Compare Hidden & Dangerous Bundle S prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Illusion Softworks. Published by 2K. Released on 10/21/2003. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Strategy. Metacritic score: 75/100.

A bundle of classic WWII tactical squad shooters that demand patience, planning, and a tolerance for early-2000s rough edges.

Hidden & Dangerous Bundle S collects Illusion Softworks' cult WWII tactical action series, a lineage that sits at a peculiar crossroads between third-person squad shooter and deliberate, almost puzzle-like mission design. These are not run-and-gun titles. Each mission tasks you with leading a small SAS team behind enemy lines, managing equipment loadouts before deployment, and then executing operations where a single bad decision - or a single exposed silhouette - can cascade into a full wipe. If you have ever colour-coded a loadout screen, you will feel immediately at home. The tactical layer is where both games earn their reputation. Before boots hit the ground, you are selecting soldiers with distinct skill profiles, assigning weapons from a period-accurate arsenal that spans silenced pistols, scoped rifles, and heavier support options, and thinking through what the mission briefing actually demands rather than what sounds cool. Stealth and direct assault are both viable approaches on most maps, but the game will punish sloppy execution of either. AI teammates can be directed with basic commands, and while their pathfinding is a product of the era - meaning occasionally maddening - the satisfaction of a clean coordinated breach more than compensates. For strategy-minded players who want something with historical texture, the series rewards the same mindset you bring to a slow-burn grand strategy campaign: think ahead, prepare contingencies, accept that the first run through a mission is often reconnaissance. The difficulty curve is steep by modern standards, and there is no hand-holding tutorial that respects your time the way contemporary releases do. However, that friction is also the point. Each completed mission feels genuinely earned, and the replay value in experimenting with different squad compositions and approach vectors is real. On the downside, the technical age shows. Expect to spend time with community patches and compatibility fixes to get things running acceptably on modern hardware. The AI, while occasionally impressive for its era, has ceiling moments that feel jarring. There is no meaningful mod ecosystem to speak of at this point, and the multiplayer infrastructure that once extended these games' life is effectively dark. What remains is the single-player campaign experience, which is substantial if you meet it on its own terms. If you are a tactics or historical strategy fan willing to treat a release from the early 2000s as a time capsule rather than a contemporary product, there is genuine depth here that many shinier successors have failed to replicate. Approach it the way you would approach any demanding campaign: with a save-scum tolerance and a willingness to restart a mission when the plan falls apart, not when the controls do. Diego, Scout Team

Hidden & Dangerous Bundle S

Hidden & Dangerous Bundle S

Oct 21, 2003Illusion Softworks2K
GamerScout Says

A bundle of classic WWII tactical squad shooters that demand patience, planning, and a tolerance for early-2000s rough edges.

PC
Best Price Available
€0.00
at N/A
Historical low: €1.41

GamerScout Verdict

Best for tactics-oriented players who treat old-school difficulty as a feature, not a flaw, and can handle dated tech.

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About Hidden & Dangerous Bundle S

Hidden & Dangerous Bundle S collects Illusion Softworks' cult WWII tactical action series, a lineage that sits at a peculiar crossroads between third-person squad shooter and deliberate, almost puzzle-like mission design. These are not run-and-gun titles. Each mission tasks you with leading a small SAS team behind enemy lines, managing equipment loadouts before deployment, and then executing operations where a single bad decision - or a single exposed silhouette - can cascade into a full wipe. If you have ever colour-coded a loadout screen, you will feel immediately at home. The tactical layer is where both games earn their reputation. Before boots hit the ground, you are selecting soldiers with distinct skill profiles, assigning weapons from a period-accurate arsenal that spans silenced pistols, scoped rifles, and heavier support options, and thinking through what the mission briefing actually demands rather than what sounds cool. Stealth and direct assault are both viable approaches on most maps, but the game will punish sloppy execution of either. AI teammates can be directed with basic commands, and while their pathfinding is a product of the era - meaning occasionally maddening - the satisfaction of a clean coordinated breach more than compensates. For strategy-minded players who want something with historical texture, the series rewards the same mindset you bring to a slow-burn grand strategy campaign: think ahead, prepare contingencies, accept that the first run through a mission is often reconnaissance. The difficulty curve is steep by modern standards, and there is no hand-holding tutorial that respects your time the way contemporary releases do. However, that friction is also the point. Each completed mission feels genuinely earned, and the replay value in experimenting with different squad compositions and approach vectors is real. On the downside, the technical age shows. Expect to spend time with community patches and compatibility fixes to get things running acceptably on modern hardware. The AI, while occasionally impressive for its era, has ceiling moments that feel jarring. There is no meaningful mod ecosystem to speak of at this point, and the multiplayer infrastructure that once extended these games' life is effectively dark. What remains is the single-player campaign experience, which is substantial if you meet it on its own terms. If you are a tactics or historical strategy fan willing to treat a release from the early 2000s as a time capsule rather than a contemporary product, there is genuine depth here that many shinier successors have failed to replicate. Approach it the way you would approach any demanding campaign: with a save-scum tolerance and a willingness to restart a mission when the plan falls apart, not when the controls do.

Diego
Diego · Scout Team

Strategy & simulation

Tags

steamTactical ShooterSquad ManagementWWIIStealth OptionalMission PlanningClassicSingle-player CampaignLoadout Customization

System Requirements

Minimum

Memory
512 MB RAM
DirectX
9.0
Storage
3 GB
Graphics
3D Graphics DirectX 9.0
Processor
1.4 GHz
System requirements
Windows Vista / 7 / 8 / 10

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Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
75
Steam
95%(990)

Game Info

Developer
Illusion Softworks
Publisher
2K
Release Date
Oct 21, 2003

Features

Single-playerFamily Sharing

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Frequently asked questions about Hidden & Dangerous Bundle S

How much does Hidden & Dangerous Bundle S cost?

Hidden & Dangerous Bundle S 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 Hidden & Dangerous Bundle S cheapest?

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What platforms is Hidden & Dangerous Bundle S available on?

Hidden & Dangerous Bundle S is available on PC.

When was Hidden & Dangerous Bundle S released?

Hidden & Dangerous Bundle S was released on 21 October 2003.

Who developed Hidden & Dangerous Bundle S?

Hidden & Dangerous Bundle S was developed by Illusion Softworks and published by 2K.

Is Hidden & Dangerous Bundle S worth buying?

Hidden & Dangerous Bundle S holds a Metacritic score of 75/100, making it one of the standout Action titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.