Platforms: PC (Windows, macOS), PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X|S
Unique Feature: Faithful D&D 5e Adaptation, Deep Player Choice & Consequence, Playable Origin Characters & Custom Character, Extensive Companion System with Relationships/Romance, Turn-Based Tactical Combat.
Perspective: Third-Person
Multiplayer: None (Single-Player Only)
Setting: Wizarding World (Hogwarts, Hogsmeade, Scottish Highlands), Late 1800s
Platforms: PC, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X|S, Nintendo Switch
Unique Feature: Immersive Hogwarts Experience, Ancient Magic System, Extensive Spell List, Broom Flight, Magical Beast Taming & Care, Room of Requirement Customization.
sports_esports
Gameplay & Mechanics
Companions/Followers
Astarion: Rogue class. Excels at stealth, lockpicking, disarming traps, and dealing high single-target damage with sneak attacks. Can bite humanoids to gain a temporary buff. His story involves confronting his vampire master.
High Elf (Vampire Spawn)
Gale: Wizard class. A powerful arcane spellcaster with access to a wide variety of damaging, utility, and control spells. Must periodically consume magical items to stabilize a Netherese Orb in his chest.
Human
Lae'zel: Fighter class. A skilled martial combatant, proficient with various weapons and armor. Githyanki psionics grant her abilities like Mage Hand and Jump. Her story revolves around her loyalty to Vlaakith and finding a Githyanki crèche.
Githyanki
Shadowheart: Cleric class (Trickery Domain initially, can change). A versatile support character with healing spells, buffs, debuffs, and offensive divine magic. Carries a mysterious artifact. Her story involves her devotion to Shar and uncovering lost memories.
Half-Elf
Wyll: Warlock class (Pact of the Fiend). A folk hero known as 'The Blade of Frontiers.' Uses Eldritch Blast and other warlock spells, and is proficient with rapiers. His pact with the cambion Mizora is a central part of his story.
Human
Karlach: Barbarian class. A fierce melee combatant who rages for increased damage and resistance. Her infernal engine heart deals fire damage and is tied to her personal quest. Escaped from Avernus.
Tiefling (Zariel Tiefling)
Halsin (Recruitable after Act 1): Druid class (Circle of the Moon). Archdruid of the Emerald Grove. Can Wild Shape into various powerful animal forms (bear, wolf, owlbear, etc.) for combat and utility, and casts nature-based spells.
Wood Elf
Minthara (Recruitable, conditional on evil playthrough in Act 1): Paladin class. A ruthless Drow commander and follower of The Absolute. If recruited, she is a powerful martial combatant with divine spells and abilities.
Drow (Lolth-Sworn)
Jaheira (Recruitable in Act 2): Druid/Fighter multiclass potential (from previous games). A veteran Harper leader. Uses druidic spells, Wild Shape, and martial prowess. Provides wisdom and experience.
Half-Elf
Minsc & Boo (Recruitable in Act 3): Ranger class. The iconic hero of Baldur's Gate, known for his strength, simple wisdom, and devotion to his hamster, Boo (who he believes is a miniature giant space hamster and offers guidance). A strong melee fighter.
Human & Miniature Giant Space Hamster
Hirelings (Withers' Service): Generic, non-story party members that can be hired from Withers at camp if the player needs to fill out their party or wants specific class compositions. They have no personal quests or unique dialogue.
Various Races & Classes
Summoned Creatures/Familiars/Elementals/Undead (Player & NPC Abilities): Many classes can summon temporary allies like familiars (Find Familiar spell), elementals (Conjure Elemental), undead minions (Animate Dead), spiritual weapons, or other magical creatures to aid in combat.
Various Magical Constructs & Beings
Natsai 'Natty' Onai (Temporary AI): A Gryffindor student. Accompanies the player on her specific relationship questline missions. Fights alongside the player using her own set of spells and courage. Can transform into an Animagus (gazelle).
Human (Witch)
Poppy Sweeting (Temporary AI): A Hufflepuff student. Joins the player during her relationship questline missions, which focus on magical beasts. She uses spells to help pacify or protect creatures and assists in combat against poachers.
Human (Witch)
Sebastian Sallow (Temporary AI): A Slytherin student. Accompanies the player throughout his extensive relationship questline, which delves into Dark Arts. He is a skilled duelist and uses a variety of spells, including potentially Unforgivable Curses depending on player choices and story progression.
Human (Wizard)
Professor Eleazar Fig (Temporary AI): The player's primary mentor. Accompanies the player on several key main story missions, providing combat support with his proficient spellcasting and offering guidance.
Human (Wizard)
Other Temporary Quest-Specific Allies: During various main and side quests, other characters like Lodgok (goblin), Sirona Ryan, or even specific professors might temporarily fight alongside the player or assist with specific tasks. Their abilities are scripted for those encounters.
Human (Witches/Wizards), Goblin, House-Elf
Key Collectibles
Magical Items (Weapons, Armor, Amulets, Rings, Cloaks, Boots, Gloves, Helmets): Found in chests, dropped by powerful enemies, sold by merchants, or received as quest rewards throughout Faerûn. Categorized by rarity (Common, Uncommon, Rare, Very Rare, Legendary). Provide stat bonuses, unique abilities, and are crucial for character power and build customization.
Illithid Tadpole Specimens: Additional Mind Flayer tadpoles found on specific infected individuals or in certain locations. The player character (and companions) can choose to consume these to unlock powerful psionic Illithid Powers via a unique skill tree, but this may have narrative and character consequences.
Books, Scrolls, Letters, Notes, Journals (Lore & Quest Items): Extensively scattered throughout the world in libraries, ruins, on corpses, in containers, etc. Provide rich lore about the Forgotten Realms, character backstories, hints for quests, solutions to puzzles, or contain spell scrolls that can be learned by wizards or cast once by any character.
Gold, Gems, Valuables: Currency (Gold Pieces) and valuable items (gems, jewelry, artwork) found in containers, on enemies, or as quest rewards. Used for purchasing items, services (like respecs from Withers), or bribing NPCs.
Crafting Materials (Herbs, Ores, Monster Parts, Essences - for Alchemy & Smithing): Gathered from the environment, looted from enemies, or purchased. Used for crafting potions, elixirs, oils, coatings, grenades, and potentially for upgrading some gear (though direct weapon/armor upgrades use Smithing Stones in Elden Ring, BG3 uses a different system for magical item acquisition/enhancement, alchemy is primary crafting).
Supply Packs & Camp Supplies: Found in containers or purchased. Used to initiate a Long Rest at camp, which fully heals the party, restores spell slots and abilities, and often triggers important companion conversations and story developments.
Soul Coins: Mysterious coins found in various locations, often tied to devils or Avernus. Can be used by Karlach to fuel her infernal engine or have other, less obvious uses.
Infernal Iron: Rare metal found in specific locations, often guarded or in dangerous areas. Used by Dammon the Tiefling blacksmith for Karlach's personal quest to repair her infernal engine and for crafting specific infernal gear.
Story-Specific Key Items (e.g., Moonlantern, Githyanki Discs, Quest Artifacts): Unique items required to progress specific main story quests or major side quests. Often involve solving puzzles or defeating bosses to obtain.
Field Guide Pages: Found throughout Hogwarts, Hogsmeade, and the Highlands. Revealed by casting Revelio near specific objects, landmarks, or by catching flying pages with Accio. Provide lore, XP, and contribute to leveling up the Field Guide challenge.
