That sword Geralt unsheaths in The Witcher 3 Songs of the Past expansion artwork? We've seen it before

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A close up of Witcher hero Geralt drawing a sword from its sheath. The sword has an ornate red scabbard and a notched blade and elaborate crossguard. Image credit: CD Projekt Red

A third Witcher 3 expansion, Songs of the Past, was only announced yesterday, but it appears we've seen the sword Geralt unsheaths in the artwork before.

Roughly a month ago, on 30th April, CD Projekt Red shared artwork and a poem celebrating the Gaelic festival of Beltane, or Belleteyn as the company called it - a festival which marks the beginning of summer. In the picture, we see the eponymous witcher Geralt sitting, leant against a tree, while his bardic friend Dandelion serenades nearby nighttime revellers.

Geralt, a grey-haired, grizzled monster hunter, sits slumped against a tree at night, while in the background, people dance around a fire as a bard serenades them. CD Projekt Red's 'Belleteyn' artwork. Note the swords by Geralt's side in the bottom left. | Image credit: CD Projekt Red

On first inspection there's not much more to see, but look closer in the bottom left of the image, by Geralt's side and underneath the words "Have a magical Belleteyn", and you'll see two sheathed swords, and one of these has an unusually ornate crossguard, visible even in this area of painted dark.

The sword has a multilayered crossguard. There's a more functional and robust V-shaped crossguard overlaid by a golden, swooping, swirling decoration of sorts. It's a design that like-for-like matches the sword Geralt holds in the Songs of the Past expansion artwork. Reddit user Kasavir created a helpful overlay image for side-by-side comparison.

A close-up of a grizzled old warrior sat by a tree and the swords resting on the ground by him, with an overlaid image of a person drawing a sword from a sheath that looks just like the other swords seen in the image here. Reddit user Kasavir's helpful comparison image. | Image credit: Kasavir / CD Projekt Red

Given the outlandish and unique design of the sword, the chances of this being a coincidence are extremely small. This is backed up by realising this piece of 'Belleteyn' artwork was produced barely a month before the expansion's official announcement, so the artists involved would have been well aware of its significance. But is there anything more than an a-ha 'we hid it in plain sight' Easter egg going on here?

There could be. There is some speculation whirring around that Songs of the Past takes place in the coastal kingdom of Cidaris, which is underneath Redania and close to Skelige - areas from the base Witcher 3 game. Cidaris is also a region where Dandelion (known as Jaskier in the books) is thought to come from, so should the "Songs" in the Songs of the Past title refer to him, as a bard, then maybe this previously issued artwork offers us a snapshot of what's to come.

Everything else depends on the significance of the sword itself, and much has been made of it after the expansion announcement because, well, there's not much else to go on. The overwhelming thought seems to be Geralt is holding Ciri's Witcher 4 sword, but while there is a close resemblance, I've studied the recent Witcher 4 trailers and can confidently say they're not the same weapon.

A close-up of a kneeling character drawing a longsword from a scabbard.

CD Projekt Red has even released stills from The Witcher 4 announcement trailer that show Ciri's blade in detail, so you can clearly see the differences.

You can clearly see in The Witcher 4 announcement trailer that the hilts are different, and that the blade itself, while similarly notched, is different as well. Ciri's actual sword has three curved-notches whereas there are only two in the Songs of the Past artwork, and her sword has an area at the base of the blade cut out, whereas the sword in the Songs of the Past artwork does not. The Unreal demo of Witcher 4 from last summer also shows the hilt, perhaps more clearly, where you can see the differences. Ciri does not draw the blade in this demonstration, though.

If not Ciri's sword, then, what's the significance of it? There are some people who've suggested the sword is already in The Witcher 3 game, as Gesheft, a powerful silver sword. The blades are certainly very similar. Perhaps, then, the sword isn't important at all. After all, it wouldn't be the first time Geralt has held a sword in Witcher 3 expansion artwork - he did it for both Hearts of Stone and Blood and Wine.

Side note: it must be more than coincidence that the number of swords on Geralt's person in Witcher 3 expansion artwork has grown corresponding to the sequential number of the expansions themselves. In the first expansion's artwork Hearts of Stone, for example, Geralt has one sword. It's two for Blood and Wine and three for Songs of the Past. That's a clever touch, assuming it's intended.

A trio of Witcher expansion artwork images, showing the hero Geralt holding swords while being sneaked up on by some horrid looking creatures. Count the swords in each picture. They correspond to the sequential order of the game's expansions. Coincidence? | Image credit: Plenty_Shift_551 / CD Projekt Red

Exactly how teasing CD Projekt Red is being here, then, it's hard to tell without all of the details, and with Songs of the Past due next year, there's a long marketing campaign still to come. The next beat of that, incidentally, will be late summer, so perhaps some questions will be answered then. We're also expecting to see more of The Witcher 4 at Unreal Fest later in June.

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