Compare Batman: Arkham Asylum (GOTY) prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by RockSteady Studios. Published by Square Enix. Released on 9/15/2013. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Single Player, Third Person, Hack & Slash, Adventure. Metacritic score: 91/100.

Batman trapped in his own rogues' gallery, fighting through Arkham Asylum with fists, gadgets, and shadows. A tight, gothic action-adventure that rewrote what superhero games could be.

Batman: Arkham Asylum is a contained, story-driven action-adventure that drops you inside a gothic psychiatric prison overrun by the Joker and his crew. The whole game takes place on Arkham Island, which is a deliberate choice - the setting functions almost like a Metroidvania, with areas progressively opening up as you unlock new gadgets. The grapnel gun, Batarang, Batclaw, explosive gel, and the line launcher are all tools you genuinely use, and Detective Mode - a toggleable X-ray overlay - lets you tag threats through walls and scan crime scenes. It never lets you forget you are playing a detective as much as a brawler. The centrepiece is the FreeFlow combat system. You strike, counter with timed button presses when the warning flash appears above an enemy's head, weave in Cape Stun, Ground Takedowns, and Batarang throws to keep combo chains alive and multipliers climbing. Experience earned from those chains buys upgrades. It sounds simple, and in story mode it largely is - enemies without guns fold quickly - but Challenge Mode maps that ship with the GOTY edition (Crime Alley, Scarecrow Nightmare, Totally Insane, and Nocturnal Hunter) push the system hard enough to reveal real depth. The flip side: boss fights are the game's weakest link. Most rely on repetitive patterns, and the final confrontation is widely seen as a letdown after everything that precedes it. The camera also gets claustrophobic in tight corridors. Stealth sections hold up better than the bosses do. Armed guards make direct combat suicidal, so you perch on gargoyles, pick off isolated enemies with silent takedowns, use floor grates and corner cover to thin a room before anyone raises an alarm. It is tense in a way that feels earned rather than artificially hard. The asylum itself is packed with 240 collectibles - Riddler trophies, chattering Joker teeth, inmate interview tapes, and Amadeus Arkham's cryptic wall writings - which layer genuine lore onto what could have been filler busywork. Kevin Conroy and Mark Hamill voice Batman and the Joker using their Animated Series performances, and the difference is audible from the first scene. The GOTY edition adds those four extra Challenge Maps but does not fundamentally change the package. The main campaign runs around 12 hours; completionists hunting every collectible and maxing Challenge Mode scores can double that. Visually the game shows its age in textures and models, but the overall art direction - gargoyle-lined halls, neon-lit medical wards, jungle greenhouse - holds its own. Compared to the sequels, Arkham City and Arkham Knight, this is the tightest and most atmospheric of the series, even if it is also the most mechanically basic. If you have never touched the Arkham series this is still the right place to start - the scope is manageable, the tone is exactly what a Batman game should feel like, and the FreeFlow combat system went on to influence third-person action games for the following decade. Just go in with realistic expectations about the boss fights. Alex, Scout Team

Batman: Arkham Asylum (GOTY)
ActionSingle PlayerThird PersonHack & SlashAdventure

Batman: Arkham Asylum (GOTY)

Sep 15, 2013RockSteady StudiosSquare Enix
GamerScout Says

Batman trapped in his own rogues' gallery, fighting through Arkham Asylum with fists, gadgets, and shadows. A tight, gothic action-adventure that rewrote what superhero games could be.

PC
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Historical low: €1.70

GamerScout Verdict

Best for players who want a focused, atmospheric superhero action game with stealth depth - start here before the sequels.

