Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Gaming
  3. Evergreens

Is Baldur’s Gate 3 cross-platform?

Add as a preferred source on Google
A group of four adventures stands on the ends of a cliff in Baldur's Gate 3.
Larian Studios

The biggest CRPG of 2023, if not ever, promises a huge adventure that you are encouraged to play cooperatively with up to four friends. While online play is expected in the modern era, Baldur’s Gate 3 surprisingly also supports split-screen co-op on PC, PlayStation 5, and Xbox Series X, meaning you can run an entire campaign with a friend side-by-side.

As great as all that is, the vast majority of people will likely want to play with a friend in the comfort of their own homes, which might mean a PC and console player will want to team up like you can in Minecraft or Apex Legends.

Recommended Videos

Is that possible in Baldur’s Gate 3? We know it wasn’t at launch, but a lot has changed over the months and years the game has been out. Here’s a quick rundown of whether this is a cross-platform game.

Is Baldur’s Gate 3 cross-platform?

For the longest time, there was no crossplay support in Baldur’s Gate 3. Even after the game came out on Xbox consoles, everyone was isolated to playing on their own platforms. It wasn’t until Patch 8, the game’s final update, that things changed.

Finally, crossplay is available for PS5, Xbox Series X/S, and PC so you can experience the entire adventure together no matter where your party members are playing.

To take advantage of crossplay, all you need is a Larian Account and to go into the multiplayer menu at the title screen. From here, select “crossplay” and enable it. Once done, you can create a lobby and invite your friends via their own Larian Accounts to join you.

That Larian Account is also used for cross-progression. So long as you log in with the same account, you can carry your campaign progress to any platform you own the game on to continue right where you left off.

Jesse Lennox
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Jesse Lennox covers all things gaming but has a specific interest in all things PlayStation, JRPGs, and experimental indies…
Nintendo is raising Switch 2 price in the US, but there’s still time left to snag one for less
Nintendo held out longer than Sony and Microsoft before raising prices, but the AI-driven memory crunch has finally forced its hand.
Nintendo Switch 2

Nintendo is the latest company to bend its knee in the face of a pricing crisis triggered by AI. The company has just announced revised pricing for its Switch 2 console and online gaming services in multiple key markets, including the US. 

Shoppers in the United States will soon have to pay a $50 premium for the handheld console. The effective date of price revisions in the US, Canada, and Europe is September 1, 2026 (via CNBC). If you've been eyeing the portable gaming console, you have less than four months to get it at the launch price.

Read more
GTA 6’s production budget sounds so astronomical you will have a hard time believing it
GTA 6 could cost more than entire movie franchises
Lucia and her partner rob a store in GTA 6.

Grand Theft Auto 6 has been slow-cooking in Rockstar Games' kitchen for a long while now. But after a decade of building one of the most hyped video games of all time, the expenses are adding up.

In a new Business Insider profile of Take-Two Interactive CEO Strauss Zelnick, the company boss declined to say exactly how much GTA 6 has cost. His only confirmation was that “it was expensive.” However, analysts are estimating the total bill could land somewhere between $1 billion and $1.5 billion.

Read more
Mortal Kombat isn’t done ripping spines out yet
NetherRealm is already pursuing another Mortal Kombat game, even as other franchise projects take shape.
A character select screen in Mortal Kombat 1.

Mortal Kombat 1 won’t be NetherRealm’s last trip into the arena. After the 2023 reboot, Ed Boon said in a Collider interview that the team is "definitely pursuing another Mortal Kombat game," giving players the clearest sign yet that the series remains active.

NetherRealm has confirmed direction while leaving the reveal details blank. It hasn’t shared a title, launch window, platforms, roster details, or story direction. The next Mortal Kombat game is real enough to discuss, but not ready enough to show.

Read more