
Game intel
Baldur's Gate
The Sega Dreamcast version of Baldur's Gate is an unreleased port of an RPG developed by BioWare. Planned for release in May 2000 (with porting work being hand…
If you’ve been holding out for a cheap, one-stop way to catch up on the CRPG canon, Humble Bundle just handed you the keyring. For roughly €23.49 you can grab a 12-item pack – nine core RPGs plus DLC and extras – that drops Baldur’s Gate: Enhanced Edition, Planescape: Torment EE, Neverwinter Nights EE and other Dungeons & Dragons-adjacent classics into your Steam library for pocket change. That matters because these aren’t token ports: they’re the games most people point to when they complain modern RPGs don’t have enough player choice.
Paying roughly the price of a single indie hit to acquire a quintet of canonical CRPGs is one of those moments where market mechanics actually work for gamers. Humble’s pack combines Beamdog’s Infinity Engine stewardship (the Baldur’s Gate line, Icewind Dale, Planescape remasters) with Owlcat’s modern Pathfinder titles — a tidy through-line from AD&D-era dialogue trees to tactical, more recent CRPG design. If you’ve been meaning to experience the branching conversations and patched-up nostalgia of these games, the bundle removes one of the two big barriers: cost.
Humble Bundle is not inventing new ways to play these games. It’s repackaging existing Enhanced Editions and recent releases into a single, heavily discounted purchase window. That’s fine—it’s useful—but don’t confuse it with active preservation or meaningful remastering. Enhanced Editions fix usability and widescreen problems, but community reports still note dated engine quirks on modern hardware. In short: this is affordable access, not a guarantee these games will run flawlessly across every 2026 rig or Steam Deck without additional patches.

The bundle’s sequencing is logical: Beamdog carries the D&D lineage back to the Infinity Engine and AD&D mechanics, while Owlcat represents the path D&D’s descendants took in the 2010s with Pathfinder. That gives buyers a playable lineage of design evolution. What it doesn’t do is sweep in historical cousins like Wizardry or Ultima — a headline that hints at broader ‘classic CRPG’ nostalgia would be misleading. This is a curated, Beat‑the‑average-style set focused on D&D and Pathfinder family trees.

How much of the bundle’s proceeds actually reach charity after platform fees and developer payouts? Humble’s charity tie-ins are real, but they’re also part of a marketing funnel that repackages evergreen inventory. That doesn’t make the deal worse — just worth noting for anyone who thinks their purchase is a pure donation.
For newcomers this is a “get them while they’re cheap” moment. For collectors, it’s convenient consolidation. For nostalgia hunters, it’s a reminder that the CRPG catalog is still being monetized in bunches — beneficial, but packaged. Either way: if you want to play the games that shaped modern choices-and-consequence RPGs without paying full price for each relic, this is probably the cheapest route in right now.

TL;DR: Humble Bundle’s Beamdog & Owlcat pack sells a curated CRPG library — Baldur’s Gate EE, Planescape: Torment EE, Neverwinter Nights EE and more — for about €23.49. It’s an excellent value for new players; longtime owners should check overlap. Watch for community reports on modern compatibility and the bundle’s March 11 end date.
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