Compare The Lord of the Rings: Gollum - Precious Edition prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Daedalic Entertainment. Published by Daedalic Entertainment. Released on 5/25/2023. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Action, Adventure.

A stealth platformer set in Middle-earth that puts you in Gollum's scrawny shoes between The Hobbit and Fellowship. Widely panned on launch, it's a rough ride even for die-hard Tolkien fans.

The Lord of the Rings: Gollum is a third-person stealth platformer that fills in a gap of Tolkien lore most fans probably didn't know they wanted filled. You play as the wretched, ring-obsessed Smeagol-turned-Gollum across ten chapters, moving through iconic locations like the dark slave pits of Barad-dur and the elven forests of Mirkwood, before the events of The Fellowship of the Ring. The framing device is clever enough: Gandalf interrogates Gollum in a Mirkwood cell, and the story unfolds in flashback. You even meet characters like Thranduil and Mell, a blind elf who serves as an unlikely ally. The concept on paper is genuinely interesting. In practice, almost everything breaks down at the execution level. The core loop is shadow-hopping stealth and climbing traversal. Gollum can jump, wall-run, swing on bars, shimmy ledges, and throw rocks to distract guards. There are no weapons, no combat system to speak of beyond the occasional unarmored-orc choke-out, and no skill tree or ability unlocks across the entire runtime. What you see in the opening hour is all there is. The stealth itself is inconsistently implemented: guards sometimes ignore you when they shouldn't, and detect you through solid cover when logic says they can't. A "Gollum Vision" detective mode highlights enemies and paths but was reported by multiple reviewers to be unreliable. The platforming suffers from an uncooperative camera that swings into Gollum's back during climbs, and a jump system where the distance Gollum actually travels feels disconnected from player input. There is one mechanic worth calling out as a spark of something better: the Gollum-versus-Smeagol choice system. At dialogue decision points, you pick a course of action and then have to convince the other personality to go along. It reflects the character's fractured psychology in a way that feels true to the source material. But reviewers broadly found that these choices carry little narrative consequence, which undercuts the tension they could have created. The story itself leans heavily on assumed Tolkien knowledge, and even fans found the narrative hard to follow by the later chapters. The Precious Edition bundles the base game with the Sindarin voice-over DLC (which lets the elves speak Tolkien's constructed elvish language rather than English), a Lore Compendium, a digital artbook with over 100 sketches, the original soundtrack, and six Gollum-inspired emotes. The Sindarin DLC is the most meaningful add-on for lore purists, though the fact it isn't in the base game raised eyebrows at launch. The soundtrack itself is original, built around strings and woodwinds rather than mimicking the Howard Shore film scores, and it's probably the most consistently praised element of the whole package. Daedalic Entertainment publicly apologized the day after launch for the game's technical state, and the poor reception ultimately caused the studio to close its development division entirely. That context matters when you're deciding whether to spend money here. Post-launch patches addressed some instability, but the underlying design problems, bland level structure, dated visuals, and shallow mechanics are not things a patch can fix. If your Tolkien devotion is absolute and you genuinely want to experience Gollum's untold years, this is the only game that covers that ground. Everyone else will find better uses for their time. Alex, Scout Team

The Lord of the Rings: Gollum - Precious Edition

The Lord of the Rings: Gollum - Precious Edition

May 25, 2023Daedalic Entertainment
GamerScout Says

A stealth platformer set in Middle-earth that puts you in Gollum's scrawny shoes between The Hobbit and Fellowship. Widely panned on launch, it's a rough ride even for die-hard Tolkien fans.

PCXbox
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Historical low: €5.06

GamerScout Verdict

Only for Tolkien completionists desperate to see Gollum's untold years; everyone else should pass.

