Titan Quest - Compare Prices & Find Best Deals

Compare Titan Quest prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Grimlore Games. Published by THQ Nordic. Released on 8/1/2025. Available on PC. Genres: Action, RPG, Early Access.

Titan Quest II drops you into a myth-soaked action RPG where Nemesis has gone rogue and the Threads of Fate are unraveling. Early Access, but already swinging hard.

Titan Quest II is an isometric action RPG set in a version of ancient Greece where the gods are very much your problem. Nemesis, Goddess of Retribution, has broken loose and started corrupting the Threads of Fate themselves, which is as apocalyptic as it sounds. You are, predictably, the one mortal capable of doing something about it. Developer Grimlore Games is carrying the torch from the beloved 2006 original, and in Early Access form the game already shows a serious commitment to that legacy: dense mythological atmosphere, a loot treadmill that keeps you chasing one more drop, and a mastery-based character system that rewards players who actually think about their builds. The mastery system is where the game earns its keep. Rather than locking you into a rigid class, Titan Quest II lets you combine two masteries to define your character, which means the build space opens up considerably once you get past the first few hours. A character blending warfare with storm magic plays very differently from one mixing hunting with earth abilities, and the synergies between skill trees are the kind of thing you will be theorycrafting on a second playthrough. Combat is responsive and weighty for the genre, with a clear visual language that lets you read enemy attacks without squinting at a screen full of particle effects. The mythological bestiary pulls from Greek sources with genuine care, so you are not fighting generic skeletons but harpies, satyrs, and creatures that feel like they belong in the world. The narrative framing around Nemesis is genuinely interesting premise-wise. A goddess of punishment losing control of her own domain and becoming the source of cosmic injustice is a solid hook with room for real thematic depth. Early Access being what it is, the story content currently available leaves plenty of threads open, and it is too soon to say whether the writing will reward the kind of close reading that separates a good RPG from a great one. What is present reads competently, with some moments of actual wit, but the quest writing occasionally slides into the fetch-and-kill patterns that pad out ARPGs without advancing anything meaningful. The main Nemesis arc keeps the stakes visible, which helps. Technically, the game runs well and looks genuinely striking. Grimlore has rendered the ancient Greek environments with enough visual variety that moving from sun-baked coastal ruins to shadowy mythological underworlds feels like a real change of scenery rather than a palette swap. Performance on PC is stable for an Early Access title, with none of the catastrophic launch issues that can derail a goodwill-building period. The roadmap promises additional acts, expanded mastery content, and story completion before full release, which is the right shape for an Early Access rollout in this genre. The 83 percent positive Steam rating from over sixteen thousand reviews suggests the community is largely on board with the current state. Who is this for right now? If you burned hours on the original Titan Quest or have a soft spot for Grim Dawn-style mastery layering, Titan Quest II in Early Access is already delivering on the core loop. If you are someone who needs a complete narrative arc and a polished endgame before you invest, the patient play is to wait for full release. The bones are strong, the mythology is handled with respect, and the build variety holds genuine promise. It just needs more game around it before anyone can call it a complete experience. Monika, Scout Team

Titan Quest
ActionRPGEarly Access

Titan Quest

Aug 1, 2025Grimlore GamesTHQ Nordic
GamerScout Says

Titan Quest II drops you into a myth-soaked action RPG where Nemesis has gone rogue and the Threads of Fate are unraveling. Early Access, but already swinging hard.

PC
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Historical low: $29.99

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About Titan Quest

Titan Quest II is an isometric action RPG set in a version of ancient Greece where the gods are very much your problem. Nemesis, Goddess of Retribution, has broken loose and started corrupting the Threads of Fate themselves, which is as apocalyptic as it sounds. You are, predictably, the one mortal capable of doing something about it. Developer Grimlore Games is carrying the torch from the beloved 2006 original, and in Early Access form the game already shows a serious commitment to that legacy: dense mythological atmosphere, a loot treadmill that keeps you chasing one more drop, and a mastery-based character system that rewards players who actually think about their builds. The mastery system is where the game earns its keep. Rather than locking you into a rigid class, Titan Quest II lets you combine two masteries to define your character, which means the build space opens up considerably once you get past the first few hours. A character blending warfare with storm magic plays very differently from one mixing hunting with earth abilities, and the synergies between skill trees are the kind of thing you will be theorycrafting on a second playthrough. Combat is responsive and weighty for the genre, with a clear visual language that lets you read enemy attacks without squinting at a screen full of particle effects. The mythological bestiary pulls from Greek sources with genuine care, so you are not fighting generic skeletons but harpies, satyrs, and creatures that feel like they belong in the world. The narrative framing around Nemesis is genuinely interesting premise-wise. A goddess of punishment losing control of her own domain and becoming the source of cosmic injustice is a solid hook with room for real thematic depth. Early Access being what it is, the story content currently available leaves plenty of threads open, and it is too soon to say whether the writing will reward the kind of close reading that separates a good RPG from a great one. What is present reads competently, with some moments of actual wit, but the quest writing occasionally slides into the fetch-and-kill patterns that pad out ARPGs without advancing anything meaningful. The main Nemesis arc keeps the stakes visible, which helps. Technically, the game runs well and looks genuinely striking. Grimlore has rendered the ancient Greek environments with enough visual variety that moving from sun-baked coastal ruins to shadowy mythological underworlds feels like a real change of scenery rather than a palette swap. Performance on PC is stable for an Early Access title, with none of the catastrophic launch issues that can derail a goodwill-building period. The roadmap promises additional acts, expanded mastery content, and story completion before full release, which is the right shape for an Early Access rollout in this genre. The 83 percent positive Steam rating from over sixteen thousand reviews suggests the community is largely on board with the current state. Who is this for right now? If you burned hours on the original Titan Quest or have a soft spot for Grim Dawn-style mastery layering, Titan Quest II in Early Access is already delivering on the core loop. If you are someone who needs a complete narrative arc and a polished endgame before you invest, the patient play is to wait for full release. The bones are strong, the mythology is handled with respect, and the build variety holds genuine promise. It just needs more game around it before anyone can call it a complete experience. Monika, Scout Team

Tags

steamGreek MythologyEarly Access RPGMastery SystemLoot-DrivenIsometric ARPGBuild CraftingMythological EnemiesSingle-player Focus

System Requirements

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Reviews & Ratings

Steam
83%(16,623)

Game Info

Developer
Grimlore Games
Publisher
THQ Nordic
Release Date
Aug 1, 2025

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Price History

2024-12$59.99
2024-11$41.99
2024-09$35.99
2024-07$29.99(lowest)