Divinity: Original Sin 2 - Definitive Edition

The critically acclaimed RPG that raised the bar, from the creators of Baldur's Gate 3. Gather your party. Master deep, tactical combat. Venture as a party of up to four - but know that only one of you will have the chance to become a God.

Divinity: Original Sin 2 - Definitive Edition is a tactical rpg, rpg and turn-based strategy game developed and published by Larian Studios.
Released on September 14th 2017 is available on Windows and MacOS in 13 languages: English, French, German, Russian, Polish, Spanish - Spain, Simplified Chinese, Traditional Chinese, Italian, Korean, Czech, Portuguese - Brazil and Japanese.

It has received 185,065 reviews of which 177,398 were positive and 7,667 were negative resulting in an impressive rating of 9.5 out of 10. 😍

The game is currently priced at 13.49€ on Steam and has a 70% discount.


The Steam community has classified Divinity: Original Sin 2 - Definitive Edition into these genres:

Media & Screenshots

Get an in-depth look at Divinity: Original Sin 2 - Definitive Edition through various videos and screenshots.

Requirements

These are the minimum specifications needed to play the game. For the best experience, we recommend that you verify them.

Windows
  • Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system
  • OS *: Windows 7 SP1 64-bit or Windows 8.1 64-bit or Windows 10 64-bit
  • Processor: Intel Core i5 or equivalent
  • Memory: 4 GB RAM
  • Graphics: NVIDIA® GeForce® GTX 550 or ATI™ Radeon™ HD 6XXX or higher
  • DirectX: Version 11
  • Storage: 60 GB available space
  • Additional Notes: Minimum requirements may change during development.
MacOS
  • OS: macOS 10.13.6 High Sierra
  • Processor: Core i5
  • Memory: 8 GB RAM
  • Graphics: HD Graphics 5000 or Radeon R9 M290X
  • Storage: 20 GB available space
  • Additional Notes: Nvidia GPUs are not supported at this time and will likely result in graphical distortion or artefacts.
    Supported:
    - MacBook Pro: all since late 2016
    - MacBook Air: all since mid 2017
    - iMac: with AMD GPUs since late 2013
    - Mac Pro: all since late 2013
    - Mac mini: all since 2018

Reviews

Explore reviews from Steam users sharing their experiences and what they love about the game.

