How to Play Every Borderlands Game in Chronological Order

Quickly earning a reputation as the face of the looter shooter genre in the years since its release, Borderlands really has become one of gaming’s most recognisable franchises. From its cel-shaded art style to its masked psycho poster child, the foul-mouthed, tongue-in-cheek sci-fi universe is now a staple of modern video game culture. It’s not stopping there though, with the series quickly morphing into a multimedia sensation in its own right, spinning off into comics, novels and even a tabletop game.

This month, that journey reaches its biggest milestone yet, with Borderlands finally making its long-awaited jump to the big screen courtesy of Hostel and Thanksgiving director, Eli Roth. Reimagining Pandora and its vault-obsessed locals for a brand new audience. And while the film did not review particuarly well, it’s still a major step for any franchise.

With the Borderlands movie now in theaters, there’s likely to be a lot of new and returning fans looking to dive back into the games and reacquaint themselves with where it all started. So, we decided to put together a quick timeline of the series to get you caught up on how it all fits together.

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How Many Borderlands Games Are There?

In total, there are currently seven Borderlands games and spin-offs that are canon to the series, and two smaller, non-canon titles: Borderlands: Vault Hunter Pinball and Borderlands Legends.

Where’s The Best Place to Start?

While it’s the simplest answer, the best place to start is arguably Borderlands 1, although if you don’t care about the story, any of the three mainline games are a good introduction.

All three entries in the trilogy are relatively similar in style, scope and gameplay, and better yet, they’re all available on modern consoles and PC. That being said, there is a great overarching story that runs through the Borderlands saga, and if you’ve just come off the movie and want to follow it as intended, starting from the beginning is the best way to play.

Every Canon Borderlands Game in Chronological Order

These blurbs contain mild spoilers for each game, including characters, settings, and story beats.

1. Borderlands (2009)

The game that kickstarted it all. The very first Borderlands launched in 2009, telling the story of Lilith, Brick, Roland and Mordecai: a group of four “Vault Hunters” that venture out on the treasure hunt of a lifetime. Arriving on the volatile planet of Pandora, they seek out a legendary bunker known as The Vault, which is said to house unimaginable treasures.

As expected, their expedition quickly turns into a chaotic maelstrom of carnage, with the group facing off against a militia known as the Crimson Lance, contending with the planet’s savage wildlife and taking down hordes of bloodthirsty bandits. From the moment Borderlands hit shelves, it was a huge hit, launching the looter shooter genre into the stratosphere through its compelling gameplay loop of killing masses of enemies, discovering a near-limitless supply of guns and building your chosen character.

The game was also supported heavily after release, getting a further four expansions that took the game from zombie-themed islands to a tongue-in-cheek riff on Mad Max’s Thunderdome.

2. Borderlands: The Pre-Sequel (2014)

Developed by 2K Australia with the assistance of Gearbox Software, Borderlands: The Pre-Sequel may have launched after Borderlands 2, but it fills in the gap between the first two Borderlands games. The story follows a group of new Vault Hunters, Athena, Wilhelm, Nisha and Claptrap, as they head out on a mission to find a Vault on the moon of Elpis.

The Pre-Sequel was, in a lot of ways, a bunch more of the Borderlands fans knew and loved. Set in a new locale with fresh classes to master and learn, it offered more guns, boss fights, quests and enemy encounters to plough through while the world waited for an inevitable Borderlands 3. However, its main selling point was further fleshing out the story of Borderlands 2, with the game featuring the second game’s main antagonist, Handsome Jack, in a leading role.

Alongside featuring many of the second game’s main bosses and characters years before their roles in the sequel’s story, it also offered a full view of Jack’s descent into madness, establishing the iconic foe’s origins. Much like the other games, 2K Australia added several expansions after the game launched, including the Holodome Onslaught and Claptastic Voyage maps, as well as two playable characters: the Doppelganger and the Baroness.

3. Borderlands 2 (2012)

The official sequel to Borderlands, Borderlands 2 launched in 2012, bringing players back to Pandora with a new squad of ambitious Vault Hunters in tow. The tale begins with our heroes, Maya, Axton, Salvador and Zer0, heading to Pandora to search for a new Vault. However, it quickly becomes apparent that the planet’s overlord, the sadistic Handsome Jack, doesn’t take kindly to brave adventurers seeking fame and fortune by uncovering the latest fabled Vault on Pandora. While riding a train across the untamed planet, Jack attempts to have them killed, leaving them stranded in an icy wasteland.

