
Polygon’s Nintendo Direct coverage made it clear that Capcom is leaning hard into Switch 2 with Onimusha, Dragon’s Dogma 2, and the rest of its 2026 lineup. PC players who already finished Dragon’s Dogma 2 and exhausted its New Game Plus loop are not waiting for ports — they want the next action-RPG that hits the same nerves: pawns, vocation depth, world traversal that feels weighty, and combat that rewards positional awareness.
We ranked seven Dragon’s Dogma 2 alternatives on PC. The list mixes pure open-world action-RPGs, story-driven CRPGs, and one souls-adjacent pick. Each one solves a specific complaint about Capcom’s pacing.
Quick comparison
| Game | Best for | Cost | Standout | Platforms |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Elden Ring | Open-world action-RPG ceiling | $59.99 | The Lands Between | Windows |
| The Witcher 3 | Story-rich fantasy RPG | $39.99 | Side quest writing | Windows, Mac, Linux |
| Baldur’s Gate 3 | Turn-based party CRPG | $59.99 | Reactive choices | Windows, Mac |
| Kingdom Come 2 | Historical action-RPG | $59.99 | Bohemia sandbox | Windows |
| Pillars of Eternity II | Real-time-with-pause CRPG | $29.99 | Ship combat layer | Windows, Mac, Linux |
| Greedfall 2 | Diplomatic action-RPG | $49.99 | Faction reputation | Windows |
| Nioh 2 | Soulslike with build depth | $49.99 | Yokai and stance system | Windows |
Why people pause Dragon’s Dogma 2
The recurring threads on r/DragonsDogma:
- Performance issues on launch hardware. CPU bottlenecks in cities ship multi-patch later, still spotty for some configurations.
- Fast travel is gated to a scarce, expensive item. The trade-off makes the world feel large but tests patience after the third Gransys lap.
- New Game Plus does not change enough. Pawn progression and vocation grind plateau after one full run.
- Combat depth peaks early. Once you have your favourite vocation maxed, the action loop stops surprising.
- Story is thin compared to the systems beneath it. The arisen narrative does not pull people forward the way the combat does.
The seven picks below each cover a different angle.
The 7 best Dragon’s Dogma 2 alternatives on PC
Elden Ring — open-world action-RPG ceiling
Elden Ring by FromSoftware is the most direct heir to what Dragon’s Dogma is trying to do. The open world is denser, the boss design is the best in the genre, and the Shadow of the Erdtree expansion added a second mid-to-late-game region that takes 30+ hours on its own. Combat is more rigorous than Dragon’s Dogma 2’s, but the build variety in talismans, weapon arts, and ash-of-war combinations is deeper.
For arisen who want the same exploration high with sharper combat, Elden Ring is the obvious first pick.
Where it falls short: No party companions or pawns. The story is environmental rather than narrative-driven. The difficulty curve will frustrate players who relied on Dragon’s Dogma’s pawn buffer.
Pricing:
- Free: No
- Base: $59.99, Shadow of the Erdtree expansion $39.99 (regular discounts to $34.99 base)
- vs Dragon’s Dogma 2: Same price, deeper combat, no party
Switching from Dragon’s Dogma 2: Build a hybrid strength-faith setup early. Roundtable Hold is the closest thing to Vernworth as a hub town.
Download: Elden Ring on Steam
Bottom line: Pick Elden Ring when you want the genre ceiling for open-world action-RPGs.
The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt — story-rich fantasy RPG
The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt by CD Projekt Red is the answer to “Dragon’s Dogma 2 has thin writing”. The Blood and Wine expansion is on most lists of the best DLC ever made, the side quests rival the main story, and the next-gen edition modernised the visuals significantly. Combat is lighter than Dragon’s Dogma 2’s, but the world reactivity goes much further.
For arisen who want narrative depth, faction politics, and characters they remember, this is the trade.
Where it falls short: Combat is the weakest part of the game. The opening hours in White Orchard are paced for a different decade.