Demiguise Statues / Moons: Small statues of Demiguises holding moons. These can only be collected at night. Turning the moons in to Gladwin Moon (the Hogwarts caretaker) is part of a side quest to upgrade the Alohomora spell, allowing the player to unlock higher-level locks (Level I, II, III).
Merlin Trials: 95 ancient puzzles created by Merlin, scattered throughout the Highlands. Activated by Mallowsweet Leaves. Solving each puzzle (which involves using various spells like Lumos, Accio, Depulso, Confringo, Flipendo to manipulate objects) rewards XP and contributes to increasing the player's maximum gear inventory capacity.
Ancient Magic Hotspots: Locations where traces of powerful Ancient Magic linger. Interacting with them often involves a small environmental puzzle or collecting motes of magic, and permanently increases the player's Ancient Magic meter capacity.
Collection Chests: Chests containing collectible items for the Room of Requirement (Conjuration spellcrafts for decoration/utility, Trait recipes for gear enchanting) or Wand Handles (cosmetic). Found in Hogwarts, Hogsmeade, hamlets, and dungeons.
Astronomy Tables: Specific locations with stone tables where the player, at night, can use a telescope to align stars and reveal a constellation. Rewards XP and cosmetic items.
Landing Platforms: Raised platforms found throughout the Highlands. Successfully landing a broom on each one contributes to a challenge and rewards XP.
Infamous Foes: Marked on the map, these are unique, named enemies (dark wizards, powerful beasts, etc.) that are tougher than their regular counterparts. Defeating all of them is a tracked challenge and rewards XP/gear.
Balloons (Over Highlands): Sets of five balloons floating in the air in various parts of the Highlands. Popping all five in a set with broom flight rewards XP.
A vast array of melee weapons based on D&D 5e. Each weapon type has different damage dice (e.g., 1d6, 1d8, 1d10, 1d12, 2d6), properties (Light, Heavy, Finesse, Reach, Two-Handed, Versatile), and damage types (Slashing, Piercing, Bludgeoning). Many magical versions exist with enchantments and special abilities.
Projectile weapons for ranged combat. Require ammunition (arrows, bolts, sling bullets). Bows often scale with Dexterity. Crossbows are generally easier to use but may have slower reload. Many magical versions exist.
Items required by certain spellcasting classes to cast their spells. Staves and wands are common for Wizards/Sorcerers. Holy Symbols for Clerics/Paladins. Druidic Foci for Druids. Musical Instruments for Bards. Some foci are magical and provide bonuses to spell attack rolls or save DCs.
Shields: Defensive Gear
Provide a bonus to Armor Class (AC), making the wielder harder to hit. Can be used in conjunction with one-handed weapons. Magical shields may offer additional resistances or abilities.
Attacks made with fists, kicks, or natural weaponry (claws, bites) if the character has such features (e.g., Monks, Druids in Wild Shape, certain races).
Hundreds of spells available to spellcasting classes, categorized by level (Cantrips to Level 6 spells in base game). Spells have diverse effects: direct damage (Fireball, Magic Missile), healing (Cure Wounds, Healing Word), crowd control (Hold Person, Web), buffs (Haste, Bless), debuffs (Bane, Slow), utility (Detect Thoughts, Knock, Fly), and summons (Conjure Elemental, Animate Dead).
Craftable or found consumable items. Potions for healing or temporary buffs (Potion of Speed, Elixir of Giant Strength). Oils/Coatings to apply elemental damage or effects to weapons. Grenades/Bombs for area-of-effect damage or utility (e.g., Alchemist's Fire, Smokepowder Bomb).
Allow any character to cast the spell contained within the scroll once, regardless of their class, provided they can read it (usually not an issue). Useful for accessing spells outside a character's known list.
The player's primary tool for casting spells. While cosmetic aspects like wand handles can be changed, the core, wood, length, and flexibility chosen at Ollivanders (or found/awarded) are fixed but generally do not significantly impact gameplay stats beyond flavor. Spell effectiveness comes from learned spells and talents.
Spells used directly in combat. Damage spells (Confringo, Incendio, Diffindo), Control spells (Levioso, Glacius, Arresto Momentum), Force spells (Accio, Depulso, Flipendo). Can be chained into combos and upgraded via Talents.
Spells required for exploration, puzzle-solving, and interacting with the world. Includes Revelio, Lumos, Alohomora, Reparo, Wingardium Leviosa, Disillusionment Charm, and various Transfiguration spells for the Room of Requirement.
Dark Arts Spells (Unforgivable Curses - Optional): Forbidden Offensive Magic
Players can choose to learn and use the three Unforgivable Curses: Avada Kedavra (killing curse), Crucio (torture curse), and Imperio (control curse). These are very powerful but their use may have narrative or character implications (though direct game system punishment is minimal).
Ancient Magic (Throws & Finishers): Special Powerful Magic
The player's unique ability. Ancient Magic meter fills during combat, allowing for powerful environmental throws (using objects highlighted in blue) or devastating finisher moves on weakened enemies.
Brewed in the Room of Requirement or Potions class. Provide temporary buffs like increased defense (Edurus), increased spell damage (Maxima), reduced spell cooldowns (Focus), invisibility, or offensive AoE effects (Thunderbrew).
Grown in the Room of Requirement or Herbology class. Can be deployed in combat to attack, stun, or distract enemies automatically.
Armor / Gear Sets
Clothing (No Armor Proficiency Required): Basic attire like robes, shirts, trousers. Provides no or minimal Armor Class (AC). Worn by spellcasters like Wizards and Sorcerers who typically rely on spells like Mage Armor or defensive abilities.
Light Armor (Padded, Leather, Studded Leather): Offers a base AC plus the wearer's Dexterity modifier. Does not impose disadvantage on Stealth checks. Suitable for classes like Rogues, Rangers, Bards, and some spellcasters with proficiency.
Medium Armor (Hide, Chain Shirt, Scale Mail, Breastplate, Half Plate): Offers a higher base AC than light armor. Dexterity modifier added to AC is often capped (usually at +2). May impose disadvantage on Stealth checks for heavier types (Scale Mail, Half Plate). Used by classes like Clerics, Druids, Rangers, Fighters, Paladins.
Heavy Armor (Ring Mail, Chain Mail, Splint, Plate): Provides the highest base AC but does not allow adding Dexterity modifier to AC (unless a specific Feat is taken). Imposes disadvantage on Stealth checks and may have a Strength requirement to wear without movement penalty. Primarily for Fighters and Paladins.
Shields: Equipped in one hand, provides a +2 bonus to Armor Class (AC). Can be used with one-handed weapons. Magical shields can offer additional properties or resistances.
Magical Armor & Clothing: Numerous magical variants of all armor and clothing types exist. These can provide bonuses to AC, saving throws, ability scores, resistances to damage types (fire, cold, etc.), grant spell-like abilities, or other unique passive effects. Color-coded by rarity (Uncommon - Green, Rare - Blue, Very Rare - Purple, Legendary - Orange).
Helmets, Gauntlets, Boots (Often part of a set or individual magical items): While D&D 5e simplifies armor to a single AC value from the main body piece (+ shield), Baldur's Gate 3 includes distinct slots for Head, Hands, and Feet. These slots are primarily for magical items that provide various perks, stat boosts, or special abilities, rather than directly contributing separate AC values like in some other RPGs (though some might grant +1 AC or similar as a magical property).
Robes & Cloaks: The primary chest and outer layer clothing. Provide Offensive and Defensive stats. Various styles reflecting Hogwarts houses, wizarding fashion of the era, or specialized gear (e.g., Quidditch robes - though Quidditch isn't playable). Can have Trait slots.
