Titan Quest 2 has launched via Steam Early Access (and the Epic Game Store), and the user rating is sitting at Very Positive with nearly 9,000 reviews.

A mildly anticipated video game sequel releases, and it’s actually good? In 2025? That’s got to feel great for THQ Nordic and the developers at Grimlore Games.

Titan Quest 2 is the sequel to the 2006 action-RPG, which was heavily inspired by Diablo, and set in an ancient world of Mythological monsters. It was widely considered one of the best Diablo-clones in a crowded genre. THQ Nordic since purchased the rights, updated the base game, and produced additional expansion packs before releasing their own sequel.

Currently, Titan Quest 2 features about 15 hours of content. The multi-Mastery system returns, where players create their class by combining two different Masteries. The second Mastery is selected upon reaching level eight. The Early Access version includes four options: Warfare, Rogue, Earth, and Storm. Each Mastery has its own skill tree of active abilities and passive buffs.

Plus, the combination gives you a cool new class name, such as Ashstalker, or Stormblade.

The original Titan Quest had eight Masteries (not including expansions). Missing Masteries (and perhaps still to come) include Hunting, Nature, Spirit, and Defense.

titan quest 2 early accessGrimlore Games recently released their roadmap for Titan Quest 2, detailing the next updates and additions over the new several months. Major updates will arrive every three months, which feels a tad sparse, but includes new chapters, new masteries, and a full character creator to customize our avatars.

The game will remain in Early Access for at least one year. The price will increase “in stages” until the full 1.0 release. The full release is tentatively scheduled for late 2026, along with a console release.

 


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Eric has been writing for over nine years with bylines at Dicebreaker, Pixelkin, Polygon, PC Gamer, Tabletop Gaming magazine, and more covering movies, TV shows, video games, tabletop games, and tech. He reviews and live streams D&D adventures every week on his YouTube channel. He also makes a mean tuna quesadilla.