Compare Sonic Origins (PC) Steam Key prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Sonic Team. Published by SEGA. Released on 6/22/2022. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Action, Adventure, Casual.

Four genuine 16-bit classics in one package, held back by a shaky PC port, aggressive DLC slicing, and Sonic 3's legally-mangled soundtrack. The games are still brilliant. The wrapper is a mess.

My first instinct with Sonic Origins was cautious optimism. Four classic Sonic titles rebuilt on the Retro Engine, native widescreen, new modes, and a fresh coat of animated glue tying them together. What actually landed on PC was rougher than that pitch deserved. The collection covers Sonic the Hedgehog, Sonic CD, Sonic 2, and Sonic 3 & Knuckles. At their core, these are momentum-driven 2D platformers that still feel remarkably clean to run through. Anniversary Mode is the headline addition: it pushes everything to native 16:9, tosses out the old lives system in favour of infinite continues, and introduces the Drop Dash (carried over from Sonic Mania) as a universal move across all four games. Being able to hold jump in mid-air and burst straight into a spin-dash on landing genuinely adds pace to movement, and playing Sonic 1 with Tails or Knuckles as unlocked alternatives freshens up runs you might have done a hundred times. Classic Mode stays in 4:3 with the original ruleset for purists. Mission Mode throws bespoke stage challenges at you, graded for Gold Coins that unlock museum content and special stage retries. Boss Rush is exactly what it sounds like. Story Mode chains all four games back-to-back, bridged by short but genuinely well-animated cutscenes that are probably the most visually striking new thing in the package. Here is where it gets uncomfortable. The PC version launched with a documented list of problems: collision bugs in Sonic 3 & Knuckles, muffled audio across all games, widescreen boundary glitches, and erratic Tails AI. Even one of the porting developers publicly stated that the final build was not what his team submitted, pointing at integration bugs added during Sega's internal compile process. That kind of launch chaos hurt trust early, and the Mixed Steam rating reflects it. On top of the technical issues, Sega shipped the collection with features carved out for paid DLC tiers, including things like character animations in the main menu that most players would reasonably expect to be standard. There is also the Sonic 3 soundtrack situation: legal complications forced replacement of several tracks with prototype substitutes that lack the energy of the originals. Newcomers will not clock it, but anyone who grew up with Carnival Night or Ice Cap knows immediately. So who should actually play this? If you have never touched the classic Sonic games and want the most convenient, modern-feeling way in, Origins does the job. The widescreen Anniversary Mode looks sharp, the Drop Dash is a welcome addition, and the animated cutscenes give context the original cartridges never had. If you are a long-time fan reconsidering a revisit, manage your expectations on PC specifically. The roughest post-launch bugs have been patched over time, but the Sonic 3 music and the DLC structure are permanent features of the product. The games themselves are still excellent, momentum-rich platformers that reward learning the layouts. Origins just makes you work around some self-inflicted packaging problems to get to them. Alex, Scout Team

Sonic Origins (PC) Steam Key
ActionAdventureCasual

Sonic Origins (PC) Steam Key

Jun 22, 2022Sonic TeamSEGA
GamerScout Says

Four genuine 16-bit classics in one package, held back by a shaky PC port, aggressive DLC slicing, and Sonic 3's legally-mangled soundtrack. The games are still brilliant. The wrapper is a mess.

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About Sonic Origins (PC) Steam Key

My first instinct with Sonic Origins was cautious optimism. Four classic Sonic titles rebuilt on the Retro Engine, native widescreen, new modes, and a fresh coat of animated glue tying them together. What actually landed on PC was rougher than that pitch deserved. The collection covers Sonic the Hedgehog, Sonic CD, Sonic 2, and Sonic 3 & Knuckles. At their core, these are momentum-driven 2D platformers that still feel remarkably clean to run through. Anniversary Mode is the headline addition: it pushes everything to native 16:9, tosses out the old lives system in favour of infinite continues, and introduces the Drop Dash (carried over from Sonic Mania) as a universal move across all four games. Being able to hold jump in mid-air and burst straight into a spin-dash on landing genuinely adds pace to movement, and playing Sonic 1 with Tails or Knuckles as unlocked alternatives freshens up runs you might have done a hundred times. Classic Mode stays in 4:3 with the original ruleset for purists. Mission Mode throws bespoke stage challenges at you, graded for Gold Coins that unlock museum content and special stage retries. Boss Rush is exactly what it sounds like. Story Mode chains all four games back-to-back, bridged by short but genuinely well-animated cutscenes that are probably the most visually striking new thing in the package. Here is where it gets uncomfortable. The PC version launched with a documented list of problems: collision bugs in Sonic 3 & Knuckles, muffled audio across all games, widescreen boundary glitches, and erratic Tails AI. Even one of the porting developers publicly stated that the final build was not what his team submitted, pointing at integration bugs added during Sega's internal compile process. That kind of launch chaos hurt trust early, and the Mixed Steam rating reflects it. On top of the technical issues, Sega shipped the collection with features carved out for paid DLC tiers, including things like character animations in the main menu that most players would reasonably expect to be standard. There is also the Sonic 3 soundtrack situation: legal complications forced replacement of several tracks with prototype substitutes that lack the energy of the originals. Newcomers will not clock it, but anyone who grew up with Carnival Night or Ice Cap knows immediately. So who should actually play this? If you have never touched the classic Sonic games and want the most convenient, modern-feeling way in, Origins does the job. The widescreen Anniversary Mode looks sharp, the Drop Dash is a welcome addition, and the animated cutscenes give context the original cartridges never had. If you are a long-time fan reconsidering a revisit, manage your expectations on PC specifically. The roughest post-launch bugs have been patched over time, but the Sonic 3 music and the DLC structure are permanent features of the product. The games themselves are still excellent, momentum-rich platformers that reward learning the layouts. Origins just makes you work around some self-inflicted packaging problems to get to them. Alex, Scout Team

Tags

steamRetro CollectionWidescreen RemasterDrop DashAnniversary ModeBoss RushMission ModeMulti-Character PlayStory Mode

System Requirements

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Reviews & Ratings

Steam
76%(5,977)

Game Info

Developer
Sonic Team
Publisher
SEGA
Release Date
Jun 22, 2022

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