Outfits (Full Sets): Some gear pieces form a named set (e.g., Dark Arts Set, Legendary Set). While there isn't a direct 'set bonus' for wearing all pieces, they often have a cohesive visual style and strong individual stats/traits.
Headwear (Hats, Helmets, Spectacles): Various types of headgear, from traditional wizarding hats and school beanies to more protective helmets or simple spectacles. Provide Offensive and Defensive stats and can have Trait slots.
Handwear (Gloves): Gloves that offer minor Offensive and Defensive stats and can have Trait slots.
Neckwear (Scarves, Necklaces): Scarves representing Hogwarts houses or other decorative neckwear. Provide Offensive and Defensive stats and can have Trait slots.
Facewear (Masks): Various masks, from simple to ornate. Provide Offensive and Defensive stats and can have Trait slots.
Traits (Gear Enchantments): Passive bonuses that can be applied to gear pieces with Trait slots at an Enchanted Loom in the Room of Requirement. Traits can increase damage of specific spell types, enhance defense against certain enemies, boost Ancient Magic generation, or provide other utility effects. Traits are learned by completing challenges or rescuing beasts.
Gear Quality (Well-Appointed, Superb, Extraordinary, Legendary): Gear items have different quality tiers, indicated by color (Green, Blue, Purple, Gold). Higher quality gear has better base stats (Offense/Defense) and more/higher-level Trait slots. Gear can be upgraded at the Enchanted Loom using materials from magical beasts.
Outfits/Customization
Robes & Simple Clothing: Various types of robes (wizard, sorcerer, monk), commoner's clothes, traveler's outfits, shirts, trousers, and dresses. These are typically worn by spellcasters or characters without armor proficiency and provide little to no Armor Class (AC) on their own, relying on spells like Mage Armor or Dexterity. Many magical variants exist with special properties.
Light Armor Sets (Padded, Leather, Studded Leather): Armor sets consisting of Helms, Body Armor, Gloves, and Boots made from lighter materials. Provide a base AC plus the wearer's full Dexterity modifier (if proficient). Ideal for stealthy or agile characters like Rogues, Rangers, Bards. Many unique and magical versions are available.
Medium Armor Sets (Hide, Chain Shirt, Scale Mail, Breastplate, Half Plate): Armor sets offering better protection than light armor. The Dexterity modifier added to AC is usually capped at +2 (or +3 with a feat). Heavier types (Scale Mail, Half Plate) may impose disadvantage on Stealth checks. Worn by Clerics, Druids, Fighters, Paladins, Rangers. Many magical variants exist.
Heavy Armor Sets (Ring Mail, Chain Mail, Splint, Plate): The most protective armor, providing high base AC. Does not allow adding Dexterity modifier to AC (unless a specific feat is taken). Imposes disadvantage on Stealth checks and often has a Strength requirement to wear without movement penalty. Primarily for Fighters and Paladins. Many powerful magical versions are found.
Helmets, Gauntlets, Boots (Individual Magical Items): Beyond being part of sets, many unique magical helmets, gauntlets, and boots exist as standalone items. These provide specific perks, stat boosts, resistances, or grant special abilities/spells, rather than directly contributing separate AC values like in some RPGs (their AC contribution is part of the 'Body Armor' slot in D&D 5e, but BG3 uses them for magical effects).
Cloaks & Capes: Cosmetic and magical back slot items. Provide various appearances and often significant magical properties, such as increased saving throws, resistances, or unique activated abilities.
Amulets & Rings: Magical jewelry equipped in dedicated slots. Provide a wide array of passive bonuses, stat increases, resistances, or grant access to new spells or abilities. Essential for character builds.
Camp Clothing: A separate outfit slot for what characters wear while at the party's camp. This allows players to have their characters in more casual or thematic attire during rest periods, without affecting their combat stats. Numerous camp clothing sets can be found or purchased.
Dyes: Players can find or purchase various dyes to change the color schemes of most armor pieces and clothing, allowing for extensive visual personalization.
School Robes (Hogwarts House Specific): Players wear Hogwarts school robes, the appearance of which is determined by the House they are sorted into (Gryffindor, Hufflepuff, Ravenclaw, Slytherin). Various styles of robes can be acquired, from standard issue to more ornate versions.
Cloaks & Capes: A wide variety of cloaks and capes can be equipped over robes or other attire, offering different visual styles and contributing to Offense/Defense stats. Some are plain, others are intricately designed or faction-themed.
Outfits (Full Sets & Individual Pieces): Beyond school uniforms, players can equip various outfits suitable for different occasions or reflecting different wizarding fashions of the 1890s (e.g., formal wear, adventuring gear, Dark Arts attire). These are often found as sets (Headwear, Facewear, Handwear, Neckwear, Cloak/Robe, Outfit) but pieces can sometimes be mixed, though the game primarily uses full outfit slots for the body.
Headwear (Wizard Hats, Beanies, Helmets, Spectacles): A wide range of hats (pointed wizard hats, top hats, school beanies), helmets (for more protective looks), and spectacles. Provide Offense/Defense stats and Trait slots.
Facewear (Masks, Half-Masks): Various masks that can be equipped, from simple cloth masks to more elaborate ceremonial or protective ones. Provide Offense/Defense stats and Trait slots.
Handwear (Gloves): Different styles of gloves, from simple leather to more ornate or armored variants. Provide Offense/Defense stats and Trait slots.
Neckwear (Scarves, Amulets - cosmetic): Scarves (often house-themed) and other decorative neckwear. Provide Offense/Defense stats and Trait slots.
Transmogrification (Change Appearance): Players can change the visual appearance of any equipped gear piece to look like any other gear piece of the same type they have collected, while retaining the stats of the originally equipped item. This allows for fashion flexibility without sacrificing stats.
public
World & Exploration
World & Level Design
N/A
Hogwarts Legacy features a large open world encompassing Hogwarts castle itself (with its many iconic locations like the Great Hall, common rooms, classrooms, secret passages), Hogsmeade village, and the expansive surrounding Scottish Highlands. Key explorable regions in the Highlands include the Forbidden Forest, various hamlets (like Upper Hogsfield, Feldcroft, Irondale), vast lochs, coastal areas, and numerous ancient ruins, caves, and Merlin Trials. While not a 1:1 scale, the world is substantial and filled with detail. Travel between distinct major areas (like Hogwarts and Hogsmeade interiors vs. the open Highlands) often involves short loading transitions. The map size is estimated to be significant, offering many hours of exploration (e.g., comparisons place it around 7-10 sq km for the main Highlands overworld, plus the dense interiors of Hogwarts and Hogsmeade).
Playable Vehicles
Traversal on Foot (Walking, Running, Jumping, Climbing, Flying - with spells/items): Player Locomotion
Primary mode of movement. Characters can walk, run (Dash action for extra movement in combat), jump (distance based on Strength), climb ladders and some surfaces, and swim. Spells like Fly, Misty Step, or items like Potions of Flying grant temporary flight or teleportation capabilities.
Fast Travel (Waypoint Sigils): Map Traversal Mechanic
Ancient sigils found throughout the world. Once a Waypoint Sigil is discovered and activated, the party can instantly travel to it from any other activated Waypoint or from the world map, greatly reducing travel time across large distances. Cannot be used in combat or certain restricted areas.
