
Game intel
Batman Arkham Collection
Batman: Arkham Collection includes the definitive versions of Rocksteady's Arkham Trilogy games, including all post-launch content, in one complete collection.…
This caught my attention because it’s rare to see a landmark trilogy that shaped modern action games go on sale this hard. Fanatical is offering the Batman: Arkham Collection – Arkham Asylum, Arkham City, and Arkham Knight – for $7.79 / £6.49 (up to 87% off), and the offer runs only until February 22, 2026. If you’ve never played Rocksteady’s run or you want to rewatch how modern superhero combat and traversal were forged, this is the cheapest ticket back into Gotham you’ll likely find.
The headline numbers are simple: Fanatical’s sale drops the trilogy to $7.79 / £6.49 – a reduction that’s being called as much as 87% off. That price point matters because these aren’t throwaway licensed games. Arkham Asylum set a blueprint for modern third-person superhero action, Arkham City expanded it into one of the better open worlds of the last generation, and Arkham Knight polished the visuals and scale to near-showcase levels. For the price of a cheap lunch you can own the entire arc and play through the evolution of Rocksteady’s design language.
These titles are more than nostalgia bait. Arkham Asylum introduced the free-flow combat system that directly influenced later hits; Arkham City showed how to make a dense urban sandbox feel like a single, coherent level; Arkham Knight pushed lighting, particle work and environmental polish in ways that still read well today. There are rough edges — the Batmobile sections in Knight are divisive, and the Riddler trophy grind can be punishing (there are literally hundreds of them across the games, with Arkham Knight packing roughly 400+ collectibles) — but the core gameplay loop of predator stealth, satisfying counter-focused combat, and cinematic boss encounters still lands.

These games launched on hardware that’s now ancient by PC standards, and that’s mostly good news. Modern rigs chew through the trilogy with ease, and the Steam Deck can run them respectably — expect to need a few graphical tweaks and community presets to hit a smooth 40-60fps in most sections. If you want to play on the go, the Deck is a solid option; if you’re on a gaming PC, crank up the settings and enjoy Arkham Knight’s still-impressive visuals.

Why now? Aside from the sale’s short window, the rumour mill has put Rocksteady back in the conversation about mainline Batman games after the mixed reception to their recent projects. Whether those whispers prove true or not, revisiting the trilogy refreshes the narrative and mechanical beats a new Rocksteady title would be judged against. Play through the trilogy now and you’ll clearly see the studio’s strengths — atmosphere, actor-driven performances, and a knack for designing encounters around Batman’s toolkit — as well as the things you’d hope they iterate on next time.
If you care about how modern superhero games learned to move and fight, this is a no-brainer. At $7.79 / £6.49 you’re buying decades of influence, excellent set pieces, and a trilogy that still holds up. Be realistic: the Riddler grind isn’t for everyone, and some mechanics feel dated now, but the combat and atmosphere are textbook Rocksteady. And with a possible new mainline Batman on the horizon, there’s never been a better — or cheaper — time to get up to speed.

Act fast: the sale ends Sunday, February 22, 2026.
Fanatical’s Arkham Collection sale is one of those rare moments where price, timing and context align. For under $8, you can replay the trilogy that defined superhero action — and be ready in case Rocksteady pulls Batman back into the spotlight.
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