Dray2k: Sands of Salzaar, Dysons Sphere Programm and Tales of Immortal are also games to look out for. They're all amazing games IMHO.
I heard Xuan-Yuan has a slow start, hopefully I am wrong because it certainly looks intruiging.
It does have a slow start. Compared to the demo, where you get enemy variety and a boss fight within the first 20-30 min, the actual game has you spend several hours fighting primarily only wolves.
Pacing isn't its strong suite. It's a decent AA title in the vein of Witcher 2, but I wasn't a huge fan of the bestiary- there are many enemy types, but they can all be loosely described as either some version of undead/goblins/ghosts (who all share the same greyish-purple colour palette), or enemy soldiers, who all wear the same uniforms. The combat isn't bad, but the enemy roster looks pretty boring.
I did like the puzzles, though. And the "Chinese Chess" minigame was fun, :)
There are some interesting RPG systems under the hood, but it takes a while until you can take full advantage of them. There are 2 optional bosses you can fight in late game that let you really play around with your skills and item builds, but overall, the game is quite linear and straightforward. The game would've benefited from more ways to customize the look of your characters with gear as well. The boss battles were pretty fun. I got all but one achievement, b/c that oen requires you to experiment with the game's alchemy system to get a "failed fusion", which depends on RNG. The whole playthrough took me 80 hours according to Steam.
Ancient-Red-Dragon: So this game is part 7? Why not bring the first 6 here as well?
This is the first game in the series that's using real-time combat, as opposed to the turn-based battle systems of the earlier games. It's also supposed to be a graphical step up, which is why they released it with a simultaneous English localization. The story involves a character who appears to have been playable in earlier games, but it's very much a standalone game in terms of story.