Boats (Contextual / Scripted): Minor Watercraft
In certain specific locations (e.g., traveling to Grymforge in the Underdark, crossing some rivers), the party may use a boat or skiff. These are generally part of a scripted travel sequence or a fixed interaction point rather than freely controllable vehicles for open water exploration.
Nautiloid (Prologue - Mind Flayer Spelljammer): Alien Spacecraft (Scripted Sequence)
The game begins aboard a Nautiloid, a Mind Flayer ship that travels between planes. Player control is limited to navigating its interior during the prologue sequence as it crashes.
Druids can use their Wild Shape ability to transform into various animals. While primarily for combat, some forms offer unique traversal benefits (e.g., a bird form for limited flight, a spider for climbing specific surfaces, smaller forms for fitting through gaps).
Broomsticks (Various Models): Primary Aerial Mount / Traversal
The player's primary means of fast aerial travel across the open world of the Highlands and around Hogwarts. Various broom models can be purchased from merchants in Hogsmeade, offering different visual styles (stats are generally uniform but can be upgraded for speed/acceleration via quests). Required for broom races and accessing some high locations.
Players can acquire and ride certain magical beasts as mounts. Hippogriffs (e.g., Highwing) and Thestrals (often from Deluxe/Pre-order editions) offer flight capabilities similar to brooms but with a different feel and appearance. The Graphorn is a powerful, armored ground mount acquired through a specific quest, capable of charging through obstacles. These mounts are summoned via the gear wheel.
A network of magical fireplaces (Floo Network) located throughout Hogwarts, Hogsmeade, and the Highlands. Once a Floo Flame location is discovered and activated, the player can use it (or any other activated Floo Flame) to instantly travel to any other known Floo Flame point on the map.
Traversal on Foot (Walking, Running, Sprinting, Climbing, Swimming): Player Locomotion
Standard on-foot movement for exploring interiors, navigating tight spaces, and engaging in combat. Includes basic climbing on ledges and swimming in bodies of water.
book
Story & Characters
Main Characters
Player Character (Customizable 'Tav' or Origin Character): Protagonist / Tadpole Infected
The main playable character. Can be a fully customized character ('Tav') of various races and classes, or one of six pre-set Origin Characters (Astarion, Gale, Lae'zel, Shadowheart, Wyll, Karlach) each with their own unique backstory, personal quests, and dialogue. An additional seventh Origin, 'The Dark Urge,' offers a customizable character with a sinister, amnesiac past.
Astarion Ancunín: Companion / Origin Character / High Elf Rogue (Vampire Spawn)
A charismatic and flamboyant vampire spawn magistrate who was enslaved by a cruel master for centuries. He revels in his newfound freedom but struggles with his vampiric nature and past trauma. Offers high burst damage and utility skills.
Gale of Waterdeep: Companion / Origin Character / Human Wizard
A brilliant and ambitious human wizard with a Netherese Destruction Orb in his chest that threatens to detonate. He seeks a way to control or remove it, and has a past relationship with the goddess of magic, Mystra. A powerful arcane spellcaster.
Lae'zel: Companion / Origin Character / Githyanki Fighter
A fierce and pragmatic Githyanki warrior, utterly devoted to her people's queen, Vlaakith, and the destruction of Mind Flayers. She is initially hostile and demanding but can develop into a loyal ally. A strong melee combatant.
Shadowheart (Jenevelle Hallowleaf): Companion / Origin Character / Half-Elf Cleric of Shar
A devout cleric of Shar, the goddess of darkness and loss, on a secret mission. She suffers from amnesia related to her faith and carries a mysterious Githyanki artifact. Her quest involves uncovering her past and confronting her religious indoctrination. A versatile healer and support spellcaster.
Wyll Ravengard: Companion / Origin Character / Human Warlock (The Blade of Frontiers)
A noble hero known as 'The Blade of Frontiers,' who made a pact with a cambion, Mizora, to gain power to protect the innocent. He struggles with the terms of his pact and his desire to do good. A charismatic spellcaster and swordsman.
Karlach Cliffgate: Companion / Origin Character / Tiefling Barbarian
A Tiefling barbarian who escaped servitude in Avernus, one of the Nine Hells. She has an infernal engine in her chest that is overheating and will eventually kill her. She is fiercely loyal, boisterous, and seeks to live life to the fullest. A powerful melee damage dealer.
The Archdruid of the Emerald Grove, captured by goblins early in the game. Once rescued, he can join the party, offering powerful druidic magic, Wild Shape abilities, and a deep connection to nature.
A Drow commander and follower of The Absolute, initially encountered as an antagonist at the Goblin Camp. Through specific (often evil-aligned) player choices, she can be spared and later recruited as a companion. A powerful paladin with a unique perspective.
Minsc & Boo: Companion (Recruitable - Act 3) / Human Ranger & Miniature Giant Space Hamster
The iconic, lovable, and somewhat unhinged ranger from previous Baldur's Gate games, along with his miniature giant space hamster companion, Boo. Can be recruited in Act 3. Known for his straightforward approach and devotion to Boo.
Another returning character from the original Baldur's Gate games. A veteran Harper leader, wise and experienced, fighting against the forces of the Absolute. Can join the party in Act 2.
The Dream Visitor / The Emperor: Key NPC / Guardian Figure
A mysterious figure who appears to the player character in dreams, offering protection from the Illithid tadpole's influence and guidance. Their true identity and motivations are a major plot point.
Ketheric Thorm, Orin the Red, Lord Enver Gortash (The Chosen of the Absolute): Main Antagonists
The three primary mortal leaders of the Cult of the Absolute, each chosen by one of the Dead Three gods (Myrkul, Bhaal, Bane respectively). They are powerful and serve as major bosses and adversaries throughout the game.
A charismatic and manipulative cambion (half-devil) from the Nine Hells who frequently appears to offer deals and temptations to the player character, often with dangerous strings attached. Has his own agenda and realm (House of Hope).
Withers: Key NPC / Undead Enigmatic Figure
An ancient, skeletal being found in a tomb early in the game. He offers services at the player's camp, including resurrecting fallen companions, allowing players to respec their class, and hiring hirelings (generic party members). His true nature is a mystery.
Player Character (Customizable): Protagonist / New Fifth-Year Hogwarts Student
A highly customizable character (appearance, voice, Hogwarts House - Gryffindor, Hufflepuff, Ravenclaw, Slytherin). Possesses a rare connection to Ancient Magic, making them a key figure in a brewing conflict involving goblins and dark wizards.
Professor Eleazar Fig: Ally / Mentor / Hogwarts Professor (Magical Theory)
A kind, knowledgeable, and adventurous Hogwarts professor who recognizes the player's unique abilities and acts as their primary mentor in investigating Ancient Magic and the looming threats. His wife, Miriam, was also researching Ancient Magic before her death.
Ranrok: Main Antagonist / Goblin Rebellion Leader
The ruthless and powerful leader of a goblin rebellion. He harbors a deep hatred for wizards and seeks to harness the power of Ancient Magic to overthrow wizardkind and claim what he believes is rightfully goblin property.
Victor Rookwood: Main Antagonist / Dark Wizard / Ashwinder Leader
A descendant of a notorious dark wizard family and leader of the Ashwinders, a gang of dark wizards and witches. He allies with Ranrok to exploit Ancient Magic for his own nefarious purposes.
Sebastian Sallow: Companion / Slytherin Student
A charismatic and ambitious Slytherin student who befriends the player. He is desperate to find a cure for his twin sister Anne, who is afflicted by a dark curse. His quest leads him to explore forbidden magic, presenting moral dilemmas for the player. His relationship questline is extensive.
