
Modern European royalty has things easy. Without any form of meaningful power to wield, all they have to deal with is intra-family bickering and the odd scandal. The regal protagonist of Yes, Your Grace has to deal with all this, plus a kingdom on the brink of bankruptcy, starvation, and a drug epidemic. Oh, and there's also the small matter of a faceless barbarian army at his borders, come to make good on a dark promise.
Yes, Your Grace is a kingdom management game that tasks you, as the beleaguered King Eryk, with building an army to fend off the encroaching hordes. That's your primary goal. But you need to do so whilst keeping your people fed, safe and happy. And all the while you have to find time to be a good husband, and a father to three precocious daughters.
This is all achieved through a combination of familiar elements. There's a fair amount of Reigns to the way you must maintain four key resources: money, food, military strength, and contentment. And there's also a little point-and-click adventuring to be done, as you stalk around your castle gathering evidence for a climactic trial, and a pinch of the narrative adventure to the plentiful chats you'll have with various family members, lords and servants.

We mentioned the Reigns-like system at the game's core, but it's rarely as simple as playing one dwindling resource off against another through a binary narrative choice. Each day will start with you, in your throne room, fielding requests from a line of subjects, travelling merchants and visiting dignitaries. These queries can often be solved with some of your money or supplies, but you might also need to lend the party your general, witch, or hunter.
Deciding which problem deserves your finite resources is all part of the strategy. That said, much of the process is a bit of a gamble. It's generally not possible to gather all the relevant details to inform such a decision until after the fact, while you're forced to deal with most problems in a linear fashion. It's a shame you can't have more petitioners hold off until you've heard everyone out for the day, but at least it forces you to make decisions and accept the consequences in real-time – which is, of course, how it is for real rulers.

Once you've wrapped up your daily surgery, you're free to roam about your castle and deal with more personal matters. This domestic side of Yes, Your Grace is one of its stronger elements. Arbitrating between your two warring older daughters, talking the oldest out of her melancholy state, and indulging the youngest's flights of fancy might not be massively consequential, but these moments all serve to ground the story and make the game's pixel-art characters more relatable.
Finally, before you move things forward to the next day, you'll need to return to your throne room and conduct some more kingly duties. Early on in the game, you'll be tasked with forming alliances to help bolster the war effort. You'll do this by sending out a carrier pigeon to summon neighbouring royals. These kings and queens are admirably distinct and varied and will require some sort of payment from you if they're to join your side. And this is rarely as banal as money, with tricky decisions to be made.
Eventually, your castle-wandering and decision making will be scaled up and shifted to the battlefield immediately outside your walls. Here all your preceding efforts will pay off – or fail calamitously. Yes, Your Grace can be a brutal game, wiping you out if you let any part of the equation slide, even ahead of the big battle.