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Price History

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Screenshots & Media

About Batman: Arkham Asylum (GOTY)

Batman: Arkham Asylum is a contained, story-driven action-adventure that drops you inside a gothic psychiatric prison overrun by the Joker and his crew. The whole game takes place on Arkham Island, which is a deliberate choice - the setting functions almost like a Metroidvania, with areas progressively opening up as you unlock new gadgets. The grapnel gun, Batarang, Batclaw, explosive gel, and the line launcher are all tools you genuinely use, and Detective Mode - a toggleable X-ray overlay - lets you tag threats through walls and scan crime scenes. It never lets you forget you are playing a detective as much as a brawler. The centrepiece is the FreeFlow combat system. You strike, counter with timed button presses when the warning flash appears above an enemy's head, weave in Cape Stun, Ground Takedowns, and Batarang throws to keep combo chains alive and multipliers climbing. Experience earned from those chains buys upgrades. It sounds simple, and in story mode it largely is - enemies without guns fold quickly - but Challenge Mode maps that ship with the GOTY edition (Crime Alley, Scarecrow Nightmare, Totally Insane, and Nocturnal Hunter) push the system hard enough to reveal real depth. The flip side: boss fights are the game's weakest link. Most rely on repetitive patterns, and the final confrontation is widely seen as a letdown after everything that precedes it. The camera also gets claustrophobic in tight corridors. Stealth sections hold up better than the bosses do. Armed guards make direct combat suicidal, so you perch on gargoyles, pick off isolated enemies with silent takedowns, use floor grates and corner cover to thin a room before anyone raises an alarm. It is tense in a way that feels earned rather than artificially hard. The asylum itself is packed with 240 collectibles - Riddler trophies, chattering Joker teeth, inmate interview tapes, and Amadeus Arkham's cryptic wall writings - which layer genuine lore onto what could have been filler busywork. Kevin Conroy and Mark Hamill voice Batman and the Joker using their Animated Series performances, and the difference is audible from the first scene. The GOTY edition adds those four extra Challenge Maps but does not fundamentally change the package. The main campaign runs around 12 hours; completionists hunting every collectible and maxing Challenge Mode scores can double that. Visually the game shows its age in textures and models, but the overall art direction - gargoyle-lined halls, neon-lit medical wards, jungle greenhouse - holds its own. Compared to the sequels, Arkham City and Arkham Knight, this is the tightest and most atmospheric of the series, even if it is also the most mechanically basic. If you have never touched the Arkham series this is still the right place to start - the scope is manageable, the tone is exactly what a Batman game should feel like, and the FreeFlow combat system went on to influence third-person action games for the following decade. Just go in with realistic expectations about the boss fights.

Alex
Alex · Scout Team

Catch-all

Tags

steamFreeFlow CombatMetroidvania StructurePredator StealthGadget ProgressionDetective ModeChallenge MapsGothic AtmosphereCollectible-Heavy

System Requirements

Minimum

Memory
2 GB RAM
Storage
8 GB
Graphics
NVidia GeForce 6600 / ATI Radeon 1300
Processor
3 Ghz - Intel Pentium / AMD Athlon
System requirements
Windows XP / Vista / 7

Recommended

Memory
XP = 2 GB, Vista = 3 GB
Storage
9 GB
Graphics
512 MB 3D Graphics (NVIDIA GeForce 7900 GT
Processor
Core 2 Duo E6600 (2.4 GHz) or AMD Athlon 64 X2 4600+
System requirements
Windows XP & Vista

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Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
91

Game Info

Developer
RockSteady Studios
Publisher
Square Enix
Release Date
Sep 15, 2013

Features

Single-playerSteam AchievementsSteam Trading CardsPartial Controller SupportSteam CloudFamily Sharing

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Frequently asked questions about Batman: Arkham Asylum (GOTY)

How much does Batman: Arkham Asylum (GOTY) cost?

Batman: Arkham Asylum (GOTY) pricing changes often and varies by store, edition and region. The live price table on this page compares the cheapest in-stock offers from trusted key stores like Eneba and Kinguin, so you always see the current lowest price before you buy.

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What platforms is Batman: Arkham Asylum (GOTY) available on?

Batman: Arkham Asylum (GOTY) is available on PC.

When was Batman: Arkham Asylum (GOTY) released?

Batman: Arkham Asylum (GOTY) was released on 15 September 2013.

Who developed Batman: Arkham Asylum (GOTY)?

Batman: Arkham Asylum (GOTY) was developed by RockSteady Studios and published by Square Enix.

Is Batman: Arkham Asylum (GOTY) worth buying?

Batman: Arkham Asylum (GOTY) holds a Metacritic score of 91/100, making it one of the standout Action titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.