Pricing:
- Free: No
- Base: $39.99, Complete Edition with both expansions $49.99 (regular discounts to $9.99)
- vs Dragon’s Dogma 2: Cheaper, far deeper story, lighter combat
Switching from Dragon’s Dogma 2: Set difficulty to Death March from the start. Use Quen as your defensive sign baseline; it is the closest thing to a pawn shield.
Download: The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt on Steam
Bottom line: Pick The Witcher 3 when you want a fantasy RPG whose writing carries the experience.
Baldur's Gate 3 — turn-based party CRPG
Baldur’s Gate 3 by Larian Studios is the party-driven CRPG to Dragon’s Dogma 2’s action-RPG. The pawn-to-companion mapping is direct: four characters in your party, each with class, race, and customisation options that mirror what your pawn loadout was for. Turn-based combat replaces the real-time action, but the build depth and dialogue reactivity are an order of magnitude richer.
For arisen who liked the social side of pawns more than the combat, this is the deepest swap.
Where it falls short: Long sessions. A full Baldur’s Gate 3 campaign is 100 hours and the first act bottlenecks new players. Turn-based combat is a hard pivot.
Pricing:
- Free: No
- Base: $59.99 (regular discounts to $44.99)
- vs Dragon’s Dogma 2: Same price, deeper companions, slower combat
Switching from Dragon’s Dogma 2: Pick a Fighter or Paladin as your Tav so the action feel maps closest to a Mystic Spearhand. Recruit Karlach early for the pawn-style tank.
Download: Baldur’s Gate 3 on Steam
Bottom line: Pick Baldur’s Gate 3 when you want the Dragon’s Dogma social loop without the real-time pressure.
Kingdom Come: Deliverance II — historical action-RPG
Kingdom Come: Deliverance II by Warhorse Studios is the most grounded pick. The setting is 15th-century Bohemia, combat is medieval realism (no magic, no dragons, real horse jousting), and the simulation depth goes further than any other RPG on the list. Sleep, food, hygiene, reputation, and faction standing are all systems with real consequences.
For arisen who liked the immersive sim layer of Dragon’s Dogma’s world more than the high-fantasy combat, Kingdom Come 2 is the cleanest fit.
Where it falls short: Combat learning curve is steep. The first 10 hours are deliberately slow. No fantasy elements, which polarises the audience.
Pricing:
- Free: No
- Base: $59.99 (regular discounts to $39.99)
- vs Dragon’s Dogma 2: Same price, denser simulation, no magic
Switching from Dragon’s Dogma 2: Spend the early hours on the training ground with the master-at-arms. The sword combos are not optional; the combat will not survive button mashing.
Download: Kingdom Come: Deliverance II on Steam
Bottom line: Pick Kingdom Come 2 when you want a historical RPG with the genre’s deepest simulation layer.
Pillars of Eternity II: Deadfire — real-time-with-pause CRPG
Pillars of Eternity II: Deadfire by Obsidian is the underrated entry on the list. The class system has 11 base classes and multiclass options, the ship-to-ship combat layer adds a strategic dimension no other CRPG matches, and the writing is sharp without being precious. The Definitive Edition bundles all DLC.
For arisen who want a CRPG that respects their time more than Baldur’s Gate 3 does, Deadfire is the pragmatic pick.
Where it falls short: Combat readability is a function of camera angle, not great. The 2D isometric view is not for everyone. Population in modern multiplayer is non-existent (it’s single-player).
Pricing:
- Free: No
- Base: $29.99, Obsidian Edition $44.99 with DLC (regular discounts to $11.99 base)
- vs Dragon’s Dogma 2: Cheaper, deeper class system, isometric
Switching from Dragon’s Dogma 2: Pick a class with active abilities (Cipher, Rogue, Monk) so the action rhythm feels closer to vocations than to wizard-style RTwP.
Download: Pillars of Eternity II: Deadfire on Steam
Bottom line: Pick Deadfire when you want a CRPG with a real strategic layer beyond combat.
