

Whether or not this is what draws Geralt back to Toussaint or if it will serve Geralt well during his time in the city is yet to be known. The music is soft but somber enough to fit the beauty clashes with horror feel that they are going for and as Geralt and company heads towards the city he makes the comment “it’s exactly how I remember it.” Meaning, this is not Geralt’s first trip to Toussaint, thus he will share some history with a few of the land’s inhabitants that reside in the land of summer. Seeing such a change in color palette and landscape just fills the viewer with a sense of peaceful dread, as we all know that if people are too happy in these types of worlds then something bloody gruesome is about to go down in this remote and seemingly peaceful town. The first Blood and Wine trailer started off with a bright and beautiful summer landscape something that’s not commonly found in the Witcher games as Velen, Novigrad and Skellige are all doom and gloom like locations, and rightfully so. But do these deceivingly innocent trailers harbor a secret to that of the land of Toussaint and if so what exactly could we expect to experience during out time spent away from Temeria’s war torn lands?

The latest trailers to drop for the final expansion pack for The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt play out like a classic summer horror movie preview and I for one love every second of them.
