Compare Bioshock: The Collection prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by 2K Australia. Published by 2K Games. Released on 9/13/2016. Available on PC, Xbox, Nintendo Switch. Genres: Action, Single Player, First Person, Horror, FPS / TPS, Adventure, RPG. Metacritic score: 96/100.

Three full BioShock campaigns plus Minerva's Den in one package - atmospheric immersive sims that blur the line between shooter and RPG.

BioShock: The Collection bundles the three mainline BioShock games along with the Minerva's Den DLC into a single package, giving you somewhere north of 40 hours of some of the most narratively ambitious first-person games ever made. The original BioShock and its sequel are set in Rapture, an art-deco underwater city that has collapsed under the weight of its own ideology. BioShock Infinite trades the ocean floor for Columbia, a floating city wrapped in American exceptionalism and religious fervour. Each game uses its setting as an argument, not just a backdrop, and that's rarer than it should be. From a mechanics standpoint, these are immersive sims dressed in shooter clothing. You juggle firearms with plasmids (or vigors in Infinite) - the series' version of active abilities - to build combat approaches that feel genuinely different from one run to the next. Incinerate plus oil slick, telekinesis as a grenade redirect, swarms of bees as a crowd-control opener: the systems reward creative players who pay attention to the environment. BioShock 2 arguably has the tightest combat loop of the three, giving you dual-wielding between weapons and plasmids simultaneously and adding a more grounded power-fantasy rhythm. Infinite leans harder on the shooting and pulls back on the immersive sim depth, which is a trade-off worth knowing about before you go in expecting the same texture. The writing is where this collection earns its place in the conversation. Rapture's world-building is delivered almost entirely through audio diaries and environmental storytelling - a corpse propped next to a handwritten note, a shop window that tells you exactly what this society used to value and what it's become. Andrew Ryan is one of gaming's more genuinely frightening antagonists precisely because his logic is internally consistent. Minerva's Den, often overlooked, has a smaller story that hits harder than its runtime suggests and stands as one of the better DLC campaigns in the genre. If you skip it, you're leaving the best-kept secret in the package on the table. The remaster treatment is functional. Textures and resolution are updated for modern displays and the games run cleanly on PC. Do not expect a full visual overhaul - these are cleanup jobs, not reconstructions. Some animations still carry their age visibly, and Infinite in particular hasn't changed enough to fully mask the era it came from. None of that undermines the experience, but temper your expectations if you're coming from modern releases. The collection also lacks BioShock 2's multiplayer mode, which was stripped out and never returned. That's a minor loss for most players, but completionists should know. Who is this for? Anyone who cares about games that try to say something. If you want clean gunplay and linear progression with no narrative baggage, look elsewhere. If you want first-person games that reward close reading, reward curiosity, and make you think about what you're actually doing and why - this is where you spend a weekend. Or four. Monika, Scout Team

Bioshock: The Collection
ActionSingle PlayerFirst PersonHorrorFPS / TPSAdventureRPG

Bioshock: The Collection

Sep 13, 20162K Australia2K Games
GamerScout Says

Three full BioShock campaigns plus Minerva's Den in one package - atmospheric immersive sims that blur the line between shooter and RPG.

PCXboxNintendo Switch
Best Price Available
€0.00
at N/A
Historical low: €5.74

GamerScout Verdict

A dense, story-driven collection that rewards patient players who want their shooters to have something to say.

Compare Prices(0 stores)

Loading prices...

We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.