Greedfall 2 — diplomatic action-RPG
Greedfall 2 by Spiders is the diplomacy-forward action-RPG on the list. Faction reputation actually changes which areas open and which quests resolve peacefully. Real-time combat sits on top of a moderate build system, the colonial setting is unusual for the genre, and the writing handles its themes with more care than the first game managed.
For arisen who want a mid-tier action-RPG with more reactivity than Dragon’s Dogma 2 gives, this is a sleeper pick.
Where it falls short: Production values are below Witcher 3 / Elden Ring tier. Some companion AI quirks. Combat is fine, not exceptional.
Pricing:
- Free: No
- Base: $49.99 (regular discounts to $29.99)
- vs Dragon’s Dogma 2: Cheaper, deeper faction system, lighter combat
Switching from Dragon’s Dogma 2: Lean into the diplomatic skill tree. Half the quests have non-combat resolutions that Dragon’s Dogma never offered.
Download: Greedfall 2 on Steam
Bottom line: Pick Greedfall 2 when you want a mid-budget RPG with strong reactivity to your choices.
Nioh 2 — soulslike with build depth
Nioh 2 by Team Ninja is the action-combat ceiling on this list. The stance system (high, mid, low per weapon, switchable mid-combo) creates frame-data depth no other pick matches. Yokai-shift abilities, mission-based structure, and a build system with hundreds of soul cores reward 100+ hours of optimisation.
For arisen who wanted Dragon’s Dogma 2’s combat to keep escalating instead of plateauing, Nioh 2 is the pick.
Where it falls short: The mission-based structure breaks the open-world feel. The dark Sengoku-Japan setting is darker than Dragon’s Dogma’s high fantasy. Co-op is gated by mission progress.
Pricing:
- Free: No
- Base: $49.99, Complete Edition with DLC $79.99 (regular discounts to $24.99 base)
- vs Dragon’s Dogma 2: Cheaper, deeper combat, mission-based
Switching from Dragon’s Dogma 2: Start with one weapon and master its three stances before diversifying. The Sloth talisman is the early-game pawn equivalent for trash mobs.
Download: Nioh 2 on Steam
Bottom line: Pick Nioh 2 when you want the deepest combat system on the list and you are willing to trade open world for missions.
How to choose
- If you want the genre ceiling for open-world action-RPGs: Elden Ring.
- If story is the missing ingredient: The Witcher 3 first, then Baldur’s Gate 3.
- If you want simulation depth: Kingdom Come: Deliverance II.
- If you want the cheapest CRPG that respects your time: Pillars of Eternity II.
- If reactivity matters more than budget: Greedfall 2.
- If combat depth is the priority: Nioh 2.
- Stay on Dragon’s Dogma 2 if you have not yet hit the post-game Unmoored World content or if the Mystic Spearhand DLC is still ahead of you. The systems are still strong; the question is whether the world keeps offering new things.
FAQ
Is Elden Ring harder than Dragon’s Dogma 2?
Yes. Elden Ring has a steeper learning curve and no pawn equivalent. Boss fights expect parry timing or precise dodge windows.
Which alternative has the best companions?
Baldur’s Gate 3 has the deepest companion writing. The Witcher 3’s secondary characters (Geralt’s network) are also strong.
Can I play any of these games on Steam Deck?
Elden Ring, Witcher 3, Pillars of Eternity II, and Nioh 2 are Verified or Playable on Steam Deck. Kingdom Come 2 has stability issues. Baldur’s Gate 3 runs well on Deck.
Is Nioh 2 a soulslike?
It is in the soulslike family, with stamina-based combat and bonfire-style shrine checkpoints. The stance system makes it the genre’s most demanding melee combat.
Which alternative is best for co-op?
Baldur’s Gate 3 has full multiplayer for the campaign. Nioh 2 has co-op missions. Most others on this list are single-player.
Are any of these alternatives free to start?
No. Free trials exist for some titles via Steam free weekends but none are free-to-play.