Bandai Namco has announced a new Limited Edition Dark Souls Trilogy Collector’s Edition for PlayStation 4 and Xbox One. It carries a price tag of €499.99 and gives the player access to the Darks Souls Remastered, Dark Souls II: Scholar of the First Sin, Dark Souls III: The Fire Fades, all the DLC content released so far for all three games.

You can pre-order it exclusively via Bandai Namco Entertainment Europe Store (only 2000 units is available, so hurry up). Apart from all three Dark Souls games and all DLC content, Dark Souls Trilogy Collector’s Edition will also include:

  • A high-quality, numbered, and hand-painted 34cm Elite Knight at the Bonfire statue
  • The DARK SOULS TRILOGY soundtrack – featuring six soundtrack CDs with music from all three games
  • And a 460-page DARK SOULS TRILOGY compendium (only available in English) – containing illustrated maps with boss and NPC locations, item encyclopedia, a bestiary of enemies and bosses, and a manuscript of all dialogue from each game reiterate.

There is nothing wrong with this announcement except the price tag and Dark Souls fans are up in arms over it. They have called the €500 price tag as “Insane and Crazy.” You can read some of the feedback below.

What is your thought on this? Let us know in the comment section below.

“As good a game as Dark Souls Remastered is (which I finally just beat last night), their asking price of $40 was too steep for such an outdated looking game from 7 years prior. I feel the Shadow of the Colossus is now the benchmark by which all remakes/remasters should adhere to.

To be honest. I have to agree. As much as I love the games and have collected some statues and CE editions myself. This is just too pricy considering the age of the games.

Excuse me what the fuck? Anyone considering buying this probably has all three games already, either have the soundtrack or doesn’t care… they’re paying 500 for a figurine and a book… christ almighty what a rip-off.

500 euro? They really don’t care what their IP is, do they? gonna milk that cow till it turns into a raisin.”