Price History

Historical low
€5.7425 Jun 2026
Keyshops
€5.65€5.96€6.27€6.585 Jun14 Jun22 Jun1 Jul9 Jul
Tracking prices since 5 Jun 2026
Create alert

Screenshots & Media

Screenshot

About Bioshock: The Collection

BioShock: The Collection bundles the three mainline BioShock games along with the Minerva's Den DLC into a single package, giving you somewhere north of 40 hours of some of the most narratively ambitious first-person games ever made. The original BioShock and its sequel are set in Rapture, an art-deco underwater city that has collapsed under the weight of its own ideology. BioShock Infinite trades the ocean floor for Columbia, a floating city wrapped in American exceptionalism and religious fervour. Each game uses its setting as an argument, not just a backdrop, and that's rarer than it should be. From a mechanics standpoint, these are immersive sims dressed in shooter clothing. You juggle firearms with plasmids (or vigors in Infinite) - the series' version of active abilities - to build combat approaches that feel genuinely different from one run to the next. Incinerate plus oil slick, telekinesis as a grenade redirect, swarms of bees as a crowd-control opener: the systems reward creative players who pay attention to the environment. BioShock 2 arguably has the tightest combat loop of the three, giving you dual-wielding between weapons and plasmids simultaneously and adding a more grounded power-fantasy rhythm. Infinite leans harder on the shooting and pulls back on the immersive sim depth, which is a trade-off worth knowing about before you go in expecting the same texture. The writing is where this collection earns its place in the conversation. Rapture's world-building is delivered almost entirely through audio diaries and environmental storytelling - a corpse propped next to a handwritten note, a shop window that tells you exactly what this society used to value and what it's become. Andrew Ryan is one of gaming's more genuinely frightening antagonists precisely because his logic is internally consistent. Minerva's Den, often overlooked, has a smaller story that hits harder than its runtime suggests and stands as one of the better DLC campaigns in the genre. If you skip it, you're leaving the best-kept secret in the package on the table. The remaster treatment is functional. Textures and resolution are updated for modern displays and the games run cleanly on PC. Do not expect a full visual overhaul - these are cleanup jobs, not reconstructions. Some animations still carry their age visibly, and Infinite in particular hasn't changed enough to fully mask the era it came from. None of that undermines the experience, but temper your expectations if you're coming from modern releases. The collection also lacks BioShock 2's multiplayer mode, which was stripped out and never returned. That's a minor loss for most players, but completionists should know. Who is this for? Anyone who cares about games that try to say something. If you want clean gunplay and linear progression with no narrative baggage, look elsewhere. If you want first-person games that reward close reading, reward curiosity, and make you think about what you're actually doing and why - this is where you spend a weekend. Or four.

Monika
Monika · Scout Team

RPGs

Tags

steamImmersive SimPlasmidsEnvironmental StorytellingAudio LogsBuild VarietyRemasteredStory-RichPolitical ThemesSingle Playthrough Worth

System Requirements

Minimum

Memory
1 GB
Storage
8GB
Graphics
Direct X 9.0c 128MB RAM Pixel Shader 3.0
Processor
Intel single-core Pentium 4 at 2.4GHz
System requirements
Windows XP or Windows Vista

Keep exploring

Community Discussion

Be the first to comment on Bioshock: The Collection.

Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
96

Game Info

Developer
2K Australia
Publisher
2K Games
Release Date
Sep 13, 2016

Price Alert

Get notified when the price drops below your target!

Create Alert

No card? Pay another way

Top up your Steam Wallet or buy crypto with any card — instant delivery, no bank account needed.

More from 2K Australia

Buy smarter: helpful guides

Frequently asked questions about Bioshock: The Collection

How much does Bioshock: The Collection cost?

Bioshock: The Collection 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.

Where can I buy Bioshock: The Collection cheapest?

Compare Bioshock: The Collection prices across every verified store in the price table on this page. We list the cheapest in-stock key and store offers, updated regularly, so you always see the best current deal before you buy.

What platforms is Bioshock: The Collection available on?

Bioshock: The Collection is available on PC, Xbox, Nintendo Switch.

When was Bioshock: The Collection released?

Bioshock: The Collection was released on 13 September 2016.

Who developed Bioshock: The Collection?

Bioshock: The Collection was developed by 2K Australia and published by 2K Games.

Is Bioshock: The Collection worth buying?

Bioshock: The Collection holds a Metacritic score of 96/100, making it one of the standout Action titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.