Compare Magicka 2 key prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Pieces Interactive. Published by Paradox Interactive. Released on 5/26/2015. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Adventure. Metacritic score: 71/100.

Bring two or three friends and you have one of the most chaotic, laugh-out-loud co-op experiences on PC. Show up solo and you'll be pulling your hair out before chapter three.

My first honest warning about Magicka 2: the word 'solo' should not appear anywhere near your purchase decision. I tried it alone, and the experience sits somewhere between 'educational' and 'punishing in ways that feel personal.' That said, fire up a session with two or three friends and something genuinely special clicks into place, because this is a top-down action game built entirely around the idea that chaos is funnier when it's shared. The core of the game is a freeform spellcasting system where you combine up to five of eight different elements at once, then choose how to unleash them: self-cast, area-of-effect, beam, or projectile. New to this entry is the Poison element, joining returning hybrid elements like Steam and Ice. Powerful preset spells called Magicks sit on a hotbar with cooldowns, but the real depth comes from real-time combination casting. One wizard soaks enemies with a water spell, another fires lightning into them for amplified damage. Someone crosses a life beam with a death beam and triggers a large explosion that, with equal probability, wipes out the enemies or two teammates. Friendly fire is always on, which the game treats less as a warning and more as a feature. The movement system was also tightened versus the first game: you can now run and cast simultaneously, which matters a lot when retreating from a horde while lobbing fire mines behind you. Beyond the main nine-chapter campaign set across a Nordic folklore-flavored Midgard, there are Challenge and Trial modes that work well for co-op groups who want structured wave-clearing with a scoring system that unlocks more Magicks as rewards. The Artifact system lets you toggle modifiers that range from tweaking elemental damage percentages to slapping a sitcom laugh track on every death. It sounds gimmicky, and some of it is, but it adds genuine replay variety for groups who want to revisit content on higher difficulties. Robes, staves, and weapons provide small elemental bonuses balanced against resistances, so there is light loadout customization without the deep upgrade loop you would get from a proper action-RPG. The criticisms worth knowing: the level design leans heavily on funneling you into tight corridors and then flooding them with enemy waves, which is punishing by design but can tip into frustrating when the geometry removes your escape routes. The story is thin, told in mock-gibberish Swedish-flavored dialogue, and the jokes land about half the time depending on your appetite for gaming in-jokes and absurdist Norse fantasy. Compared to the original Magicka, which launched in 2011, this sequel plays it relatively safe. Fans who wanted a significant expansion of the spell vocabulary may feel underwhelmed; veteran players pointed out that some of the most powerful combination spells from the first game were dialed back. What you get is a cleaner, faster, more stable version of the same formula rather than a reinvention. For the right group, none of that matters much. The spell interaction system is genuinely inventive, the moment-to-moment chaos produces stories that get retold after the session ends, and the Steam review score of 83% from nearly fourteen thousand players is a fair reflection of what it delivers when played as intended. Just come with friends. Alex, Scout Team

Magicka 2 key

Magicka 2 key

May 26, 2015Pieces InteractiveParadox Interactive
GamerScout Says

Bring two or three friends and you have one of the most chaotic, laugh-out-loud co-op experiences on PC. Show up solo and you'll be pulling your hair out before chapter three.

PC
Steam Deck UnsupportedProtonDB Platinum
Best Price Available
€0.00
at N/A
Historical low: €2.78

GamerScout Verdict

Unmissable with two to four friends who tolerate chaos; genuinely rough and potentially rage-inducing if you play alone.

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Price History

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€2.7829 Jun 2026
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Screenshots & Media

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About Magicka 2 key

My first honest warning about Magicka 2: the word 'solo' should not appear anywhere near your purchase decision. I tried it alone, and the experience sits somewhere between 'educational' and 'punishing in ways that feel personal.' That said, fire up a session with two or three friends and something genuinely special clicks into place, because this is a top-down action game built entirely around the idea that chaos is funnier when it's shared. The core of the game is a freeform spellcasting system where you combine up to five of eight different elements at once, then choose how to unleash them: self-cast, area-of-effect, beam, or projectile. New to this entry is the Poison element, joining returning hybrid elements like Steam and Ice. Powerful preset spells called Magicks sit on a hotbar with cooldowns, but the real depth comes from real-time combination casting. One wizard soaks enemies with a water spell, another fires lightning into them for amplified damage. Someone crosses a life beam with a death beam and triggers a large explosion that, with equal probability, wipes out the enemies or two teammates. Friendly fire is always on, which the game treats less as a warning and more as a feature. The movement system was also tightened versus the first game: you can now run and cast simultaneously, which matters a lot when retreating from a horde while lobbing fire mines behind you. Beyond the main nine-chapter campaign set across a Nordic folklore-flavored Midgard, there are Challenge and Trial modes that work well for co-op groups who want structured wave-clearing with a scoring system that unlocks more Magicks as rewards. The Artifact system lets you toggle modifiers that range from tweaking elemental damage percentages to slapping a sitcom laugh track on every death. It sounds gimmicky, and some of it is, but it adds genuine replay variety for groups who want to revisit content on higher difficulties. Robes, staves, and weapons provide small elemental bonuses balanced against resistances, so there is light loadout customization without the deep upgrade loop you would get from a proper action-RPG. The criticisms worth knowing: the level design leans heavily on funneling you into tight corridors and then flooding them with enemy waves, which is punishing by design but can tip into frustrating when the geometry removes your escape routes. The story is thin, told in mock-gibberish Swedish-flavored dialogue, and the jokes land about half the time depending on your appetite for gaming in-jokes and absurdist Norse fantasy. Compared to the original Magicka, which launched in 2011, this sequel plays it relatively safe. Fans who wanted a significant expansion of the spell vocabulary may feel underwhelmed; veteran players pointed out that some of the most powerful combination spells from the first game were dialed back. What you get is a cleaner, faster, more stable version of the same formula rather than a reinvention. For the right group, none of that matters much. The spell interaction system is genuinely inventive, the moment-to-moment chaos produces stories that get retold after the session ends, and the Steam review score of 83% from nearly fourteen thousand players is a fair reflection of what it delivers when played as intended. Just come with friends.

Alex
Alex · Scout Team

Catch-all

Tags

steam4-Player Co-opFriendly FireElemental CombosCouch Co-opWave DefenseArtifact ModifiersNorse FantasyTop-Down ActionSpell Crafting

System Requirements

Minimum

Processor
CPU: 3GHz Dual Core (Intel Pentium G3220 or higher / AMD A4-4000 or higher)
Memory
2 GB RAM
Graphics
Nvidia GeForce 550 or better / ATI Radeon HD 5850 or better Storag…

Recommended

Processor
2.8GHz Quad Core (Intel Core i5-2300 or higher / AMD A8-3850 or higher)
Memory
4 GB RAM
Graphics
Nvidia GeForce 640 or better / ATI Radeon HD 6670 or better Storag…

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Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
71
Steam
83%(13,783)

Game Info

Developer
Pieces Interactive
Publisher
Paradox Interactive
Release Date
May 26, 2015

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Frequently asked questions about Magicka 2 key

How much does Magicka 2 key cost?

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What platforms is Magicka 2 key available on?

Magicka 2 key is available on PC.

When was Magicka 2 key released?

Magicka 2 key was released on 26 May 2015.

Who developed Magicka 2 key?

Magicka 2 key was developed by Pieces Interactive and published by Paradox Interactive.

Is Magicka 2 key worth buying?

Magicka 2 key holds a Metacritic score of 71/100, making it one of the standout Action titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.