Compare BioShock Infinite: The Complete Edition prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Irrational Games. Published by 2K. Released on 3/25/2013. Available on PC, Mac, Linux, Xbox. Genres: Action.

BioShock Infinite: The Complete Edition

BioShock Infinite: The Complete Edition

Add-on / DLC for BioShock Infinite — view full game
Mar 25, 2013Irrational Games2K
PCMacLinuxXbox
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About BioShock Infinite: The Complete Edition

I've gone back to BioShock Infinite twice now, and the opening hour still lands. You arrive in Columbia, a gleaming city pinned to the clouds above 1912 America, and Irrational Games spends real time letting you breathe in a place that feels genuinely wrong underneath all that sunshine and brass-band patriotism. Religious zealotry, extreme nationalism, and barely disguised racism are baked into the architecture before a single shot is fired. That worldbuilding work is the game's strongest card, and it plays it with confidence. When the shooting starts, you're working with a two-weapon limit, a roster of Vigors (the series' bottled superpowers, equivalent to the original's Plasmids), a wearable gear system that grants passive bonuses, and the Skyline mechanic: zipline-style rails threaded through Columbia's skyways that let you swing into combat from above or escape a firefight fast. The combat ceiling is high when all these systems click together. The frustration is that they don't always get the chance. A decent chunk of the game's arenas don't feature Skylines at all, and straight corridor gunfights against respawning Patriots and Handymen can feel like filler between the set pieces that actually use the game's full toolkit. The two-weapon cap forces situational thinking, which is smart design in theory, but the lack of weapon sway or spread means that in practice you're mostly headshoting stationary targets, which goes flat after a while. 1999 Mode exists for players who want real pressure, and the punishing resource management there makes every Vigor choice meaningful. Elizabeth, though, is the reason this game earns its reputation. She doesn't need babysitting, never blocks doorways, and actively throws you ammo, salts, and health mid-fight without prompting. Her ability to open Tears in reality, pulling in cover, turrets, or fresh supplies from alternate timelines, is the mechanical expression of the story's multiverse logic. More importantly, the writing between her and Booker DeWitt (voiced with real texture by Troy Baker) builds steadily across the runtime. Their dynamic avoids the escort-mission trap almost entirely: she reacts to events, develops opinions, and the relationship shifts as revelations compound. It's the kind of character work that still benchmarks against Half-Life 2's Alyx Vance. The story is where the game polarises. Critics at launch were split almost cleanly: mainstream outlets called it a generation-defining narrative; a vocal counter-argument held that its ambitious multiverse ending was more confusing than profound, and that its treatment of race and class as backdrop rather than genuine subject was a missed opportunity. Both readings have merit. The final act does lean heavily on interdimensional mechanics that not every player will find satisfying, and the pacing stumbles about two-thirds in. What's harder to dispute is that no other FPS from its era tried this hard to mean something, and the Burial at Sea DLC, which loops back to Rapture and closes with a genuinely affecting second episode, adds another three or four hours that reward players who stuck with the story. If you want a shooter that prioritises feel and friction above all else, Infinite is probably not the right call. If you want a ten-to-twelve hour single-player experience with a world you'll still be thinking about afterward, a companion character who earns her place, and enough mechanical variety to keep combat interesting even when it doesn't hit its ceiling, this is a case where the 94 Metacritic score is not just critic enthusiasm. The PC version, with precise mouse-look on those Skyline sections, is the best platform to play it on.

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Game Info

Developer
Irrational Games
Publisher
2K
Release Date
Mar 25, 2013

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Frequently asked questions about BioShock Infinite: The Complete Edition

How much does BioShock Infinite: The Complete Edition cost?

BioShock Infinite: The Complete Edition 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 BioShock Infinite: The Complete Edition available on?

BioShock Infinite: The Complete Edition is available on PC, Mac, Linux, Xbox.

When was BioShock Infinite: The Complete Edition released?

BioShock Infinite: The Complete Edition was released on 25 March 2013.

Who developed BioShock Infinite: The Complete Edition?

BioShock Infinite: The Complete Edition was developed by Irrational Games and published by 2K.