Compare The Incredible Adventures of Van Helsing II prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by NeocoreGames. Published by NeocoreGames. Released on 6/13/2014. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Adventure, Indie, RPG. Metacritic score: 77/100.

If your Diablo itch has gone unscratched and you have a soft spot for mad science and gothic fog, Van Helsing II's sprawling lair management and three-class build system will pull you in deeper than you planned.

I want to be honest about the first hour: it is rough. Van Helsing II drops you mid-sentence into a resistance war, wobbles its camera through exposition-heavy cutscenes, and buries you under skill trees before you have had a chance to care about any of it. Stick through it anyway. The game that opens up on the other side of that clunky threshold is a genuinely layered action RPG with more going on than its budget-tier reputation suggests. The three classes available from the start, the Hunter, the Thaumaturge, and the Arcane Mechanic, are more flexible than they sound on paper. NeocoreGames deliberately kept class boundaries porous, so a Hunter can drift toward spellcasting, or lean into a glass-cannon ranged build, without the game punishing you for it. The Thaumaturge's elemental bolt-slinging feels satisfying in the middle chapters when enemy density peaks, and the Arcane Mechanic's turret-and-gadget playstyle is a genuine change of pace for anyone who usually runs melee-first. On top of your own skill trees, Lady Katarina, your ghostly companion, has two trees of her own and can be directed toward melee support, ranged fire, or a damage-absorb role. Levelling her up in tandem with your character gives the whole progression loop a pleasing dual rhythm. The secret lair sitting at the heart of the campaign is the structural piece that elevates Van Helsing II above a simple wave-clear grinder. From it you marshal resistance commanders and send them on tactical missions, manage troop equipment, craft and forge gear through a fragmentation system that lets you shatter artifacts into magical runes and slot them onto new items, and even raise and enhance a Chimera creature you can summon into combat. The extended tower defence mode returns with up to seven optional levels and noticeably better map design than in the first game. None of these systems are essential, but they accumulate into something that rewards completionists and stat-lovers considerably. The rage system, which lets you charge up to three PowerUp modifiers across your eight active skills, adds a welcome layer of timing to what could otherwise be mindless clicking. Where the game stumbles is familiar territory for the genre. Combat feedback lacks impact; enemies frequently feel like damage sponges rather than threats with personality, and the "difficulty" setting mostly means more of them rushing you at once. Multiplayer co-op for up to four players exists, but community reports have flagged persistent bugs and connectivity issues that have never been fully resolved, so I would not bank on that being the draw. The story, too, never quite earns its own mythology. The snarky banter between Van Helsing and Katarina is charming in small doses, but the pop culture references land awkwardly against the otherwise grim-industrial setting, and the motivations of the broader resistance plot remain thin throughout. If you are here for narrative, this is not that game. For genre fans, though, particularly anyone who has finished Torchlight 2 or exhausted a Diablo season and wants something with its own flavour, Van Helsing II delivers. The gothic-steampunk world of Borgova has a genuinely distinctive atmosphere, the lair adds a light strategy heartbeat between dungeon runs, and the class customisation has enough depth to support multiple playthroughs. Accept the slow opening, manage your expectations around the story, and it settles into one of the more comfortable action RPGs from that mid-2010s indie wave. Kai, Scout Team

The Incredible Adventures of Van Helsing II
ActionAdventureIndieRPG

The Incredible Adventures of Van Helsing II

Jun 13, 2014NeocoreGames
GamerScout Says

If your Diablo itch has gone unscratched and you have a soft spot for mad science and gothic fog, Van Helsing II's sprawling lair management and three-class build system will pull you in deeper than you planned.

