Compare Elite Dangerous: Commander Premium Edition prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Frontier Developments. Published by Frontier Developments. Released on 5/19/2021. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Single Player, Multiplayer, Local Co-op, First Person, Simulation, Strategy, Adventure, RPG.

A complete entry point into one of the most ambitious space sims ever made: base game plus the Odyssey expansion that finally lets you leave your cockpit and walk on alien worlds.

Elite Dangerous: Commander Premium Edition is the most complete single purchase you can make into Frontier's decade-old space sandbox. The bundle packs the base game, the Odyssey expansion, and the Odyssey soundtrack into one product, meaning you start with ship-to-ground gameplay already unlocked. That matters because Odyssey is what closes the loop: you can now trade, mine, bounty hunt, and smuggle from your cockpit, then disembark, kit out a suit with first-person weapons and gear, and raid or defend planetary settlements on foot. The two halves of the game feed each other in ways that took years to arrive, and this edition is the right way to own both. The numbers are genuinely hard to argue with. The playspace is a 1:1 procedural recreation of the Milky Way, built on real astronomical data, covering around 400 billion star systems. Over 40 flyable ships are available, designed by seven in-lore manufacturers, each with distinct handling, hardpoint counts, and internal module configurations. Ship outfitting means swapping Thrusters, Frame Shift Drives, Power Plants, Sensors, and weapons across thermal, kinetic, explosive, and mixed damage types. Jump range is mass-dependent, so every loadout decision has a concrete cost in light-years per hop. That is the kind of systems-level decision-making that rewards a spreadsheet mentality, and the engineering upgrade system adds another layer on top once you have the credits to pursue it. For newcomers worried about the learning curve: take the tutorials seriously. They cover flight, Supercruise, docking, and combat basics in repeatable short sessions, and docking alone will humble you for at least the first hour. The game does not hold your hand after that, but the community wiki, third-party tools like the Odyssey Materials Helper, and an active player base make the on-ramp far more navigable than it was at launch. The honest recommendation is to pick a single career early - trader, explorer, bounty hunter, miner - and resist the urge to rush toward capital ships. Progressing from a Sidewinder through a Cobra to an Asp Explorer at your own pace is where most of the satisfaction lives. You can play entirely in Solo mode or join Open Play where other Commanders are live threats and allies. Powerplay 2.0 and Community Goals add structured faction-conflict mechanics if you want a reason to log in on a schedule. The criticisms are real and worth naming. Supercruise transits inside a system can stretch to 15 minutes of straight-line flying with nothing to interact with - a friction point the community has debated for years without a satisfying resolution. Odyssey's PC launch in 2021 was rough, arriving with server instability, performance problems, and broken mechanics that took multiple major patches to address; the game is in substantially better shape now, but that history is part of why some long-term players remain cautious. The second in-game currency, ARX, has crept into early ship access since mid-2024, which is a direction worth watching. None of these issues ruin the experience, but they set the right expectations: Elite Dangerous rewards patience and punishes impatience. If you want a space sim where every credit earned, every module swapped, and every jump plotted is a decision with weight, this edition gives you the full toolkit. It is not a game you finish. It is a game you return to. Diego, Scout Team

Elite Dangerous: Commander Premium Edition
ActionSingle PlayerMultiplayerLocal Co-opFirst PersonSimulationStrategyAdventureRPG

Elite Dangerous: Commander Premium Edition

May 19, 2021Frontier Developments
GamerScout Says

A complete entry point into one of the most ambitious space sims ever made: base game plus the Odyssey expansion that finally lets you leave your cockpit and walk on alien worlds.

PC
Best Price Available
0.00
at N/A
Historical low: $

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

Screenshot

About Elite Dangerous: Commander Premium Edition

Elite Dangerous: Commander Premium Edition is the most complete single purchase you can make into Frontier's decade-old space sandbox. The bundle packs the base game, the Odyssey expansion, and the Odyssey soundtrack into one product, meaning you start with ship-to-ground gameplay already unlocked. That matters because Odyssey is what closes the loop: you can now trade, mine, bounty hunt, and smuggle from your cockpit, then disembark, kit out a suit with first-person weapons and gear, and raid or defend planetary settlements on foot. The two halves of the game feed each other in ways that took years to arrive, and this edition is the right way to own both. The numbers are genuinely hard to argue with. The playspace is a 1:1 procedural recreation of the Milky Way, built on real astronomical data, covering around 400 billion star systems. Over 40 flyable ships are available, designed by seven in-lore manufacturers, each with distinct handling, hardpoint counts, and internal module configurations. Ship outfitting means swapping Thrusters, Frame Shift Drives, Power Plants, Sensors, and weapons across thermal, kinetic, explosive, and mixed damage types. Jump range is mass-dependent, so every loadout decision has a concrete cost in light-years per hop. That is the kind of systems-level decision-making that rewards a spreadsheet mentality, and the engineering upgrade system adds another layer on top once you have the credits to pursue it. For newcomers worried about the learning curve: take the tutorials seriously. They cover flight, Supercruise, docking, and combat basics in repeatable short sessions, and docking alone will humble you for at least the first hour. The game does not hold your hand after that, but the community wiki, third-party tools like the Odyssey Materials Helper, and an active player base make the on-ramp far more navigable than it was at launch. The honest recommendation is to pick a single career early - trader, explorer, bounty hunter, miner - and resist the urge to rush toward capital ships. Progressing from a Sidewinder through a Cobra to an Asp Explorer at your own pace is where most of the satisfaction lives. You can play entirely in Solo mode or join Open Play where other Commanders are live threats and allies. Powerplay 2.0 and Community Goals add structured faction-conflict mechanics if you want a reason to log in on a schedule. The criticisms are real and worth naming. Supercruise transits inside a system can stretch to 15 minutes of straight-line flying with nothing to interact with - a friction point the community has debated for years without a satisfying resolution. Odyssey's PC launch in 2021 was rough, arriving with server instability, performance problems, and broken mechanics that took multiple major patches to address; the game is in substantially better shape now, but that history is part of why some long-term players remain cautious. The second in-game currency, ARX, has crept into early ship access since mid-2024, which is a direction worth watching. None of these issues ruin the experience, but they set the right expectations: Elite Dangerous rewards patience and punishes impatience. If you want a space sim where every credit earned, every module swapped, and every jump plotted is a decision with weight, this edition gives you the full toolkit. It is not a game you finish. It is a game you return to. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

steamSpace SimShip OutfittingOn-Foot CombatOpen-World SandboxPowerplay Faction MechanicsEngineering ProgressionWing Co-opCommunity GoalsVR Support

System Requirements

Minimum

Memory
6 GB RAM
Graphics
Nvidia GTX 470/ATI 7240HD
Processor
Quad Core CPU (4 x 2Ghz)
System requirements
Windows 7/8/10 64-bit

Recommended

Memory
8 GB RAM
Graphics
Nvidia GTX 770 / AMD Radeon R9 280X
Processor
Intel Core i7-3770K Quad Core CPU / AMD FX 4350 Quad Core CPU
System requirements
Windows 7/8/10 64-bit

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
Frontier Developments
Publisher
Frontier Developments
Release Date
May 19, 2021

Price Alert

Get notified when the price drops below your target!

Create Alert

More from Frontier Developments