A brave and principled Gryffindor student who transferred to Hogwarts from Uagadou, the largest wizarding school in Africa. She is skilled in Transfiguration and seeks to fight injustice. Her relationship questline involves dealing with poachers and dark wizards.
Poppy Sweeting: Companion / Hufflepuff Student
A kind-hearted and empathetic Hufflepuff student with a deep love and understanding of magical beasts. She is concerned about their mistreatment by poachers. Her relationship questline focuses on rescuing and protecting various magical creatures.
Professor Matilda Weasley: Ally / Deputy Headmistress / Transfiguration Professor
A stern but fair Gryffindor and the Deputy Headmistress of Hogwarts. She guides the player through their initial catch-up studies and introduces them to the Room of Requirement.
Professor Dinah Hecat: Ally / Defense Against the Dark Arts Professor
An experienced and no-nonsense DADA professor who provides the player with crucial combat spells and assignments.
Professor Abraham Ronen: Ally / Charms Professor
A jovial and enthusiastic Charms professor.
Professor Mirabel Garlick: Ally / Herbology Professor
A cheerful and passionate Herbology professor.
Professor Aesop Sharp: Ally / Potions Master
A stern and exacting former Auror who now teaches Potions.
Headmaster Phineas Nigellus Black: Neutral Figure / Headmaster of Hogwarts
The unpopular and largely disinterested Headmaster of Hogwarts, an ancestor of Sirius Black. Often more concerned with his status than the students' well-being.
Lodgok: Ally / Goblin Dissident
A goblin who once worked with Miriam Fig and disagrees with Ranrok's violent methods. He provides crucial information to the player.
Sirona Ryan: Ally / Owner of the Three Broomsticks
The welcoming transgender witch owner of the Three Broomsticks pub in Hogsmeade. A source of information and quests.
Deek: Ally / House-Elf
A helpful house-elf who assists the player in the Room of Requirement, guiding them in its use and customization, and in caring for magical beasts.
Example Missions
Main Questline (The Illithid Tadpole & The Absolute)
A sprawling, multi-act campaign following the player character and their companions as they search for a cure for the Mind Flayer tadpoles implanted in their brains, while simultaneously becoming embroiled in a massive conspiracy involving a new deity known as The Absolute, its chosen leaders (Ketheric Thorm, Orin the Red, Lord Enver Gortash), and a plot to dominate Faerûn. The quest involves exploring diverse regions, making critical alliances, and confronting powerful entities.
Companion Quests (Personal Story Arcs)
Each of the main Origin companions (Astarion, Gale, Lae'zel, Shadowheart, Wyll, Karlach) and other key recruitable companions (Halsin, Minthara, Jaheira, Minsc) has an extensive personal questline that delves into their backstory, motivations, and personal conflicts. Completing these quests deepens the relationship with the companion, can lead to romance, and often has significant narrative impact and unique rewards.
Side Quests (Regional Stories & Miscellaneous Tasks)
A vast number of optional quests found throughout the game's three acts. These range from helping local villagers with minor problems, investigating local mysteries, resolving faction disputes, exploring optional dungeons, to uncovering hidden lore. Rewards vary from gold and experience to unique magical items and new allies.
Exploring Legacy Dungeons & Major Locations (e.g., Goblin Camp, Grymforge, Moonrise Towers, Gauntlet of Shar, House of Hope, Counting House, Iron Throne)
Infiltrate and navigate large, complex, multi-layered dungeon environments or significant urban locations. These areas are often tied to main or major side quests and are filled with enemies, traps, puzzles, secrets, valuable loot, and culminate in boss encounters or critical story developments.
Solving Environmental Puzzles & Overcoming Traps
Many areas feature intricate environmental puzzles that require observation, using specific spells or abilities (e.g., Mage Hand, Fly, Gaseous Form), interacting with mechanisms, or solving riddles to progress or access hidden areas. Disarming or avoiding traps is also a constant consideration.
Interacting with Factions (e.g., Druids of the Emerald Grove, Tiefling Refugees, Goblins, Myconids, Duergar, Harpers, Flaming Fist, The Guild, Cult of the Absolute)
Engage with various groups and factions throughout the world. Player choices can lead to alliances, conflicts, or changes in faction leadership and influence over certain areas. These interactions often involve unique questlines and moral dilemmas.
Long Rests & Camp Events
Utilize camp supplies to take Long Rests, which fully restore health, spell slots, and abilities. Long Rests are also crucial for triggering important companion conversations, romance scenes, story developments related to the Illithid tadpole, and visits from key NPCs like Withers or Raphael.
Main Questline (Ancient Magic & Ranrok's Rebellion)
A series of core narrative quests following the player's journey as a new fifth-year student at Hogwarts, their discovery of a unique connection to Ancient Magic, and their efforts to uncover a dangerous conspiracy involving the goblin Ranrok, dark wizard Victor Rookwood, and the hidden repositories of this powerful magic. Involves attending classes, exploring ancient trials, and major confrontations.
Relationship Questlines (Natsai Onai, Poppy Sweeting, Sebastian Sallow)
Three extensive, multi-part optional storylines focusing on the player's friendship with one of three key Hogwarts classmates. Each questline delves into the companion's personal story, motivations, and challenges, often involving unique adventures, moral choices, and special rewards related to that companion (e.g., Natsai's involves fighting poachers and injustice, Poppy's focuses on magical beasts, Sebastian's explores Dark Arts and a family curse).
Assignments (Professor's Tasks)
Short tasks given by Hogwarts professors to teach the player new spells. These typically involve completing a prerequisite activity (e.g., using a specific potion, collecting ingredients) and then attending a brief lesson to learn the spell (e.g., Incendio, Disillusionment, Diffindo, Bombarda).
Side Quests (Found in Hogwarts, Hogsmeade, and Highlands)
Numerous optional quests given by various students, professors, residents of Hogsmeade, or inhabitants of the Highlands. These range from simple fetch quests and puzzle-solving to more involved local stories, investigations, or helping someone in need. Rewards typically include XP, Galleons, gear, or cosmetic items.
Merlin Trials (Mysteries)
Solve 95 environmental puzzles scattered throughout the Highlands, activated by Mallowsweet Leaves. Each trial requires using specific spells to manipulate objects (e.g., lighting braziers, moving spheres, destroying stone pillars, guiding moths). Completing sets of Merlin Trials increases the player's maximum gear inventory capacity.
Beast Rescuing & Care (Room of Requirement)
Find and rescue various magical beasts from poacher camps or the wild using the Nab-Sack. Rescued beasts can be brought to customizable Vivariums in the Room of Requirement, where they can be fed, brushed, and played with to gather valuable crafting materials (e.g., Puffskein Fur, Mooncalf Fur) for gear upgrades and traits.
Dungeon Exploration (Caves, Tombs, Ruins)
Explore optional underground areas or ancient ruins often containing enemies, puzzles, Collection Chests (with conjurations or wand handles), gear, and lore items.
A comprehensive list of in-game challenges tracked in the Field Guide. Completing these (e.g., defeat X enemies of a certain type, complete X side quests, collect X Field Guide Pages, brew X potions) rewards XP and unlocks cosmetic gear appearances.
people
Multiplayer
Multiplayer Details
Features online cooperative multiplayer for up to 4 players. Players can join a host's campaign, either creating a new custom character for that game or taking control of one of the host's unassigned origin companions. The entire story campaign can be played cooperatively. Split-screen local co-op is available on consoles (PS5/Xbox Series X|S) for 2 players.