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Price History

Historical low
€5.0615 Jun 2026
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About The Lord of the Rings: Gollum - Precious Edition

The Lord of the Rings: Gollum is a third-person stealth platformer that fills in a gap of Tolkien lore most fans probably didn't know they wanted filled. You play as the wretched, ring-obsessed Smeagol-turned-Gollum across ten chapters, moving through iconic locations like the dark slave pits of Barad-dur and the elven forests of Mirkwood, before the events of The Fellowship of the Ring. The framing device is clever enough: Gandalf interrogates Gollum in a Mirkwood cell, and the story unfolds in flashback. You even meet characters like Thranduil and Mell, a blind elf who serves as an unlikely ally. The concept on paper is genuinely interesting. In practice, almost everything breaks down at the execution level. The core loop is shadow-hopping stealth and climbing traversal. Gollum can jump, wall-run, swing on bars, shimmy ledges, and throw rocks to distract guards. There are no weapons, no combat system to speak of beyond the occasional unarmored-orc choke-out, and no skill tree or ability unlocks across the entire runtime. What you see in the opening hour is all there is. The stealth itself is inconsistently implemented: guards sometimes ignore you when they shouldn't, and detect you through solid cover when logic says they can't. A "Gollum Vision" detective mode highlights enemies and paths but was reported by multiple reviewers to be unreliable. The platforming suffers from an uncooperative camera that swings into Gollum's back during climbs, and a jump system where the distance Gollum actually travels feels disconnected from player input. There is one mechanic worth calling out as a spark of something better: the Gollum-versus-Smeagol choice system. At dialogue decision points, you pick a course of action and then have to convince the other personality to go along. It reflects the character's fractured psychology in a way that feels true to the source material. But reviewers broadly found that these choices carry little narrative consequence, which undercuts the tension they could have created. The story itself leans heavily on assumed Tolkien knowledge, and even fans found the narrative hard to follow by the later chapters. The Precious Edition bundles the base game with the Sindarin voice-over DLC (which lets the elves speak Tolkien's constructed elvish language rather than English), a Lore Compendium, a digital artbook with over 100 sketches, the original soundtrack, and six Gollum-inspired emotes. The Sindarin DLC is the most meaningful add-on for lore purists, though the fact it isn't in the base game raised eyebrows at launch. The soundtrack itself is original, built around strings and woodwinds rather than mimicking the Howard Shore film scores, and it's probably the most consistently praised element of the whole package. Daedalic Entertainment publicly apologized the day after launch for the game's technical state, and the poor reception ultimately caused the studio to close its development division entirely. That context matters when you're deciding whether to spend money here. Post-launch patches addressed some instability, but the underlying design problems, bland level structure, dated visuals, and shallow mechanics are not things a patch can fix. If your Tolkien devotion is absolute and you genuinely want to experience Gollum's untold years, this is the only game that covers that ground. Everyone else will find better uses for their time.

Alex
Alex · Scout Team

Catch-all

Tags

steamStealth PlatformerLinear LevelsLore-HeavySplit Personality ChoicesNo Combat SystemSingle Player OnlyTolkien Canon

System Requirements

Minimum

Memory
8 GB RAM
Storage
45 GB
Graphics
Nvidia GTX 1060, 6GB / AMD Radeon R9 290X, 4GB
Processor
Intel Core i5-4690 / AMD Ryzen 3 1300X
64bit support
Yes
System requirements
Windows 10/11

Recommended

OS
Windows 10/11
Processor
Intel Core i7-8700K / AMD Ryzen 5 3600X
Memory
16 GB RAM
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3070, 8GB (with DLSS Quality Setting)…

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Game Info

Developer
Daedalic Entertainment
Publisher
Daedalic Entertainment
Release Date
May 25, 2023

Features

Single-playerSteam AchievementsFull controller supportSteam Trading CardsSteam CloudRemote Play on TVFamily Sharing

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What platforms is The Lord of the Rings: Gollum - Precious Edition available on?

The Lord of the Rings: Gollum - Precious Edition is available on PC, Xbox.

When was The Lord of the Rings: Gollum - Precious Edition released?

The Lord of the Rings: Gollum - Precious Edition was released on 25 May 2023.

Who developed The Lord of the Rings: Gollum - Precious Edition?

The Lord of the Rings: Gollum - Precious Edition was developed by Daedalic Entertainment.