Left for dead, the team set out on an adventure to discover the truth behind Handsome Jack’s schemes, attempting to stop to him and find the Vault in the process. Borderlands 2 was essentially a bigger, more expansive take on the original game, offering plenty of quests, new classes to master, a charismatic main villain to take down and, somehow, even more guns to find and collect.

It’s still regarded by many as the best Borderlands to date, offering a fun story, memorable combat encounters and a healthy dose of the series’ trademark sense of humour. Much like the first game, it also came with a bunch of post-release support, including four additional campaigns, two bonus playable characters, and several Headhunter missions.

4. Tales From The Borderlands (2014 – 2015)

The first full spin-off of the series, Tales From The Borderlands was Walking Dead developer Telltale’s take on the Borderlands universe, offering an episodic, story-focused adventure set on the surface of Pandora. Unlike the mainline entries, Tales doesn’t centre on a team of super-powered, gun-obsessed Vault Hunters. Instead, it follows a crook and a corporate lackey who unwittingly stumble into a grand adventure.

Set after the events of Borderlands 2, we follow Rhys, a Hyperion employee lobbying for a higher position in the company, and Fiona, a con artist working with her sister, Sasha. After Rhys attempts to one-up a colleague by intercepting a deal to acquire a vault key, he learns the key was a fake in a con set-up by Fiona, entangling the two together and setting off a chain reaction of events that put them on the trail of a brand new Vault.

As with all of Telltale’s games, Tales From The Borderlands focuses primarily on a branching, cinematic story with moral choices that can change the direction of the narrative. In the years following its release, Tales From The Borderlands has been acknowledged as a key piece of the Borderlands canon, with original characters from the game even popping up in Borderlands 3.

5. Tiny Tina’s Wonderlands (2022)

Gearbox Software’s most recent entry in the Borderlands franchise, from the outside, Tiny Tina’s Wonderlands doesn’t look like a Borderlands game. Subbing out futuristic desert wastelands for a sprawling fantasy kingdom, while Wonderlands may have plenty of dragons, goblins and unicorns, it’s very much still a Borderlands game in everything but the setting.

Acting as a fully-fledged version of the beloved Borderlands 2 DLC, Tiny Tina’s Assault on Dragon Keep, Tiny Tina’s Wonderlands once again has you entering the world of Bunkers and Badasses; the Borderlands equivalent of Dungeons and Dragons. With Tina as your very enthusiastic dungeon master, you’ll battle against a range of fantasy monsters, embark on some heroic quests and battle your way to the monstrous Dragon Lord.

As with all Borderlands games, Tiny Tina’s Wonderlands boasts a metric ton of guns to find, classes to master and enemies to kill, while also incorporating new ideas to complement the shift in setting, such as an overworld area you traverse between missions and the ability to use spells. It also has its own helping of expansions to dig into, with four separate DLCs featuring new dungeons, bosses and gear.

6. Borderlands 3 (2019)

Seven years after the release of Borderlands 2, Gearbox Software returned for an official third entry, launching Borderlands 3 in 2019. As always, the threequel brings a fresh new cast of Vault Hunters into the fray, introducing players to Amara, FL4K, Zane and Moze, and sending them out on a chaotic new adventure.

This time around, players are tasked with stopping a pair of murderous siren twins named Troy and Tyreen, who are venturing across the galaxy and harnessing the power inside the vaults for a mysterious cause. In a franchise first, players are tasked with travelling to multiple planets to take them down, teaming with an array of familiar faces such as Lilith, Rhys, Maya, Brick, Zer0 and, of course, Claptrap.

As always, you can expect plenty of looter shooter chaos to ensue, with a heap of guns to find, enemies to eviscerate and new character classes to master. There’s also plenty of DLC content to jump into when you’re done, with Borderlands 3’s additional content offering four new campaigns, takedown missions and even designer and director cuts that resurrect a bunch of content left on the cutting room floor.

7. New Tales From The Borderlands (2022)

Gearbox Software’s official follow-up to Tales From The Borderlands, New Tales From The Borderlands is currently the last game on the chronological timeline. Bringing in a slate of fresh characters instead of opting for a continuation of the original Tales game, New Tales has three protagonists: Anu, Octavio and Fran.