Hogwarts Legacy is a purely single-player experience. There are no multiplayer modes.
extension
Editions & DLC
Available Editions
Available in Standard Edition and a Digital Deluxe Edition (included Divinity Bard Song Pack, Paintings from Rivellon, Adventurer's Pouch, Digital Artbook, Digital Character Sheets, Digital Soundtrack). A physical Collector's Edition included a Mind Flayer vs. Drow diorama statue, hardcover artbook, character sheets, cloth map, tadpole keyring, D20 die, Magic: The Gathering booster packs, and all Digital Deluxe content.
Available in Standard Edition, Deluxe Edition (Dark Arts Pack with cosmetic set, Threstral mount, Dark Arts battle arena, 72 hours early access for digital), and Collector's Edition (Deluxe content + life-size floating ancient magic wand with book base, SteelBook case, Kelpie robe cosmetic).
Post-Launch Content / DLC
Larian Studios has released numerous significant free patches post-launch, adding new content (like an extended epilogue), quality-of-life improvements, bug fixes, and performance enhancements. They have stated that they are not currently planning major paid expansions or DLC for Baldur's Gate 3, focusing instead on patches and potentially new projects.
No major story expansions have been released or announced as of mid-2024. Post-launch support has primarily consisted of patches, quality-of-life updates (like Arachnophobia mode), and making previously platform-exclusive content available to all players. Some cosmetic DLC items were available via pre-orders or deluxe editions.
help_outline
FAQ
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Is Baldur's Gate 3 a direct sequel to Baldur's Gate 1 & 2? A: Yes, Baldur's Gate 3 is set over 120 years after the events of Baldur's Gate II: Shadows of Amn and is considered a direct sequel in the series. It references past events and features some returning characters like Jaheira and Minsc, but tells a new, largely self-contained story.
Q: Do I need to play the previous Baldur's Gate games to understand Baldur's Gate 3? A: No, it is not strictly necessary. Baldur's Gate 3 is designed to be accessible to newcomers to the series and the Dungeons & Dragons setting. However, familiarity with the previous games or Forgotten Realms lore will enhance appreciation of returning characters, references, and world details.
Q: Is Baldur's Gate 3 based on Dungeons & Dragons rules? A: Yes, Baldur's Gate 3 is a faithful adaptation of the Dungeons & Dragons 5th Edition (D&D 5e) ruleset. Character creation, classes, spells, combat mechanics (actions, bonus actions, reactions, saving throws, advantage/disadvantage), and skill checks are all based on D&D 5e.
Q: How does multiplayer co-op work? A: Up to four players can play the entire campaign together online. Players can join an existing game or start a new one. Each player can control a custom character or an Origin companion. Decisions can be made collaboratively or individually (often with dice rolls for persuasion within the party). Local split-screen co-op for two players is also available on consoles.
Q: What are Origin Characters? A: Origin Characters are pre-made playable characters with unique backstories, personalities, personal quests, and voice acting. Players can choose to play as one of these (e.g., Astarion, Gale, Lae'zel, Shadowheart, Wyll, Karlach, The Dark Urge) or create a fully custom character. If not chosen as the main character, Origin Characters can be recruited as companions.
Q: How important are choices in Baldur's Gate 3? A: Choices are extremely important and form a core part of the experience. Decisions made in dialogue, quests, and actions have significant and often far-reaching consequences, affecting character relationships (including romances), companion loyalty, quest outcomes, the state of the world, and leading to multiple distinct endings and epilogues.
Q: Can I respec my character? A: Yes, players can change their class, ability scores, and other character choices by speaking to Withers, an enigmatic undead NPC found early in the game who joins the player's camp. This service costs a moderate amount of gold.
Q: Is Hogwarts Legacy set in the same timeline as Harry Potter? A: No, Hogwarts Legacy is set in the late 1800s (specifically starting in 1890), over a century before the events of the Harry Potter books and films. While it shares the same wizarding world, it features a new story and original characters, though some familiar names (like Weasley, Black) appear as ancestors.
Q: Can I choose my Hogwarts House? A: Yes, early in the game, the player character is sorted into one of the four Hogwarts Houses: Gryffindor, Hufflepuff, Ravenclaw, or Slytherin. The player can influence the Sorting Hat's decision or directly choose their preferred house. House choice affects common room access, some dialogue, and a house-specific questline.
Q: Is Quidditch playable in Hogwarts Legacy? A: No, Quidditch is not a playable mini-game in Hogwarts Legacy. Headmaster Black cancels the Quidditch season at the start of the school year in the game's narrative, though broom flight for exploration is a key feature.
Q: Can I learn and use Dark Arts / Unforgivable Curses? A: Yes, players have the option to learn and use Dark Arts, including the three Unforgivable Curses (Avada Kedavra, Crucio, Imperio), primarily through Sebastian Sallow's companion questline. Using them does not result in direct game system punishment (like a morality system), but characters may react to their use, and choosing to learn them is a player decision.
Q: What is the Room of Requirement used for? A: The Room of Requirement is a customizable personal hub space for the player within Hogwarts. Here, players can identify and upgrade gear at an Enchanted Loom, brew potions at Potion Stations, grow magical plants at Potting Tables, and set up Vivariums to care for and breed magical beasts rescued from the wild. The room's appearance can be heavily customized with various decorative and functional Conjuration spellcrafts.
Q: Are there romantic relationships in Hogwarts Legacy? A: While players can form strong friendships and complete extensive relationship questlines with companions like Natsai, Poppy, and Sebastian, there are no explicit romantic relationship mechanics or options in the game.
build
Technical Details
Graphics & Visual Fidelity
Powered by Larian's Divinity 4.0 Engine, Baldur's Gate 3 showcases highly detailed environments, expressive character models with realistic animations (especially facial animations during dialogue), and spectacular spell effects. Features advanced lighting, detailed textures, and diverse biomes from lush forests and underground caverns to bustling cityscapes. The game is renowned for its cinematic presentation and visual fidelity in the CRPG genre.
Developed on Unreal Engine 4, Hogwarts Legacy boasts highly detailed and atmospheric environments, particularly the intricate recreation of Hogwarts castle and Hogsmeade. It features impressive lighting, particle effects for spells, detailed character models, and diverse landscapes in the Scottish Highlands. Ray tracing options (Reflections, Shadows, Ambient Occlusion) are available on PC and current-gen consoles, enhancing visual fidelity.
Audio & Soundtrack
Original score composed by Borislav Slavov, featuring sweeping orchestral themes, atmospheric ambient tracks, character motifs, and memorable songs (like 'Raphael's Final Act'). The music dynamically adapts to gameplay situations (exploration, combat, dialogue). Sound design is rich, with distinct spell effects, creature vocalizations, environmental sounds, and extensive, high-quality voice acting for all characters and narration.
Original score composed primarily by Peter Murray, J Scott Rakozy, and Chuck E. Myers, featuring enchanting orchestral themes that evoke the magical atmosphere of the wizarding world and Hogwarts, with distinct motifs for different locations and story beats. Sound design includes intricate magical spell effects, ambient sounds of Hogwarts and its surroundings, and creature vocalizations.
User Interface (UI/UX)
Features a detailed UI typical of CRPGs. Includes character sheets, inventory management (grid-based, with weight considerations), spellbooks, quest logs, a world map with waypoints and journal entries, and a turn-based combat interface with a hotbar for actions, bonus actions, spells, and items. Dialogue choices are presented clearly. Extensive tooltips provide D&D rule explanations.
