Compare Borderlands 3 - Season Pass (DLC) prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Gearbox Software. Published by 2K Games. Released on 3/13/2020. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Action, RPG. Metacritic score: 81/100.

Four meaty story DLCs bolted onto Borderlands 3's chaotic loot shooter, extra planets, bosses, and gear for players already hooked on the base game.

Borderlands 3's Season Pass bundles four post-launch story campaigns into a single purchase, each dropping a self-contained arc with new maps, enemy factions, dedicated loot pools, and a handful of legendary weapons worth farming. If you have finished the main story and the gun-chasing loop still has its hooks in you, this is the obvious next step. If you bounced off the base game's writing or felt the combat overstayed its welcome, none of these DLCs will convert you. The four packs vary in quality more than Gearbox probably intended. Moxxi's Heist of the Handsome Jackpot leans hard on nostalgia for BL2's most beloved villain, and it mostly works because the casino setting gives level designers room to do interesting things with verticality and enemy placement. Guns, Love, and Tentacles goes full gothic-horror-wedding-in-space and is the most consistently enjoyable of the four, with tighter pacing, a genuinely atmospheric biome, and some of the better companion writing in the whole Borderlands 3 package. Bounty of Blood is a spaghetti-western detour that looks gorgeous and introduces a rideable creature mechanic, though the story wraps up a little too neatly. Psycho Krieg and the Fantastic Fustercluck is the wildest swing: a surrealist trip through a deranged Psycho's mindscape that has some sharp comedic moments but also the thinnest loot rewards of the set. From a build-variety standpoint, the Season Pass matters because each DLC adds dedicated legendary drops tied to specific bosses. If you are pushing endgame Mayhem levels or theory-crafting a particular Moze Iron Bear build or an FL4K crit-stacking setup, these pools fill gaps that the base game's loot table leaves open. The problem is that farming feels noticeably padded at higher Mayhem tiers, with drop rates tuned in a way that can turn a fun boss fight into a chore after the fifteenth reset. That is a Borderlands 3 problem generally, but the DLC bosses are not exempt from it. Narratively, let's be honest: if you came to Borderlands 3 hoping the writing had leveled up to match the wild ambition of Tales from the Borderlands, you already know the score. The humor is loud, the villains are one-note compared to Handsome Jack, and the dialogue can feel like it was workshopped to hit joke-beats rather than to say anything. The DLCs soften this slightly. Guns, Love, and Tentacles in particular has a warmth to its central relationship that the main story rarely achieves. But do not buy this expecting a narrative redemption arc for the base game's writing problems. For co-op groups who are already in the ecosystem, the Season Pass extends the shared-loot chaos with enough new content to fill several more sessions. Solo players who enjoy the mechanical loop will find solid value in the combined runtime. Anyone on the fence about Borderlands 3 itself should sort out the base game first before thinking about this. Monika, Scout Team

Borderlands 3 - Season Pass (DLC)
ActionRPG

Borderlands 3 - Season Pass (DLC)

Mar 13, 2020Gearbox Software2K Games
GamerScout Says

Four meaty story DLCs bolted onto Borderlands 3's chaotic loot shooter, extra planets, bosses, and gear for players already hooked on the base game.

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About Borderlands 3 - Season Pass (DLC)

Borderlands 3's Season Pass bundles four post-launch story campaigns into a single purchase, each dropping a self-contained arc with new maps, enemy factions, dedicated loot pools, and a handful of legendary weapons worth farming. If you have finished the main story and the gun-chasing loop still has its hooks in you, this is the obvious next step. If you bounced off the base game's writing or felt the combat overstayed its welcome, none of these DLCs will convert you. The four packs vary in quality more than Gearbox probably intended. Moxxi's Heist of the Handsome Jackpot leans hard on nostalgia for BL2's most beloved villain, and it mostly works because the casino setting gives level designers room to do interesting things with verticality and enemy placement. Guns, Love, and Tentacles goes full gothic-horror-wedding-in-space and is the most consistently enjoyable of the four, with tighter pacing, a genuinely atmospheric biome, and some of the better companion writing in the whole Borderlands 3 package. Bounty of Blood is a spaghetti-western detour that looks gorgeous and introduces a rideable creature mechanic, though the story wraps up a little too neatly. Psycho Krieg and the Fantastic Fustercluck is the wildest swing: a surrealist trip through a deranged Psycho's mindscape that has some sharp comedic moments but also the thinnest loot rewards of the set. From a build-variety standpoint, the Season Pass matters because each DLC adds dedicated legendary drops tied to specific bosses. If you are pushing endgame Mayhem levels or theory-crafting a particular Moze Iron Bear build or an FL4K crit-stacking setup, these pools fill gaps that the base game's loot table leaves open. The problem is that farming feels noticeably padded at higher Mayhem tiers, with drop rates tuned in a way that can turn a fun boss fight into a chore after the fifteenth reset. That is a Borderlands 3 problem generally, but the DLC bosses are not exempt from it. Narratively, let's be honest: if you came to Borderlands 3 hoping the writing had leveled up to match the wild ambition of Tales from the Borderlands, you already know the score. The humor is loud, the villains are one-note compared to Handsome Jack, and the dialogue can feel like it was workshopped to hit joke-beats rather than to say anything. The DLCs soften this slightly. Guns, Love, and Tentacles in particular has a warmth to its central relationship that the main story rarely achieves. But do not buy this expecting a narrative redemption arc for the base game's writing problems. For co-op groups who are already in the ecosystem, the Season Pass extends the shared-loot chaos with enough new content to fill several more sessions. Solo players who enjoy the mechanical loop will find solid value in the combined runtime. Anyone on the fence about Borderlands 3 itself should sort out the base game first before thinking about this. Monika, Scout Team

Tags

steamShooter-LooterDLC CampaignCo-op Loot FarmingEndgame Build CraftingMayhem ModeBoss FarmingNarrative DLCxboxLooter-ShooterSkill Tree DepthBuild VarietyCo-op CampaignProcedural LootPost-Launch DLC

System Requirements

System requirements for Borderlands 3 - Season Pass (DLC) aren't listed yet. Check the store page for the latest specs.

Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
81
Steam
81%(162,636)

Game Info

Developer
Gearbox Software
Publisher
2K Games
Release Date
Mar 13, 2020

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