It's worth mentioning that Yes, Your Grace doesn't shy away from the rigid, patriarchal and occasionally queasy social structures of the medieval era just because it's a colourful fantasy game. The game hinges on you being pressured to marry off your eldest daughter, who is just 13 at the outset, while the game also touches upon the matter of spousal abuse. It doesn't always stick the landing in terms of tone, with the combination of humour and drama not always coming across as natural. But the writing is solid, and there's plenty of personality to its babbling characters.
It's a shame the game's menus aren't more elegant. They simply don't feel well optimised for console controls, with awkward menus that speak to the game's PC origins and the majority of Joy-Con buttons going entirely unused. We also encountered a couple of bugs that required a restart, which was annoying rather than calamitous, given the short, sharp phase-based nature of the game.
Yes, Your Grace is an odd mixture of a game. It tempts you in with its humour, its personality, and its easy-to-grasp mechanics. But it can really punish you with its insistence on frugality, and with its demand that you make decisions with less than a complete picture. No single element is wholly satisfying, but crucially it has that one thing that many games lack: heart.
Conclusion
An interesting combination of kingdom management and point-and-click adventuring that doesn't always form into a cohesive whole. Yes, Your Grace has a flavour all of its own, though, and you'll genuinely come to care for the royal family at its core.
Comments 26
What a stupid title for a videogame. It's like they don't want the game to sell.
Really love this game, the humour’s pretty well done and it’s constantly fun. Dunno about playing it on Switch though, these games usually work best on PC.
"This c*ck has been enchanted"
I'm sorry, what???
Bought it on launch, cant advance past week 4. No patch or acknowledgement yet from the developers. I want a refund
@TheWingedAvenger
To be fair, this wouldn't even make it to the quarter finals of this year's Stupid Name Olympics.
Can feel unfairly punishing cons? Poor Dark Souls, Bloodborne, Sekiro.They needs to be reviewed by you.
Needs pointer controls:
No gyro, no buy.
@DevlinMandrake @TheWingedAvenger It’s not that silly. Yes, Your Grace is a standard reply to royalty when they ask you to do a task, á la the entire gameplay loop of this game. It’s actually extremely fitting.
Thanks so much for the review! We have a patch in with Nintendo right now to fix up the couple of bugs that a small number of people are finding
Answers for some of your thoughts:
@TheWingedAvenger: The game has already sold more than 100,000 copies, so the name is working just fine thanks!
@Fulgor_Astral: Sorry to hear that! Where exactly did you message us? If you tweet at @nomorerobotshq, we'll definitely be able to help you!
@Varoennauraa: The game wouldn't really work with gyro controls... it's a walk around, talk to people, and use menus kinda game.
Thanks all!!
@NoMoreRobots Hahaha i love that response about the game's name . And personally, i love the name!
@StefanN IMO it's a fine name.. most titles/names are used already.. so you have to be creative
@Fazermint
I was rather intrigued by that phrase myself. Sounds a bit like posh porn, heheh.
@Alucard83 Yeah. And to me this doesn't just feel like none other were available anymore, I think the name is very distinct, unique and definitely sparked my curiosity
@nessisonett
I'm well aware of the origins of the phrase (although it's not used to refer to royals any longer). And where did I say it was a silly name?
@DevlinMandrake It wasn’t really aimed at you, it was mostly to further the discussion of the names you and the other person were having. Should have made that clear.
@NoMoreRobots on twitter, under the BraveAtNight handle.
Week 4, after a king visits me, leaving the throne room, screen goes black and stays like that
Hey @Fulgor_Astral! I'm guessing you're playing off an SD card — there's a weird bug right now where a small number of people playing off specific SD cards are finding it black screening at weird times. If you go into the settings, and copy the game to your system rather than off the SD card, you'll find it works again!
@nessisonett
Fair enough. I could have made it clearer but my flippant comment was mean to show that I don't think it's a particularly bad/daft name. A bit odd, yeah, but there's definitely a place for that sort of thing. Within reason.
@NoMoreRobots Mike, is that you?
@NoMoreRobots a fix is in the works anyway, right? I'd rather have the game in my sd card
Hey a fix is def on the way, coming soonish (pending however long it takes Nintendo to approve it, which can sometimes be a while unfortunately)
Give this game a 50% discount and I'll buy it no problem. Why is it $26 on the Switch Store but its $19.99 everywhere else!?
@TheWingedAvenger "es, Your Grace, a kingdom management RPG developed by Brave At Night and published by No More Robots, has made over $600,000 in revenue during its launch weekend.
The title landed on Steam and GOG on March 6, and according to No More Robots founder Mike Rose is now on track to sell roughly 250,000 units on Steam alone during its first year. " (Gamasutra)
@NoMoreRobots That's interesting. SNK Anniversary Collection has also the tendency to crash but moving it to the internal file system eliviated the problem somewhat. Games run faster on the internal memory as well. I have a strange issue with PayPal, so I was not able to purchase your game today, but I will buy it as soon as possible and I'm looking forward to it very much! (Altough it seems to be another game that proofs that any Non-Native speaker who is able to understand English well enough is better off changing the system language to English as well. I watched a short sequence of an Let'Play of the German version. Yet another horrible word by word translation of a video game, but even bigger developers like WayForward have a bad track record in this regard.)
I seem to have hurt some people's feelings - probably the game's developers - when I said the name of the game was stupid, an opinion obviously shared by a few other people here. They attempt to rebut me not by saying why they think the game's title is good, but by telling me how much the game has sold, which is beside the point. Giving your game a stupid title makes it sell less than it would have if you'd given it a good name. I never said the game wouldn't sell hundreds of thousands of copies. I said its name would be a detriment to it.
@TheWingedAvenger
It's just a name, who cares? Besides, the name is what instantly caught my attention when I was looking through the discounted games, making me look at it and ultimately resulting in me buying it.
Not that that even really matters. It's still just a name and if anyone bases the games they play off of what they're called... well, they have other issues. Lol.
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