Icewind Dale (Enhanced Edition)
A classic AD&D dungeon-crawler set in the frozen north, heavy on tactical combat, light on dialogue trees, and still brutally satisfying after all these years.
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About Icewind Dale (Enhanced Edition)
Icewind Dale Enhanced Edition is a party-based RPG built on the Infinity Engine, set in the Forgotten Realms' frigid Dale region and running on the AD&D 2nd Edition ruleset. Beamdog's remaster smooths out a substantial list of bugs from the original Black Isle release, layers in new spells, items, and some quality-of-life improvements, and packages the whole thing at a resolution your monitor won't laugh at. If you have spent time with Baldur's Gate or Planescape: Torment, the isometric real-time-with-pause combat will feel like coming home. Here is the key distinction you need to understand before buying: Icewind Dale is not a narrative RPG in the BG3 sense. There are no origin companions with sprawling personal questlines. Your party of up to six characters is entirely player-created, which means you are building a roster from scratch using race, class, and stat allocation rather than picking up pre-written personalities along the way. The story is present, and the world is atmospheric, but the writing exists to frame the combat rather than to reward close reading. If you buy this expecting dialogue-driven character drama, you will be disappointed. If you want a tightly designed dungeon-gauntlet with genuine tactical depth, you are in exactly the right place. The combat system is where the game earns its Very Positive rating and its dedicated fanbase. AD&D 2nd Edition is crunchy in ways that modern RPGs have mostly smoothed away: THAC0, saving throws, spell memorization slots, weapon proficiency penalties. Beamdog has not filed those edges off, which is either a feature or a warning label depending on your tolerance for old-school systems. Building a balanced party across six classes, managing daily spell slots for your mages and clerics, and positioning your fighters to protect squishy back-liners against the game's escalating encounter design is genuinely engaging through the full campaign. The variety of multi-class options, kit variants added by the Enhanced Edition, and the breadth of the spell library means build experimentation holds up across multiple playthroughs. What works less well is the pacing in the mid-game. Several dungeon sections drag noticeably, cycling through room-clearing encounters that exist to tax your resources rather than to tell you anything interesting about the world. The original game leaned hard into this dungeon-crawl identity, and Beamdog has not restructured it. You will occasionally hit stretches that feel like XP taxation rather than adventure. The lack of voiced companion banter also makes long hauls through samey corridors feel quieter than you might want. Heart of Winter and Trials of the Luremaster, the expansions bundled in, add meaningfully to the endgame and are worth completing, but they carry the same pacing inconsistencies. For PC players who want a faithful, cleaned-up version of a genre landmark, the Enhanced Edition is the definitive way to play it. Veterans of Baldur's Gate 1 and 2 who somehow skipped this one owe themselves a look. Newcomers to the Infinity Engine should probably start with Baldur's Gate Enhanced Edition first to get the ruleset under their fingers before Icewind Dale's difficulty stops being exhilarating and starts feeling punishing. The 90% positive Steam score across thousands of reviews reflects a community that knows exactly what it signed up for. Monika, Scout Team
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Game Info
- Developer
- Beamdog
- Publisher
- Beamdog
- Release Date
- Oct 30, 2014