Compare Spellforce Complete prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Grimlore Games, THQ Nordic. Published by THQ Nordic. Released on 12/7/2017. Available on PC. Genres: Single Player, Multiplayer, Local Co-op, Bird View, Strategy, RPG.

A complete collection of the SpellForce saga, cramming together the Platinum Edition of the original game, SpellForce 2 Gold, and the Faith in Destiny expansion - dozens of hours of hybrid RPG-RTS campaigning across the world of Eo.

SpellForce Complete is, in the simplest possible terms, a vault of old-school hybrid gaming. It bundles SpellForce - Platinum Edition (itself three games: The Order of Dawn, Breath of Winter, and Shadow of the Phoenix) alongside SpellForce 2 Gold Edition and the Faith in Destiny content. If you have never touched this series before, the concept sounds immediately wild: part isometric party RPG, part real-time base-building strategy. You play a "Rune Warrior" avatar, developing skills, equipping gear, and leading a small party of companions through high fantasy maps - then, when the fight demands it, you flip into something closer to Age of Empires, summoning workers and warriors from race-specific monuments, constructing buildings, and commanding armies. The two modes do not just sit side-by-side; they interlock, because you need to find blueprints and worker runes in the RPG layer to unlock better units and structures on the RTS layer. The first game holds up better as an RPG entry-point than its reputation suggests. Six playable races - humans, elves, dwarves, orcs, dark elves, and trolls - each bring distinct racial bonuses to the RTS side, with dwarves gaining passive experience, dark elves raising skeletons from slain enemies at night, and elves performing better in forests. Your hero progression is attribute-and-skill-point based: you can build toward mages, melee fighters, archers, rogues, or some multiclass hybrid, though community veterans consistently warn against multiclassing on a first run because there is no respec and some builds hit walls fast. The magic system spans multiple schools with uneven power levels - fire and certain summoning trees pull ahead, and the game does not really hide that. Filler fetch quests exist; consider yourself warned. Dialogue, meanwhile, is functional rather than lyrical, and the original voice dub has aged about as gracefully as a dial-up modem. SpellForce 2, bundled here in its Gold form, smoothed several rough edges. The pacing is faster, the RPG elements are somewhat streamlined compared to the first game's denser build matrix, and the story benefits from a tighter central hook - you are Shaikan, blood-bonded to an ancient dragon, navigating a world already devastated by earlier wars. That dragon connection is one of the series' better bits of worldbuilding, even if the broader narrative never quite reaches the emotional register it is aiming for. The RTS component in SF2 introduced mounted units, flying units, and enormous titans into the faction rosters, which dramatically raises the spectacle ceiling on large-scale battles. Faith in Destiny, the expansion content also included here, landed to considerably cooler reception than the base game and is generally considered the weakest piece in this collection - useful for lore completionists, less essential otherwise. The honest caveat with SpellForce Complete is that you are buying two-decade-old games, and the interface design is very much of its era. Neither title offers the narrative depth of a dedicated CRPG - choices rarely reshape the world in meaningful ways - and neither matches the strategic crunch of a focused RTS. What the series does, and has done since 2003, is offer something genuinely rare: a sandbox where you can clear an entire map with an overpowered four-person squad if your hero build is good enough, or wage a full base-building war if you prefer. The flexibility is the point. For players who bounced off the first game, SF2 is a smoother on-ramp. For players who want to go deep on the original's more complex RPG system, the Platinum content will keep you busy for a long time. Monika, Scout Team

Spellforce Complete
Single PlayerMultiplayerLocal Co-opBird ViewStrategyRPG

Spellforce Complete

Dec 7, 2017Grimlore Games, THQ NordicTHQ Nordic
GamerScout Says

A complete collection of the SpellForce saga, cramming together the Platinum Edition of the original game, SpellForce 2 Gold, and the Faith in Destiny expansion - dozens of hours of hybrid RPG-RTS campaigning across the world of Eo.