Features a clean HUD displaying health, Ancient Magic meter, equipped spells (spell diamonds), and a mini-map. Menus for gear, inventory, talents, map, quests, collections, and owl post are accessible. The Field Guide is a central codex tracking progress, collectibles, and lore. Spell casting uses a customizable diamond system for quick access.
Accessibility Options
Offers a good range of accessibility options, including extensive subtitle and dialogue text customization (size, background, speaker color), options for colorblind modes, UI scaling, options to adjust camera shake and motion blur, customizable difficulty (Story, Explorer, Balanced, Tactician, Custom), and options for turn-based mode outside of combat for easier exploration for some.
Offers a range of accessibility options, including customizable controls (PC), extensive subtitle and text customization, colorblind modes, options for aim assist/lock-on, options to change QTEs to holds, Arachnophobia mode (changes spider appearances), audio visualizer for important sound cues, and various gameplay settings for difficulty and visual comfort.
CPU: Minimum desktop CPU for lower settings.
CPU (Laptop): Estimated laptop CPU equivalent. Newer i5/Ryzen 5 H-series recommended.
GPU: Minimum desktop GPU for lower settings.
GPU (Laptop): Estimated laptop GPUs. 4GB VRAM is absolute minimum.
RAM: Minimum RAM requirement (game is RAM intensive).
Storage: SSD is officially required; HDD only for bare minimum target.
laptop_windowsGPU (L): NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1050 Mobile (4GB) / GTX 1650 Mobile (4GB). **An RTX 3050 Mobile would be a significant step up.**
layersRAM: 16 GB
saveStorage (Tier): 85 GB HDD (SSD Required by spec, but HDD listed for absolute minimum)
1080p (Full HD) - Recommended (Targets 1080p, High settings, ~60 FPS)(High Preset, 1080p resolution. Vulkan or DX11.)
CPU: Official recommended desktop CPU for a good 1080p/High experience.
CPU (Laptop): Estimated mid-to-high range laptop CPUs for solid 1080p/High performance.
GPU: Official recommended desktop GPU for 1080p High settings. 8GB VRAM is important.
GPU (Laptop): Performance-focused laptop GPUs. Ensure high TGP for RTX 30/40 series. RTX 50 series mention is speculative.
RAM: 16GB RAM is officially recommended for a smoother experience at high settings.
Storage: NVMe SSD is recommended over SATA SSD for faster load times.
memoryCPU: Intel Core i7-8700K or AMD Ryzen 5 3600
developer_boardGPU: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2060 Super (8GB) or AMD Radeon RX 5700 XT (8GB)
laptop_windowsGPU (L): NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2070 Mobile (8GB) / RTX 3060 Mobile (6GB, High TGP). **An RTX 3070 Mobile or RTX 4060 Mobile (High TGP) is a good target for 1080p High 60FPS.**
CPU: Official minimum desktop CPU for Baldur's Gate 3.
CPU (Laptop): Estimated laptop CPU for minimum playability. A more modern quad-core CPU is preferable.
GPU: Official minimum desktop GPU. Requires 4GB VRAM.
GPU (Laptop): Estimated laptop GPUs for minimum settings. Ensure 4GB VRAM and sufficient TGP. (Hypothetical entry-level RTX 50 series would exceed this).
RAM: 8GB RAM is the official minimum. Dual-channel configuration is beneficial.
Storage: SSD is mandatory.
laptop_windowsGPU (L): NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1650 Mobile (4GB), RTX 3050 Laptop GPU (4GB/6GB, ensure adequate TGP). RTX 4050 Laptop GPU (6GB) would be a more capable modern minimum.
layersRAM: 8 GB
saveStorage (Tier): 150 GB SSD
—
1440p (QHD/2K) - Ultra (1440p ~60 FPS, Ultra Preset, No Ray Tracing, Upscaling Quality/Balanced)(Ultra Preset, Ray Tracing OFF, Upscaling Quality or Balanced)
CPU: CPU for 1440p/60FPS Ultra.
CPU (Laptop): High-end laptop CPU.
GPU: Desktop GPU for 1440p/60FPS Ultra.
GPU (Laptop): High-end laptop GPUs. 8GB+ VRAM critical, 10GB+ ideal.
RAM: 16GB RAM essential, 32GB beneficial for smoother experience.
Storage: NVMe SSD required.
laptop_windowsGPU (L): NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3070 Ti Mobile (8GB, Max TGP) / RTX 4070 Mobile (8GB, Max TGP). **An RTX 3080 Mobile or RTX 4080 Mobile would provide a more consistent 1440p Ultra experience.**
layersRAM: 16 GB
saveStorage (Tier): 85 GB NVMe SSD
1440p (QHD/2K) - High (Targets 1440p, High/Ultra settings, ~60 FPS)(High/Ultra Preset, 1440p resolution (DLSS/FSR Quality recommended). Vulkan or DX11.)
CPU: Strong desktop CPU for 1440p gaming, especially for maintaining framerates in Act 3.
CPU (Laptop): High-performance laptop CPUs crucial for 1440p, especially in CPU-bound scenarios.
GPU: Desktop GPU capable of delivering a solid 1440p experience. 8GB+ VRAM essential, 12GB ideal.
GPU (Laptop): Upper mid-range to high-end laptop GPUs. Max TGP versions are important. Using DLSS/FSR is highly recommended. RTX 50 series mention is speculative.
RAM: 16GB is generally fine, but 32GB is recommended for very high settings and a smoother experience in CPU/RAM intensive areas.
Storage: NVMe SSD strongly recommended for optimal performance at 1440p.
laptop_windowsGPU (L): NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3070 Laptop GPU (8GB), RTX 3070 Ti Laptop GPU (8GB), RTX 4060 Laptop GPU (8GB, High TGP), RTX 4070 Laptop GPU (8GB). (A hypothetical future RTX 5060 Ti/5070 Laptop GPU would target this performance).
layersRAM: 16 GB
saveStorage (Tier): 150 GB NVMe SSD
—
2160p (UHD/4K) - Ultra RT (2160p/4K ~60 FPS, Ultra Preset, RT On, Upscaling Performance/Ultra Performance + Frame Gen)(Ultra Preset, Ray Tracing ON (All options), Upscaling Performance/Ultra Performance + Frame Generation)
CPU: Flagship CPU for attempting 4K/60FPS Ultra RT.
CPU (Laptop): Absolute top-tier laptop CPUs.
GPU: Flagship desktop GPU for 4K Ultra RT, heavily reliant on DLSS/FSR with Frame Generation.
GPU (Laptop): The absolute best laptop GPU, will be pushed to its limits with 4K Ultra RT. Upscaling + Frame Gen mandatory.
RAM: 32GB RAM highly recommended for 4K Ultra RT.
Storage: NVMe SSD required.
—
memoryCPU: Intel Core i9-12900K or AMD Ryzen 9 5900X/7900X
laptop_macCPU (L): Intel Core i9-12900HX / AMD Ryzen 9 6900HX or better. **Modern flagship Intel/AMD HX series (e.g., 13980HX, 7945HX3D).**
laptop_windowsGPU (L): NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4090 Mobile (16GB, Max TGP). **Even this will require aggressive DLSS/FSR settings including Frame Generation for playable 4K Ultra RT. A hypothetical next-gen flagship (e.g., RTX 5090 Mobile or AMD equivalent) would be targeted for a more robust experience. (Highly Speculative)**
layersRAM: 32 GB
saveStorage (Tier): 85 GB NVMe SSD
2160p (UHD/4K) - Ultra (Targets 2160p/4K, High/Ultra settings, ~60 FPS with DLSS/FSR Performance/Balanced)(High/Ultra Preset, 2160p (4K) resolution using DLSS/FSR Performance or Balanced mode. Vulkan or DX11.)
