The Witcher 3 in Concert: A 10-Year Anniversary Journey
Ten years after The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt first pulled me into Geralt’s world, I found myself in a hall full of fans who had been on that same journey. The 10-Year Anniversary Witcher in Concert wasn’t just music it was memory, emotion, and storytelling brought to life.
From the opening notes, each piece carried me back to different corners of the Continent: the early battles of White Orchard, the winds of Skellige, the heartache of Kaer Morhen. But the part that cut the deepest was when the ensemble turned to the music from Blood and Wine. That expansion always felt like Geralt’s last chapter, his farewell, and hearing those themes live gave me chills. It was warm, sweeping, and bittersweet all at once like standing in Toussaint again under its endless summer skies.
Having two of the original composers there made the night even more powerful. Seeing Marcin Przybyłowicz and Mikolai Stroinski firsthand how their work had touched people was a moment in itself. You could feel their emotion, and it made every note carry more weight.
The ensemble itself was smaller than I expected just 14 musicians but that intimacy made the performance even stronger. With Percival Schuttenbach bringing their unique folk edge, the music had a raw, human quality.
The visuals behind the musicians tied it all together with flashes of Geralt and Ciri, the rugged beauty of Skellige, the vineyards of Toussaint. Each image reminded us why this music matters: because it’s bound to the stories and characters that made us fall in love with the game.
Walking out, makes you wanna get entranced by The Witcher 3 all over again before the next game comes out. Like always its a journey I didn’t want to end. This concert wasn’t just about celebrating a game. It was about honoring the people that brought such a beautiful game to life, the memories, and our connection to the world of the Witcher.
See if the Witcher 3 is coming to your world at https://www.thewitcher.com/us/en/concert