Nov. 2024
In my humble opinion this game is better than BG3. Better characters, better writing and overall just more fun to play. This is Larian when they are at their best. Also, Sebille called me a good boy. 10/10
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Aug. 2024
What an incredible turn based RPG. I've spent just less than one thousand hours on this masterpiece which means its my most played Singleplayer game in my adult life (admittedly some hours were playing multiplayer with friends but still). Now there's no way that I'm going to be able to list all the good things about this game in one review, but I'll try my best and highlight some really good aspects to hopefully encourage anyone reading this to give it a go. Pros - Firstly, the music in this game is AMAZING. It either sounds completely badass for fights or incomparably elegant for exploring the world. There were so many times during my many playthroughs that I had to make the decision of either humming along to the music or letting my ears fully embrace those beautiful instruments. Visually this game is stunning, the details in the world and the particle effects of abilities/spells look so well done and make it feel so satisfying when you cast them. I also really appreciate that this games movement is very freeing for a turn based RPG. I've always disliked those games where movement is restricted to like a chess board with squares. Having your characters quite literally being able to move anywhere feels so much better. Next up, the story. EVERYTHING has lore in this game. If you love reading and want to read pages and pages of lore, character backgrounds and potentially hundreds of books scattered across the game, then you can most definitely do so. But its not forced onto you. Most books that you find throughout the game aren't necessary to progress, and a lot of the time there will be an option to resolve problems by fighting if you prefer a little more action. Its completely up to you how you want to play. Lastly, I want to talk about the character creation. The character creation in Divinity is phenomenal. Obviously you can change the look of your character to how you want but more importantly, there are 10 Skill categories that you can allocate points to. You can mix and match them together and pair them with *mostly* any type of weapon in the game. The combinations you can make are endless. For example: Want to be a persuasive fire-wizard that uses daggers instead of the usual staff/wands? Want to be a non-confrontational thief that escapes his enemies by turning the floor to ice causing them to slip? Want to be an archer that fires love arrows to temporarily make his enemies fight for him? Want to be a cleric wielding a giant axe who can explode corpses? Well you can have all 4 in the same party! I could talk about this game for hours but at the time of writing this these are the aspects of the game that came to mind. Now I'll talk a little bit about some very minor cons that don't put the game in any bad light but I feel are good to know anyways. Very Minor Cons - Gift Bags: If you don't care about achievements then move onto the next con -- Gift bags are the developers way of giving their own made mods for divinity. They are free little game mechanics that you can choose whether to enable in your game or not. (I highly recommend that you do not enable any of these for your first playthrough as some make the game considerably harder/easier). Some of these settings are incredibly useful but the issue is since these are acted like mods, achievements are disabled if you enable them, so you will need to replay the game without them in order to gain any. I wish the devs would have actually implemented some of these into the base game rather than adding them as mod-like settings after. Inventory: Inventory management in this game could be a liiiiiiittle better. There's nothing necessarily wrong with the inventory system, but there are definitely a few QOL changes that they could have added. One example being the ability to name bags. Throughout the game you will pick up individual bags that you can place in your inventory and put any item inside. They are incredibly useful in tidying up your inventory and reducing clutter, but these bags cannot be named. So you will end up having to repeatedly look inside each bag to find out which bags have which items. Additionally, when crafting stuff, if an ingredient is inside one of these bags, the crafted item may appear in the bag of the ingredient instead of just appearing at the bottom of your inventory for you to sort out. Again, not exactly a game-breaking problem but definitely slightly frustrating when you have lots of items in a bag and now need to find a random crafted item amongst them all. Other than whats listed above I just wish the game never ended honestly. I want more cool spells, more races, more talents, more fights, MORE OF EVERYTHING. Truly a really incredible game, please give it a go because the developers deserve it. Thanks for reading <3.
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June 2024
I came to this game from Baldur's Gate 3 cause I wanted to try another game from Larian Studios. I didn't expect much since it's an older game, but, I've been pleasantly surprised. It's very immersive! There's so many items to find everywhere, the music is great, and I'm enjoying the voice acting. There's so much attention to detail and the tutorial really helps to ease players into the game. I'm 69 years old and have never played turn based games like BG3 or DoS2 but I"m happy to say you're never to old to learn something new and discover the joy of a new genre in gaming. I highly recommend this game to everyone who loves rpgs whether you're experienced with them of not. This one will take you on an adventure you'll remember for a long time.
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June 2024
The difference between BG3 and D:OS2 can be explained pretty easily if you've ever looked at all the stuff that 5e has done to make D&D more simple and accessible-- all of that makes for a worse video game. D:OS2 is dense in systems, but it takes the time to teach them to you and by the time you get going, you really feel like a god of some sort. Combat is never about chipping away health, every turn has important decisions that can be made that affect how the combat rolls out, with enough dynamism to allow both you and the enemy to bounce back into contention from the brink of death at almost any point in the fight. Also, the music is better. The quest writing and characters of BG3 are certainly more mature and more polished, but OS2 feels like I am sitting down with a bunch of friends back when I was a kid to make up a story on the spot. BG3 is the best version of 5e D&D as it actually exists, but OS2 is the game you thought you were playing when you first learned what Dungeons and Dragons was. Both are good, but damn I love OS2.
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April 2024
I'd say it was the best RPG experience I've ever had. 10/10 To remember it for the future, I'll just list some memorable things from our journey - Friend didn't recommend undead... so I thought it'd be funny to be one and chose "undead". - The only thing stopping me from unlocking every door in the game were puzzles. - Eventually, I became a debuff overlord crippling any enemy I see. - The first person we stole from was a crippled old lady struggling with several diseases. - Black pits.... Well, everything else was a breeze is all I can say about the matter. - FIRE! FIRE! AHHHHH IT'S EVERYWHERE!!!! - One friend got pet pal, cause they like animals... but all the animals hated them :( - That same friend was an elf. Things happened and they became to be hated by their entire race too. - Bard Friend pulls out lute "LISTEN, DO YOUR HEAR ME? LISTEN, DO YOU FEEL IT? LISTEN-" - My red lizard companion who I also got to play as eventually became a one shot, one kill boss killer. - Made out with that same red lizard as an undead (somehow), but was later cuckolded... by his wife. - Loading times were long, but I cannot forget the laughs we had while waiting. It was a several month journey with my friends. I cannot thank them enough for enriching my experience of the game. I highly recommend this game to everyone who wants to go on a journey with friends! Thanks for inviting me to play! It was a blast!
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Last Updates

Steam data 21 November 2024 21:11
SteamSpy data 19 December 2024 07:33
Steam price 23 December 2024 20:46
Steam reviews 23 December 2024 05:54
Divinity: Original Sin 2 - Definitive Edition
9.5
177,398
7,667
Online players
9,174
Developer
Larian Studios
Publisher
Larian Studios
Release 14 Sep 2017
Platforms