Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
PC Gamer
PC Gamer
Andy Chalk

The Witcher show finally adds a character exclusive to the games, too bad he's 'exceptionally loathsome and arrogant'

Roderick de Wett Gwent card art detail.

We don't talk about The Witcher on Netflix as much as we used to—the air's gone out of it a little bit, I think, although I hold out hope that Liam Hemsworth's debut in the title role will rejuvenate it—but this is interesting enough to be notable: According to Witcher fan site Redanian Intelligence, actor Jack Myers has been cast in the role of Nilfgaardian count Roderick de Wett.

"Who the hell is Roderick de Wett?" I hear you ask, and fair enough—he's not exactly a major player on The Witcher scene. But he is apparently the first game-exclusive character to appear in the Netflix series, which is based on Andrzej Sapkowski's novels and short stories, and not CD Projekt's game series. There's a possible connection with the books—de Wett shares a name with Nilfgaardian prince Joachim de Wett, suggesting a possible familial connection—but Rod himself was entirely an in-game figure.

I say "was" because, without going too deep into spoilers, his tale began and very definitively ended in the original Witcher RPG after he decided to come at the king and missed badly. I really don't recall much about him beyond a vague sense that he was a through-and-through jerk and that I didn't feel bad about busting his head open.

His Gwent card description reassures me that I am not wrong in that sensation: "Count de Wett is exceptionally loathsome and arrogant, but at least he enjoys a little dice poker on the side."

Of course, the likelihood is that de Wett on Netflix will be different from his in-game character. The timeline is complicated but The Order of the Flaming Rose, of which de Wett was a member, wasn't established until after the events being chronicled in the Netflix series, and so his path to the pointy part of Geralt's sword remains untaken at that point. I imagine he'll probably still be a scumbag, but likely of the more general "Nilfgaardian nobility" sort, rather than the "Geralt wants to kill this guy specifically" sort.

As high-profile casting goes, this really isn't up there with, say, Laurence Fishburne or even Danny Woodburn. But it is a nice callback to the videogames, which I think sometimes don't get the acknowledgement they deserve for bringing The Witcher to mainstream attention. It's a deeper cut than I would've liked, but it's also kind of fun as a "if you know, you know" kind of thing.

As for when we'll see de Wett in action, that remains a mystery. The Witcher season 4 is expected to debut sometime in 2025, but we're still waiting for a solid date.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.