Scholar of the First Sin remixes DSII with reworked enemy placements, extra bosses and every expansion. On 360 the visuals are dated, but it is the most complete way to explore every shade of Drangleic.
Your verdict
Category
Action RPG1 player16+
Description
Enriched Dark Souls II version by FromSoftware and Bandai Namco, April 2015. Includes the full game with all three DLC - Crown of the Sunken King, Old Iron King and Ivory King - integrated in a graphically improved version with repositioned enemies. The definitive and most complete Dark Souls II version.
Dark Souls II - Scholar of the First Sin review
MAX
Art direction
★★★★★
"Iconic"
MAX
Music
★★★★★
"Legendary"
4/5
Story
★★★★★
"Captivating"
Twilight dark fantasy of flawless coherence: ruined castles, nightmarish creatures and veiled light weave a melancholy, hostile world. The sense of level design and the oppressive atmosphere compose an austere beauty. This art direction, dark and fascinating, redefined an entire strand of video games.
Carried by Yuka Kitamura and Motoi Sakuraba, the music unfurls sumptuous orchestral and choral themes that raise each boss to the rank of a grand tragic opera. Between solemnity and despair, the score embraces the melancholy of a dying world. This symphonic richness, more present and grandiose, elevates the funereal atmosphere of the game.
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Fun
"Mild"
Addictiveness
"Obsessive"
Facing ever-present death by weighing each blow and each dodge endlessly renews the urge to cross the next threshold of a vast, hostile world. Improving your build, uncovering a shortcut and felling a dreaded boss reward the stubbornness. Less coherent than the original, it sometimes frustrates, but its loop of effort and reward keeps a stubborn hold.
Difficulty
"Punishing"
A reworked edition that reshuffles enemy placements and hardens certain passages, it is aimed at those wanting the most demanding take on the second installment. Anticipating ambushes, managing resources and staying calm in hostile zones are essential. Stern but fair, it extends a learning-through-failure that has become the studio's signature.
Lifespan
"Massive"
The three crowns — Sunken King, Old Iron King and Ivory King — round out Drangleic here in a reworked build with repositioned enemies and a polished look. Exploring these new lands, mastering humanity and facing online co-operators and invaders offers dense material that New Game+ keeps reigniting. Progression rewards patience over haste. As the definitive version of the second instalment, it concentrates everything that makes the adventure last.
European (PAL) edition of the reworked version of Dark Souls II that rearranges enemies and content and gathers the expansions, becoming the most rounded form of the game on the console. Its appeal lies in this status as the definitive cut, favored by fans after the most complete experience, rather than widespread scarcity. A prime piece for collectors of FromSoftware's Souls saga.
Memorable bosses
More teeming, this sequel multiplies its fearsome guardians, from the tenacious Pursuer to the elite duelists of the expansions like the Fume Knight or Sir Alonne. Each fight calls for patience, reading distances and fine stamina management. The tone may differ, but the demands stay intact, and the best duels rank among the most memorable in the line.
Is Dark Souls II - Scholar of the First Sin still worth playing in 2026?
Released in 2015 on Xbox 360, this Scholar of the First Sin edition gathers FromSoftware's Dark Souls II and its three expansions, with revised enemy placement and a new character that sheds light on the story. The dying realm of Drangleic unfolds in a difficulty that leans on numbers, and the wealth of weapons and spells rewards experimentation. The expansions, the Lost Crowns, rank among the series' best content. The world cohesion charms less than the first. But the depth stays immense. For fans of demanding role playing who want the complete experience, this is the version to favour.