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About The Incredible Adventures of Van Helsing II

I want to be honest about the first hour: it is rough. Van Helsing II drops you mid-sentence into a resistance war, wobbles its camera through exposition-heavy cutscenes, and buries you under skill trees before you have had a chance to care about any of it. Stick through it anyway. The game that opens up on the other side of that clunky threshold is a genuinely layered action RPG with more going on than its budget-tier reputation suggests. The three classes available from the start, the Hunter, the Thaumaturge, and the Arcane Mechanic, are more flexible than they sound on paper. NeocoreGames deliberately kept class boundaries porous, so a Hunter can drift toward spellcasting, or lean into a glass-cannon ranged build, without the game punishing you for it. The Thaumaturge's elemental bolt-slinging feels satisfying in the middle chapters when enemy density peaks, and the Arcane Mechanic's turret-and-gadget playstyle is a genuine change of pace for anyone who usually runs melee-first. On top of your own skill trees, Lady Katarina, your ghostly companion, has two trees of her own and can be directed toward melee support, ranged fire, or a damage-absorb role. Levelling her up in tandem with your character gives the whole progression loop a pleasing dual rhythm. The secret lair sitting at the heart of the campaign is the structural piece that elevates Van Helsing II above a simple wave-clear grinder. From it you marshal resistance commanders and send them on tactical missions, manage troop equipment, craft and forge gear through a fragmentation system that lets you shatter artifacts into magical runes and slot them onto new items, and even raise and enhance a Chimera creature you can summon into combat. The extended tower defence mode returns with up to seven optional levels and noticeably better map design than in the first game. None of these systems are essential, but they accumulate into something that rewards completionists and stat-lovers considerably. The rage system, which lets you charge up to three PowerUp modifiers across your eight active skills, adds a welcome layer of timing to what could otherwise be mindless clicking. Where the game stumbles is familiar territory for the genre. Combat feedback lacks impact; enemies frequently feel like damage sponges rather than threats with personality, and the "difficulty" setting mostly means more of them rushing you at once. Multiplayer co-op for up to four players exists, but community reports have flagged persistent bugs and connectivity issues that have never been fully resolved, so I would not bank on that being the draw. The story, too, never quite earns its own mythology. The snarky banter between Van Helsing and Katarina is charming in small doses, but the pop culture references land awkwardly against the otherwise grim-industrial setting, and the motivations of the broader resistance plot remain thin throughout. If you are here for narrative, this is not that game. For genre fans, though, particularly anyone who has finished Torchlight 2 or exhausted a Diablo season and wants something with its own flavour, Van Helsing II delivers. The gothic-steampunk world of Borgova has a genuinely distinctive atmosphere, the lair adds a light strategy heartbeat between dungeon runs, and the class customisation has enough depth to support multiple playthroughs. Accept the slow opening, manage your expectations around the story, and it settles into one of the more comfortable action RPGs from that mid-2010s indie wave. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayermultiplayercoopachievementscontroller-supporttrading-cardscloud-savestier:aaaGothic SteampunkLair ManagementCompanion SystemTower DefenseRunecraftingRage SystemResistance StrategyClass Flexibility

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck PlayableProtonDB Platinum

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable. Runs flawlessly on Linux out of the box. Based on 16 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows XP SP3, Windows 7, Windows 8
Memory
2 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0c
Network
Broadband Internet connection
Storage
20 GB available space
Graphics
GeForce 8800, Radeon HD4000, Intel HD4000 (min. 512 MB VRAM)
Processor
Dual Core CPU 2.0 GHz
Sound Card
DirectX 9.0c compatible sound card

Recommended

OS
Windows 7 (64 bit), Windows 8 (64 bit)
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Network
Broadband Internet connection
Storage
20 GB available space
Graphics
GeForce 560 or Radeon HD5800
Processor
Quad Core CPU 2.5 GHz
Sound Card
DirectX 9.0c compatible sound card

DLC & Add-ons for The Incredible Adventures of Van Helsing II3

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Community Discussion

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Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
77

Game Info

Developer
NeocoreGames
Publisher
NeocoreGames
Release Date
Jun 13, 2014

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What platforms is The Incredible Adventures of Van Helsing II available on?

The Incredible Adventures of Van Helsing II is available on PC.

When was The Incredible Adventures of Van Helsing II released?

The Incredible Adventures of Van Helsing II was released on 13 June 2014.

Who developed The Incredible Adventures of Van Helsing II?

The Incredible Adventures of Van Helsing II was developed by NeocoreGames.

Is The Incredible Adventures of Van Helsing II worth buying?

The Incredible Adventures of Van Helsing II holds a Metacritic score of 77/100, making it one of the standout Action titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.