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About Spellforce Complete

SpellForce Complete is, in the simplest possible terms, a vault of old-school hybrid gaming. It bundles SpellForce - Platinum Edition (itself three games: The Order of Dawn, Breath of Winter, and Shadow of the Phoenix) alongside SpellForce 2 Gold Edition and the Faith in Destiny content. If you have never touched this series before, the concept sounds immediately wild: part isometric party RPG, part real-time base-building strategy. You play a "Rune Warrior" avatar, developing skills, equipping gear, and leading a small party of companions through high fantasy maps - then, when the fight demands it, you flip into something closer to Age of Empires, summoning workers and warriors from race-specific monuments, constructing buildings, and commanding armies. The two modes do not just sit side-by-side; they interlock, because you need to find blueprints and worker runes in the RPG layer to unlock better units and structures on the RTS layer. The first game holds up better as an RPG entry-point than its reputation suggests. Six playable races - humans, elves, dwarves, orcs, dark elves, and trolls - each bring distinct racial bonuses to the RTS side, with dwarves gaining passive experience, dark elves raising skeletons from slain enemies at night, and elves performing better in forests. Your hero progression is attribute-and-skill-point based: you can build toward mages, melee fighters, archers, rogues, or some multiclass hybrid, though community veterans consistently warn against multiclassing on a first run because there is no respec and some builds hit walls fast. The magic system spans multiple schools with uneven power levels - fire and certain summoning trees pull ahead, and the game does not really hide that. Filler fetch quests exist; consider yourself warned. Dialogue, meanwhile, is functional rather than lyrical, and the original voice dub has aged about as gracefully as a dial-up modem. SpellForce 2, bundled here in its Gold form, smoothed several rough edges. The pacing is faster, the RPG elements are somewhat streamlined compared to the first game's denser build matrix, and the story benefits from a tighter central hook - you are Shaikan, blood-bonded to an ancient dragon, navigating a world already devastated by earlier wars. That dragon connection is one of the series' better bits of worldbuilding, even if the broader narrative never quite reaches the emotional register it is aiming for. The RTS component in SF2 introduced mounted units, flying units, and enormous titans into the faction rosters, which dramatically raises the spectacle ceiling on large-scale battles. Faith in Destiny, the expansion content also included here, landed to considerably cooler reception than the base game and is generally considered the weakest piece in this collection - useful for lore completionists, less essential otherwise. The honest caveat with SpellForce Complete is that you are buying two-decade-old games, and the interface design is very much of its era. Neither title offers the narrative depth of a dedicated CRPG - choices rarely reshape the world in meaningful ways - and neither matches the strategic crunch of a focused RTS. What the series does, and has done since 2003, is offer something genuinely rare: a sandbox where you can clear an entire map with an overpowered four-person squad if your hero build is good enough, or wage a full base-building war if you prefer. The flexibility is the point. For players who bounced off the first game, SF2 is a smoother on-ramp. For players who want to go deep on the original's more complex RPG system, the Platinum content will keep you busy for a long time. Monika, Scout Team

Tags

steamRPG-RTS HybridRune WarriorBase BuildingParty-Based CombatSkill TreeMulticlassCo-op CampaignFantasy LoreIsometric

System Requirements

Minimum

Memory
6 GB RAM
Storage
15 GB
Graphics
NVIDIA GTX 660 2GB, AMD Radeon 7850 2GB
Processor
Intel Core i5 3570, AMD FX-6350
System requirements
Windows 7, 8, Windows 10 (64 bit)

Recommended

Memory
8 GB RAM
Storage
15 GB
Graphics
NVIDIA GTX 970 4GB, AMD Radeon R9 290 4GB
Processor
Intel Core i7-4790, AMD FX-8350
System requirements
Windows 7, 8, Windows 10 (64 bit)

DLC & Add-ons for Spellforce Complete1

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Game Info

Developer
Grimlore Games, THQ Nordic
Publisher
THQ Nordic
Release Date
Dec 7, 2017

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