Deus Ex is finally getting the remaster treatment. Announced during Sony’s September 2025 State of Play, the cult-classic immersive sim is returning with rebuilt visuals, smoother systems, and a long-overdue console debut. Deus Ex Remastered launches February 5, 2026, on PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X|S, and PC.
Deus Ex Remastered confirmed for PC and Xbox too
While Sony led the announcement, publisher Aspyr confirmed the game is also heading to Steam and Xbox, with a live store page already up. That’s good news for longtime PC fans—many of whom have been keeping the game alive for years through mods like Revision.
But this time, it’s official: rebuilt assets, system upgrades, and modern support baked in.
Deus Ex Remastered overhauls visuals and adds smart features
Aspyr says the remaster will feature updated lighting, dynamic shadows, particle effects, and fully retextured character models. Dialogue now includes lip-syncing, and yes—ragdoll physics are in. It’s not a full remake, but it’s more than just a basic upscale.
The list of quality-of-life tweaks is long:
- Autosaves and faster loading
- Achievement tracking
- Cloud saves
- Ultrawide and multi-monitor support
It’s the kind of polish that might actually make this version easier to recommend to curious newcomers—or to friends who won’t touch a .zip file.
Can a Deus Ex remaster compete with its own mod scene?
That’s the looming question. PC players have had access to overhauled versions for years, often for free. And you can still grab the original Deus Ex for under a dollar on Steam.
So is this $30 remaster really worth it?
Maybe. A modern, official version that’s plug-and-play without tinkering might finally make it easier for new players to experience what made Deus Ex iconic—without bouncing off the clunky setup.
Why this remaster matters more than another remake
A remake might’ve made more headlines—but a remaster like this still matters. For one, it preserves the original design, something fans of immersive sims deeply value. And for a series often neglected by publishers, any movement feels meaningful.
Whether this is a one-off or the first signal of more to come from Eidos-Montréal remains to be seen. But for now, Deus Ex is back, cleaned up and ready for another run through Liberty Island.

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