Compare The Orange Box prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Valve. Published by Valve. Released on 10/10/2007. Available on PC. Genres: Action. Metacritic score: 96/100.

Five complete games from one studio, released the same day, and every single one of them holds up. If you haven't played Half-Life 2, Portal, or TF2 yet, there's no better entry point.

I've gone back to The Orange Box more times than I can count, and it still surprises me that something this dense ever existed as a single release. Valve shipped five complete games on one October day in 2007 - Half-Life 2, its two episodic continuations (Episode One and Episode Two), the class-based shooter Team Fortress 2, and the first-person puzzle game Portal - and somehow none of them felt like filler. The heaviest lifting is done by Half-Life 2 and its episodes. Gordon Freeman's silent protagonist routine works because the Source engine's physics and enemy AI give you so much to react to - gravity gun pulls, antlion swarms, combine soldiers who actually flank you. Episode Two pushes into forested open terrain that felt genuinely different from the city corridors of HL2 proper, and it's the last chapter of that story that ever shipped, which makes its cliffhanger ending sting even more in hindsight. If you're new to the series, budget around 20-25 hours to get through all three and accept that the story does not resolve. Portal is the wildcard of the package. What looks like a short puzzle game - use the Aperture Science portal gun to teleport yourself and objects through linked holes in space - turns into something much weirder once the AI overseer GLaDOS starts editorializing. It runs around three to five hours depending on how quickly spatial logic clicks for you, and it's the kind of game that players who've "never been game people" finish and immediately want to talk about. Team Fortress 2 is the multiplayer anchor: nine distinct classes (Scout, Soldier, Pyro, Demoman, Heavy, Engineer, Medic, Sniper, Spy), team objectives across maps like capture-the-flag and payload, and a cartoon visual style that aged better than most shooters of the era. Note that TF2 went free-to-play years after this bundle launched, so you're primarily paying here for the single-player content. The honest caveat is age. Half-Life 2's textures show their years on modern high-res displays, and the episodic structure means you're getting roughly five-hour chapters rather than a full sequel. TF2's active PC population has also shifted over time and the game has accumulated years of post-launch items and cosmetics that can feel overwhelming to newcomers. The 2024 20th-anniversary update folded both episodes and Lost Coast back into Half-Life 2 on Steam, which tidies the library side of things and added some graphical polish, but the core games are fundamentally the same builds they were at launch. What makes this worth recommending in 2025 is scope and variety. You get a landmark singleplayer FPS campaign, a puzzle game that genuinely changed how developers think about environmental storytelling, and a multiplayer shooter with one of the longest competitive lifespans in PC gaming - all from the same source. Not every player will connect equally with all five titles, but the odds are high that at least two of them will grab you hard. Alex, Scout Team

The Orange Box

The Orange Box

Oct 10, 2007Valve
GamerScout Says

Five complete games from one studio, released the same day, and every single one of them holds up. If you haven't played Half-Life 2, Portal, or TF2 yet, there's no better entry point.

PC
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GamerScout Verdict

The definitive entry point to Valve's golden era - buy it for Portal and Half-Life 2, keep it for TF2.

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Screenshots & Media

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About The Orange Box

I've gone back to The Orange Box more times than I can count, and it still surprises me that something this dense ever existed as a single release. Valve shipped five complete games on one October day in 2007 - Half-Life 2, its two episodic continuations (Episode One and Episode Two), the class-based shooter Team Fortress 2, and the first-person puzzle game Portal - and somehow none of them felt like filler. The heaviest lifting is done by Half-Life 2 and its episodes. Gordon Freeman's silent protagonist routine works because the Source engine's physics and enemy AI give you so much to react to - gravity gun pulls, antlion swarms, combine soldiers who actually flank you. Episode Two pushes into forested open terrain that felt genuinely different from the city corridors of HL2 proper, and it's the last chapter of that story that ever shipped, which makes its cliffhanger ending sting even more in hindsight. If you're new to the series, budget around 20-25 hours to get through all three and accept that the story does not resolve. Portal is the wildcard of the package. What looks like a short puzzle game - use the Aperture Science portal gun to teleport yourself and objects through linked holes in space - turns into something much weirder once the AI overseer GLaDOS starts editorializing. It runs around three to five hours depending on how quickly spatial logic clicks for you, and it's the kind of game that players who've "never been game people" finish and immediately want to talk about. Team Fortress 2 is the multiplayer anchor: nine distinct classes (Scout, Soldier, Pyro, Demoman, Heavy, Engineer, Medic, Sniper, Spy), team objectives across maps like capture-the-flag and payload, and a cartoon visual style that aged better than most shooters of the era. Note that TF2 went free-to-play years after this bundle launched, so you're primarily paying here for the single-player content. The honest caveat is age. Half-Life 2's textures show their years on modern high-res displays, and the episodic structure means you're getting roughly five-hour chapters rather than a full sequel. TF2's active PC population has also shifted over time and the game has accumulated years of post-launch items and cosmetics that can feel overwhelming to newcomers. The 2024 20th-anniversary update folded both episodes and Lost Coast back into Half-Life 2 on Steam, which tidies the library side of things and added some graphical polish, but the core games are fundamentally the same builds they were at launch. What makes this worth recommending in 2025 is scope and variety. You get a landmark singleplayer FPS campaign, a puzzle game that genuinely changed how developers think about environmental storytelling, and a multiplayer shooter with one of the longest competitive lifespans in PC gaming - all from the same source. Not every player will connect equally with all five titles, but the odds are high that at least two of them will grab you hard.

Alex
Alex · Scout Team

Catch-all

Tags

tier:no-steam-match:aaa-pricedenriched-from-kinguinSingle-Player FPSPortal MechanicsClass-Based MultiplayerPhysics-Based CombatEpisodic StoryAI CompanionPuzzle Platformer ElementsGame BundleGravity Gun

System Requirements

Minimum

1.7 GHz Processor, 512MB RAM, DirectX® 8.1 level Graphics Card (Requires support for SSE), Windows® 7 (32/64-bit)/Vista/XP, Mouse, Keyboard, Internet Connection

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Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
96

Game Info

Developer
Valve
Publisher
Valve
Release Date
Oct 10, 2007

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How much does The Orange Box cost?

The Orange Box pricing changes often and varies by store, edition and region. The live price table on this page compares the cheapest in-stock offers from trusted key stores like Eneba and Kinguin, so you always see the current lowest price before you buy.

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What platforms is The Orange Box available on?

The Orange Box is available on PC.

When was The Orange Box released?

The Orange Box was released on 10 October 2007.

Who developed The Orange Box?

The Orange Box was developed by Valve.

Is The Orange Box worth buying?

The Orange Box holds a Metacritic score of 96/100, making it one of the standout Action titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.