CPU: High-end desktop CPU to support 4K gaming and minimize bottlenecks, critical for Act 3 at 4K.
CPU (Laptop): Flagship or very high-end laptop CPUs required for attempting 4K on a laptop.
GPU: Top-tier desktop GPUs. 10GB+ VRAM is critical, 12GB-16GB+ ideal for 4K. Heavy reliance on DLSS/FSR for 60 FPS.
GPU (Laptop): The most powerful current (RTX 30/40 series) laptop GPUs are needed; 4K Ultra at 60FPS will require DLSS/FSR Performance. Hypothetical RTX 50 series laptop GPUs are speculative for future improvements.
RAM: 32GB RAM is strongly recommended for a smooth 4K gaming experience, especially with high texture settings and complex scenes.
Storage: A fast NVMe SSD (PCIe Gen4 or better) is highly recommended to handle the demands of 4K textures and fast loading for Baldur's Gate 3.
Spec: 150 GB available space (SSD Mandatory) Note: An SSD with at least 150 GB of free space is mandatory for installing and running Baldur's Gate 3. Using an NVMe SSD is recommended for the best loading times and texture streaming. Type: SSD
Spec: 85 GB available space (SSD Required). Note: An NVMe SSD is highly recommended for the best experience, minimizing load times and improving texture streaming in the detailed world. Type: SSD
desktop_windows Operating System
Spec: Windows 10 64-Bit or Windows 11 64-Bit Explanation: A 64-bit version of Windows 10 or Windows 11 is required.
Spec: Windows 10 64-bit (Version 21H1 or newer) Explanation: 64-bit Windows 10 (specified version or newer) or Windows 11 is required.
gamepad DirectX Version
Spec: DirectX 11 or Vulkan (Vulkan is default) Explanation: Requires a graphics card compatible with DirectX 11 or Vulkan. Vulkan is the default API. Ray tracing is not supported by the game.
Spec: DirectX 12 Explanation: DirectX 12 API is required.
info_outline Other Game Notes
OFFICIAL AND EXTRAPOLATED SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS for Baldur's Gate 3. This information is based on official Minimum/Recommended PC specifications from Larian Studios and includes extrapolated tiers for higher performance targets, adapted to the requested JSON structure. Laptop GPU mentions for RTX 50 series are speculative as of May 2025. An SSD is mandatory for all tiers.
Laptop Performance Note: Laptop models of listed desktop GPUs require comparable performance, heavily dependent on TGP (Total Graphics Power), VRAM, and effective cooling. Baldur's Gate 3 can be demanding, especially in CPU-heavy areas and at higher settings.
Laptop Consideration: G P U T G P: Maximum TGP for the laptop GPU is crucial for achieving target framerates, especially at higher resolutions.
Laptop Consideration: Cooling Thermals: Robust cooling is essential for sustained performance, as both CPU and GPU can be heavily utilized.
Laptop Consideration: C P U Power Limits: High sustained CPU power limits are beneficial, particularly for maintaining smooth gameplay in CPU-intensive areas like Act 3.
Laptop Consideration: M U X Switch Optimus: A MUX switch or NVIDIA Advanced Optimus is recommended for optimal performance by reducing latency.
Optimization Detail: Upscaling Tech: Supports NVIDIA DLSS and AMD FidelityFX Super Resolution (FSR). These are highly recommended for higher resolutions to maintain smooth framerates.
Optimization Detail: Key Settings Impact: Texture Quality, Model Detail, Shadow Quality, Cloud Quality, Fog Quality, Instance Distance (NPC/object density), Anti-Aliasing, and Ambient Occlusion significantly impact performance. CPU performance is critical in dense areas, especially in Act 3. Using DLSS or FSR is advisable for 1440p and 4K.
Game Name: Baldur Gate 3
Official PC system requirements from Avalanche Software/WB Games. Performance can vary significantly depending on specific hardware, settings, areas in-game (especially Hogwarts castle interiors and Hogsmeade), and background applications. An SSD is MANDATORY. Ray tracing features are very demanding.
Laptop Performance Note: Laptop models of listed desktop GPUs will require comparable performance, high TGP (Total Graphics Power), and excellent cooling. **Hogwarts Legacy is a demanding title on PC, particularly with ray tracing enabled or at higher resolutions. High-end laptop hardware is necessary for an optimal experience.**
Laptop Consideration: G P U T G P: Maximum TGP is crucial for performance, especially with RT.
Laptop Consideration: Cooling Thermals: Robust cooling is essential to prevent thermal throttling in detailed environments.
Laptop Consideration: C P U Power Limits: A strong CPU is needed for the detailed world, NPC simulation, and physics.
Laptop Consideration: R A M Speed Dual Channel: Fast dual-channel RAM benefits performance significantly.
Laptop Consideration: M U X Switch Optimus: Using a MUX switch or NVIDIA Advanced Optimus is highly recommended.
Optimization Detail: Key Settings Impact: Ray Tracing Quality (Reflections, Shadows, Ambient Occlusion), View Distance Quality, Shadow Quality, Texture Quality, Effects Quality, Foliage Quality, Population Density, and Post Processing Quality heavily impact performance. Using upscaling is highly recommended for higher resolutions/settings, especially with ray tracing.
Game Name: Hogwarts Legacy
build Optimization Details
Upscaling Tech: Supports NVIDIA DLSS and AMD FidelityFX Super Resolution (FSR). These are highly recommended for higher resolutions to maintain smooth framerates.
Key Settings Impact: Texture Quality, Model Detail, Shadow Quality, Cloud Quality, Fog Quality, Instance Distance (NPC/object density), Anti-Aliasing, and Ambient Occlusion significantly impact performance. CPU performance is critical in dense areas, especially in Act 3. Using DLSS or FSR is advisable for 1440p and 4K.
Key Settings Impact: Ray Tracing Quality (Reflections, Shadows, Ambient Occlusion), View Distance Quality, Shadow Quality, Texture Quality, Effects Quality, Foliage Quality, Population Density, and Post Processing Quality heavily impact performance. Using upscaling is highly recommended for higher resolutions/settings, especially with ray tracing.
laptop Laptop Considerations
G P U T G P: Maximum TGP for the laptop GPU is crucial for achieving target framerates, especially at higher resolutions.
Cooling Thermals: Robust cooling is essential for sustained performance, as both CPU and GPU can be heavily utilized.
C P U Power Limits: High sustained CPU power limits are beneficial, particularly for maintaining smooth gameplay in CPU-intensive areas like Act 3.
M U X Switch Optimus: A MUX switch or NVIDIA Advanced Optimus is recommended for optimal performance by reducing latency.
G P U T G P: Maximum TGP is crucial for performance, especially with RT.
Cooling Thermals: Robust cooling is essential to prevent thermal throttling in detailed environments.
C P U Power Limits: A strong CPU is needed for the detailed world, NPC simulation, and physics.
R A M Speed Dual Channel: Fast dual-channel RAM benefits performance significantly.
M U X Switch Optimus: Using a MUX switch or NVIDIA Advanced Optimus is highly recommended.
info_outline
Laptop recommendations are estimates based on available component benchmarks and game requirements.
Actual performance may vary depending on settings, drivers, cooling, power limits, etc.
Prices and availability subject to change. As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases.