Compare Dungeons & Dragons Neverwinter Nights 2: Enhanced Edition prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Aspyr Media. Published by Aspyr Media. Released on 7/15/2025. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Adventure, RPG.

A 100-hour Forgotten Realms CRPG with all three expansions bundled in, restored for modern hardware - but Aspyr's 'enhanced' label promises more than the patch notes deliver.

My shooter brain usually taps out around hour two of a CRPG, but I stuck with this one long enough to have an opinion worth printing. Neverwinter Nights 2: Enhanced Edition is Obsidian's 2006 Forgotten Realms RPG, rebuilt by Aspyr for modern systems with controller support, updated UI, and cross-platform multiplayer baked back in. The pitch is clean. The execution is lumpier than a goblin's cave floor. Start with what works. The base game plus all three expansions - Mask of the Betrayer, Storm of Zehir, and Mysteries of Westgate - are included in the package, clocking somewhere north of 100 hours of content. The D&D 3.5 ruleset drives everything: you are picking skills, allocating points, juggling up to four class combinations including prestige classes, and pausing combat to queue up spells and reposition a party that can include genuinely well-written companions. Bishop the morally sketchy ranger and the wizard-spy Sand are standout characters in a cast that holds up better than you might expect from a 2006 RPG. Skill-based dialogue - Diplomacy, Bluff, Intimidation - actually shifts story outcomes and faction relationships, which is the kind of system modern games paper over with a binary choice wheel. The real-time-with-pause combat is tactical enough to keep you honest: positioning and spell synergy matter, and larger encounters play closer to a chess match than a click-fest. Multiplayer is live, cross-platform, and functional, which is the single biggest reason to pick this version over the GoG Complete Edition if you plan to co-op. Now the problems, and there are enough of them that the Steam user score sits at 47% positive across over 1,200 reviews. Aspyr updated the game client to 64-bit, improved texture resolution, and built a controller-specific UI, but the campaign missions, bugs, and moment-to-moment jank shipped largely untouched. Reviewers on PC flagged missing combat hit sounds, overly sensitive mouse camera even after tweaking sensitivity settings, characters getting physically stuck in geometry, and inventory icons simply not loading. These are not new bugs introduced by Aspyr - they existed in 2006 - but calling it an Enhanced Edition while shipping them intact is a reasonable thing to be annoyed about. The party AI remains aggressively stupid, the movement speed is glacially slow, and there is still no fast-forward button or proper tooltip system for gear comparisons. The UI, while functional with a controller, involves a fair amount of menu nesting that takes time to internalize. None of these individually ruin the experience, but they stack up. Who should buy this right now? If you played the original and want to co-op through it on modern hardware with a controller option, this is the version to grab - GoG saves are compatible, the crossplay works, and the Steam Workshop opens the door to community modules. If you are brand new to the series and came here off the back of Baldur's Gate 3, temper expectations hard: this is a piece of 2006 design philosophy preserved in amber, not a modern remake. The 3.5 ruleset complexity is real, the visuals are firmly retro, and the camera will test your patience in the first hour. If that sounds like a fair trade for 100-plus hours of dense Forgotten Realms storytelling, alignment-based endings, and a co-op mode you can actually use, the math works out. Fred, Scout Team

Dungeons & Dragons Neverwinter Nights 2: Enhanced Edition

Dungeons & Dragons Neverwinter Nights 2: Enhanced Edition

Add-on / DLC for Dungeons — view full game
Jul 15, 2025Aspyr Media
GamerScout Says

A 100-hour Forgotten Realms CRPG with all three expansions bundled in, restored for modern hardware - but Aspyr's 'enhanced' label promises more than the patch notes deliver.

PC
Steam Deck VerifiedProtonDB Platinum
Best Price Available
€0.00
at N/A
Historical low: €13.03

GamerScout Verdict

Best for returning fans and co-op seekers; newcomers should know they are buying a preserved 2006 game, bugs and all.

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Price History

Historical low
€13.035 Jun 2026
Keyshops
€11.99€12.68€13.38€14.075 Jun16 Jun27 Jun7 Jul18 Jul
5 Jun — 18 Jul
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About Dungeons & Dragons Neverwinter Nights 2: Enhanced Edition

My shooter brain usually taps out around hour two of a CRPG, but I stuck with this one long enough to have an opinion worth printing. Neverwinter Nights 2: Enhanced Edition is Obsidian's 2006 Forgotten Realms RPG, rebuilt by Aspyr for modern systems with controller support, updated UI, and cross-platform multiplayer baked back in. The pitch is clean. The execution is lumpier than a goblin's cave floor. Start with what works. The base game plus all three expansions - Mask of the Betrayer, Storm of Zehir, and Mysteries of Westgate - are included in the package, clocking somewhere north of 100 hours of content. The D&D 3.5 ruleset drives everything: you are picking skills, allocating points, juggling up to four class combinations including prestige classes, and pausing combat to queue up spells and reposition a party that can include genuinely well-written companions. Bishop the morally sketchy ranger and the wizard-spy Sand are standout characters in a cast that holds up better than you might expect from a 2006 RPG. Skill-based dialogue - Diplomacy, Bluff, Intimidation - actually shifts story outcomes and faction relationships, which is the kind of system modern games paper over with a binary choice wheel. The real-time-with-pause combat is tactical enough to keep you honest: positioning and spell synergy matter, and larger encounters play closer to a chess match than a click-fest. Multiplayer is live, cross-platform, and functional, which is the single biggest reason to pick this version over the GoG Complete Edition if you plan to co-op. Now the problems, and there are enough of them that the Steam user score sits at 47% positive across over 1,200 reviews. Aspyr updated the game client to 64-bit, improved texture resolution, and built a controller-specific UI, but the campaign missions, bugs, and moment-to-moment jank shipped largely untouched. Reviewers on PC flagged missing combat hit sounds, overly sensitive mouse camera even after tweaking sensitivity settings, characters getting physically stuck in geometry, and inventory icons simply not loading. These are not new bugs introduced by Aspyr - they existed in 2006 - but calling it an Enhanced Edition while shipping them intact is a reasonable thing to be annoyed about. The party AI remains aggressively stupid, the movement speed is glacially slow, and there is still no fast-forward button or proper tooltip system for gear comparisons. The UI, while functional with a controller, involves a fair amount of menu nesting that takes time to internalize. None of these individually ruin the experience, but they stack up. Who should buy this right now? If you played the original and want to co-op through it on modern hardware with a controller option, this is the version to grab - GoG saves are compatible, the crossplay works, and the Steam Workshop opens the door to community modules. If you are brand new to the series and came here off the back of Baldur's Gate 3, temper expectations hard: this is a piece of 2006 design philosophy preserved in amber, not a modern remake. The 3.5 ruleset complexity is real, the visuals are firmly retro, and the camera will test your patience in the first hour. If that sounds like a fair trade for 100-plus hours of dense Forgotten Realms storytelling, alignment-based endings, and a co-op mode you can actually use, the math works out.

Fred
Fred · Scout Team

Shooters

Tags

singleplayermultiplayerpvponline-pvpcooponline-coopcross-platformachievementsworkshopcloud-savestier:aaaCRPGReal-Time-With-PauseD&D 3.5 RulesetCompanion SystemCross-Platform Co-opPrestige ClassesAlignment SystemDungeon Master ModeSteam Workshop

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
40 GB available space
Graphics
GeForce GTX 660 2GB or Radeon HD 7870 2GB
Processor
Intel Core i5-3570 or AMD Ryzen 5 1500

Recommended

OS
Windows 10
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
40 GB available space
Graphics
GeForce GTX 1080 8GB or RX VEGA 64 8GB
Processor
Intel Core i5-9600 or AMD Ryzen 7 1800

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Reviews & Ratings

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Game Info

Developer
Aspyr Media
Publisher
Aspyr Media
Release Date
Jul 15, 2025

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Frequently asked questions about Dungeons & Dragons Neverwinter Nights 2: Enhanced Edition

How much does Dungeons & Dragons Neverwinter Nights 2: Enhanced Edition cost?

Dungeons & Dragons Neverwinter Nights 2: Enhanced 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 Dungeons & Dragons Neverwinter Nights 2: Enhanced Edition available on?

Dungeons & Dragons Neverwinter Nights 2: Enhanced Edition is available on PC.

When was Dungeons & Dragons Neverwinter Nights 2: Enhanced Edition released?

Dungeons & Dragons Neverwinter Nights 2: Enhanced Edition was released on 15 July 2025.

Who developed Dungeons & Dragons Neverwinter Nights 2: Enhanced Edition?

Dungeons & Dragons Neverwinter Nights 2: Enhanced Edition was developed by Aspyr Media.