Lost Heir 2: Forging a Kingdom

by Hosted Games


Role Playing

2.99 usd



Your dragons and elves will unite the kingdom to take back your capital city!


Unite the kingdom to take back your capital city! Youll need dragons, elves, and perhaps even demons to avenge your parents murder in this fantasy epic! In "The Lost Heir 2," youll continue as the prince or princess of Daria displaced from your palace after the murder of your parents. Face betrayal, seek romance, battle enemies in war, and navigate the intrigues of court. The fate of the kingdom of Daria is in your hands."The Lost Heir 2" is a 250,000-word interactive fantasy novel by Mike Walter—the second of a trilogy—where your choices control the story. The game is entirely text-based—without graphics or sound effects—and fueled by the vast, unstoppable power of your imagination.• Play as female or male, gay, straight, or asexual.• Meet elves, dwarves, gnomes, and more as you explore the furthest reaches of the land.• Learn amazing new abilities from legendary teachers and search for powerful artifacts to help you on your way.• March into heated battle and lead your army to victory!• Fly a dragon, raise an undead army, discover alchemy, summon new demons and more!Bug fixes. If you enjoy "Lost Heir 2: Forging a Kingdom", please leave us a written review. It really helps!

Read trusted reviews from application customers

I really enjoy the DnD style of the trilogy. Other reviews influenced my review of the third game but, even though the writing could be a bit better in spots, everything else makes up for it. And it's not that bad in the first place. I really enjoyed my time with these games. I am at least halfway through the third game, which has a really fun sequence of events. My favorite, or one of my favorite, genres of writing is fantasy. And I really enjoy fantasy CYOA.

Sayer Slayer

The first book was great. This one feels a bit rushed by comparison. The story is good, though, and there are a fair number of ways to specialize your character. It's not a bad book by any means, but it doesn't match up to the first book in the series. The character growth was more organic in the 1st book (based on behavioral choices you made for your character), while this one had a lot of "buy a book to increase this stat." That said, I still recommend it, I think.

Michael S

IT'S AWESOME THAT YOU CAN BE A LESBIAN AND STILL HAVE CHILDREN THROUGH MAGIC BUT THE REASON I'M GIVING IT ONE STAR IS BECAUSE IF I SAY SOMETHING WRONG TO JESS HER RELATIONSHIP GOES DOES 10 TO 20 BUT IT BARELY GOES UP🤬😡

Tal Collier

Good story and exciting. However there's a tendecy to need gold for the best outcomes. This would be fine except THERE'S NO WHERE TO SELL STUFF! If I try to go into the store there's no option to sell which would be really helpful. My Squire died in the attack on Ludd because I couldn't afford to buy him proper armour.

david fitzpatrick

This sequel doesn't improve off the first. Disney's twist villain, story is short, relationships are artificial and flat, villain/all characters are 1 dimensional, more races that act exactly like stereotypes of their archetypes, and actions that do not define your personality but rather your stats. Characters have no development to them, villains are bosses to beat and Legacy Bonus, the cashgrab for a satisfying end, doesn't have content in it, just stats and items. This trilogy isn't worth buy

Est Val

Fun and good reply but the next one just isn't good and hurt all the great things about this one and the one before it

brad fry

May i please get a refund rhis wasnt the book i was gonna buy and i barely read it

Brian Howell

Great game but it could do a little better with how large and long the story is

Tsering Shakyawalker

I actually purchased this book. Excellent sequel to the masterpiece original. You get to make alliances and wage war. The plot, and the characters were interesting. My favorite part was visiting the different races all over the world. The story even has a twist at the end. Highly recommend.

Adam Young

Much better and emersive than part 1. You have freedom as a leader and strategist and your choices matter. I did not enjoy the pure stat-based strategy when keeping your troops operational, but did not mind it all too much either. As a whole, I would recommend.

Maya N