Toussaint, a third knight dies. All the men seem to be killed for violating the five virtues that all knights of Toussaint swear to uphold. The killer is actually Dettlaff van der Eretein, a higher vampire. Geralt sees him killing a fourth knight, and a fight ensues. Regis, another higher vampire and friend of Geralt, interrupts the fighting and convinces Dettlaff to leave. Regis is bonded to Dettlaff, by whom he is recovered, by vampire code.
Geralt and Regis discover that someone kidnapped Dettlaff's former lover Rhenawedd to force him to murder the knights. Their investigation leads them to a wine keeper who admits to selling to the Cintrian, a mysterious buyer. The Cintrian later gets killed while trying to steal a jewel that Henrietta identifies as a family heirloom lost many years ago. She speculates that her long-lost sister Syanna, who was exiled for supposedly being cursed, may be involved.
Geralt, Regis, and Detlaff team up to investigate and discover that Syanna and Rhenawedd are the same person. She faked her own kidnapping and orchestrated the murders. Dettlaff feels betrayed and threatens to destroy the capital city of Toussaint unless Syanna agrees to meet him for an explanation within three days. After learning of the situation, Henrietta confines Syanna to protect her from Dettlaff and orders Geralt to kill him.
Three days later, lesser vampires attack the city. To find Detlaff, Geralt has two choices: free Syanna or find the Unseen Elder, the head of Toussaint's vampires. If Geralt chooses to free Syanna, he goes to the Land of a Thousand Fables, a world within an enchanted fairy tale book where the sisters used to play, and locates her. While in there, he can retrieve a magical ribbon for her. She explains that she killed the knights because they exiled her, and some of them even abused her. If Geralt opts to find the Unseen Elder, he persuades him to summon Dettlaff. The head vampire summons Dettlaff to Tesham Mutna and has all vampires withdraw from Beauclair.
At this point, several endings are possible. If Geralt opts to release Syanna from the book, she, Geralt, and Regis go to Tesham Mutna, where Dettlaff confronts Syanna. If Geralt retrieves the ribbon, then it teleports Syanna to safety. Enraged, Dettlaff attacks Geralt and Regis, forcing them to kill him. Geralt is awarded Toussaint's highest honor. Before going to the ceremony, he can choose to uncover the identity of Syanna's would-be fifth victim, which turns out to be Henrietta, with the "punishing operation" against "renegade" knights was supposed to end with assassinating her. Geralt can then opt to confront Syanna in her cell about it. Regardless, he attends the ceremony where the duchess judges Syanna for her crimes. If he chooses not to look into the fifth victim, or if he investigates it and then talks to Syanna in an admonishing manner, she kills Henrietta and is in turn killed by de la Tour. With no living heirs to the dukedom, Toussaint falls into a state of chaos. If Geralt asks Syanna to consider forgiving her sister, which is only possible if he previously read a governess's diary, the two sisters resolve their differences and Toussaint celebrates.
If Geralt did not retrieve Syanna's ribbon, Dettlaff kills her. Geralt can choose to let him go or kill him with the help of Regis. Regardless, the grief-stricken Henrietta has him imprisoned for bringing Syanna to Dettlaff until Geralt's friend Dandelion convinces her to release him. Geralt then meets with Regis and can choose to look into the fifth victim. If he learns the truth and opts to tell Henrietta, she refuses to believe Geralt and forbids him from seeing her ever again.
If Dettlaff was summoned by the Unseen Elder, he is furious that Geralt and Regis did not bring him Syanna and attacks them, but gets killed. As Geralt never finds the governess' diary in this case, both sisters die even if the fifth victim was investigated.
Either way, if Dettlaff was killed, Regis is attacked by vampires who label him a traitor. Geralt returns home to the vineyard estate that formed part of his payment to find a surprise visitor. Depending on the choices and endings from the base game, the visitor may be either Yennefer or Triss, Ciri, or Dandelion.
Release
On 7 April 2015, CD Projekt announced two expansion packs for The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt—the first expansion being Hearts of Stone and the second being Blood and Wine. Blood and Wine was released on 31 May 2016. It was later released alongside Hearts of Stone in a complete edition for the Nintendo Switch on 15 October 2019.Reception
Blood and Wine received "universal acclaim" from critics, according to review aggregator website Metacritic. Many reviewers praised the way CD Projekt Red ended the storyline of the character Geralt of Rivia and the size of the expansion, with some saying it could be a new project. In a PC Gamer review by Tom Senior, he praised the developers for making such an in-depth expansion, and if they kept getting released, he'd still be playing The Witcher in 2020. Senior commended the farewell to the series. The Escapist writer Steven Bogos stated it was a good expansion overall, but was not the adventurous "save the world" storyline like previous Witcher titles.Richard Cobbett for Rock, Paper, Shotgun wrote that the game was not CD Projekt Red's best work, saying it had a good story but not as good as Hearts of Stone's. In contrast, Chris Carter for Destructoid believed Blood and Wine was better than Hearts of Stone due to the latter feeling like a "polished, elongated quest". He said Blood and Wine was expansive enough that it could be considered a new project. "Blood and Wine is sometimes as thematically dark as its predecessors", Kevin VanOrd said in a GameSpot review, although when compared to other aspects of The Witcher 3, it was less grim. Leif Johnson for IGN had initial doubts due to the slow start but started to "love it" within the first few hours of gameplay. Shacknews writer Josh Hawkins noted he experienced a few problems and bugs in the expansion, but believed it to be a good addition to the series.