Destiny 2: Lightfall + Annual Pass (DLC) Pre-purchase
Lightfall bundles a new campaign, raid, two dungeons, and four season passes into one purchase. Whether that value holds depends on how much Destiny 2 still has its hooks in you.
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.
Screenshots & Media

About Destiny 2: Lightfall + Annual Pass (DLC) Pre-purchase
Destiny 2 is a first-person looter-shooter built around a seasonal live-service model, and Lightfall is the penultimate chapter of the Light and Darkness saga that has been running since the base game launched. The Lightfall expansion drops players into Neomuna, a neon-soaked city on Neptune, and introduces the Strand subclass - a grapple-heavy, thread-based power set that genuinely changes how movement and combat feel. If you have been playing Destiny 2 long enough to remember when Stasis was the new thing, Strand will feel like a meaningful evolution rather than a palette swap. The Annual Pass component is the real value calculation here: it bundles Season Passes for Seasons 20 through 23, which means four seasonal story chapters, four season-specific weapon pools, and the accompanying battle-pass reward tracks. The raid and two dungeons included are the parts of Destiny 2 that justify the subscription-style commitment better than almost anything else in the live-service genre. Bungie raids are tightly designed six-player encounters that reward communication and repetition, and the dungeon format - three-player, raid-lite - has become one of the healthiest pieces of content in the game's rotation. If you have a regular fireteam, this is where the package earns its price. If you are a solo player or a casual, the dungeons are more accessible than raids but still require some coordination, and two of them included here is a reasonable deal compared to buying them individually. The seasonal model is where things get complicated, and anyone who has watched games like Anthem or the early seasons of The Division understands why that wariness is warranted. Destiny 2's seasonal structure has historically been a mixed bag: some seasons deliver tight story beats and genuinely interesting mechanics, others feel like a treadmill of daily activity checklist-clearing with a thin narrative veneer. Four seasons is a long commitment to make blind, especially in a pre-purchase context. The Quicksilver Storm catalyst and ornament are nice cosmetic additions for players who already own that exotic auto rifle, but they are not a deciding factor. Guild tooling in Destiny 2 remains functional but not exceptional. Clan features cover basic roster management and rewards, but the game has never really invested in deep social infrastructure the way older MMOs did. Finding a raid-ready group still leans heavily on third-party sites like Destiny 2's own LFG community or external Discord servers, which is a gap that has persisted for years and shows no signs of being addressed at the engine level. If you are coming from a game with robust in-client guild tooling, temper your expectations. Who is this for? Players who are already invested in the Destiny 2 ecosystem and want a structured roadmap through a full year of content will get genuine value from the bundle format. New players should approach carefully - the story context for Lightfall assumes familiarity with prior expansions, and the catch-up experience is uneven. Returning players who left during a previous expansion cycle may find the Strand subclass and Neomuna environment enough of a fresh hook to justify re-entry, but the seasonal model is the same machine it has always been: rewarding if you show up consistently, punishing if you lapse. Yuki, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Reviews & Ratings
No ratings available
Game Info
- Developer
- Bungie
- Publisher
- Bungie
- Release Date
- Feb 28, 2023