The story follows the group’s adventures after stumbling into a vault and finding a precious artefact, which inadvertently puts them in the line of fire of the Tediore corporation and its ruthless CEO, Susan Coldwell. With the relic now in their possession, the trio begins to uncover its true powers, all the while attempting to evade Coldwell as she hunts them down.

Much like the previous game, New Tales From The Borderlands is focused almost entirely on weaving a branching story that adapts and warps based on your choices. You can expect plenty of dialogue options, QTE fight sequences and tough decisions that will impact the outcome of the adventure.

Every Borderlands Game in Release Order

  1. Borderlands (2009)
  2. Borderlands Legends (2012)
  3. Borderlands 2 (2012)
  4. Borderlands: The Pre-Sequel (2014)
  5. Tales From The Borderlands (2014 – 2015)
  6. Borderlands 3 (2019)
  7. Tiny Tina’s Wonderland (2022)
  8. New Tales From The Borderlands (2022)
  9. Borderlands: Vault Hunter Pinball (2023)

What’s Next For Borderlands?

In terms of games, Borderlands 4 appears to be the next major release on the horizon. Gearbox Software revealed the sequel exists and is currently being worked on after the studio announced it was being acquired by Take-Two earlier this year, with Gearbox head Randy Pitchford telling us in an interview that “It’s the greatest thing [the studio has] ever done.”

Although that’s all we have to go on for now, It seems as though projects in the Borderlands universe could be more frequent going forward. We learned recently that the franchise will be a big focus for Take-Two following the acquisition, with Take-Two boss Strauss Zelnick noting in a investor’s call that the company sees a lot of “potential growth opportunities” for the IP. We’ll have to wait to see exactly what Zelnick means by that, but it appears we could be trekking to Pandora a lot more in the coming years.

Callum Williams is an IGN freelancer covering features and guides. When he’s away from his desk, you can usually find him obsessing over the lore of the latest obscure indie horror game or bashing his head against a boss in the newest soulslike. You can catch him over on Twitter at @CaIIumWilliams.

Talking Point: What Are You Playing This Weekend? (10th August)

We’re DOOM’d.

Well folks, another week has come and gone, which means it’s time to reveal what we’re all going to be playing this weekend. Before we do, however, let’s see what’s been going on this week.

First up, Monolith Soft is recruiting for what it simply describes as a “new RPG”; chances are it’ll probably be a new Xenoblade title for Nintendo’s upcoming hardware, but who knows. Elsewhere, DOOM + DOOM II got a new release on the Switch eShop courtesy of iD software, Nightdive Studios, and MachineGames (more on that later), while we reviewed what we think is one of the best 2D action-platformers on Switch with Volgarr the Viking II.

Read the full article on nintendolife.com

Fitness Boxing Feat. Hatsune Miku DLC Revealed

Out this September on Switch.

Ahead of Hatsune Miku’s Fitness Boxing outing this September, Aksys Games has officially revealed the DLC on the way to the game. Players looking for some extra exercise will be able to purchase the Miku Exercise Editor, two background music packs, and additional costumes. Here’s the full rundown (via PR):

Miku Exercise Editor – 19th September, $9.99

The editor allows players to choose their favourite songs and set their own actions. You can edit original versions or start completely from scratch. You can then share your creations online.

Read the full article on nintendolife.com

Sega Announces New Sonic X Shadow Generations Manga, Here’s A First Look

Available in next month’s issue of CoroCoro.

Sega has announced all sorts of things in the lead up to Sonic X Shadow Generations, and now to add to the year of Shadow, it’s officially revealed a new manga series is on the way.

It will begin in the October issue of CoroCoro Comic, which goes on sale next month. Here’s a first look at Shadow in this new series, along with a machine translation of the attached message shared on social media:

Read the full article on nintendolife.com

Dead Rising Deluxe Remaster Removes the ‘Erotica’ Genre From the Photography Mini-Game

Dead Rising Deluxe Remaster will be released in roughly a month, and as more news trickles in, it has been discovered that the upcoming remaster has removed the ability for players to take an “erotic” photo.

As noted in a new report from Famitsu (spotted by Eurogamer), Dead Rising Deluxe Remaster’s photography mini-game has removed the “Erotica” genre from photos taken by the player. In the original game and its subsequent 2016 re-release, there were 6 types of photos depending on what Frank photographs. A photograph with a specific photo genre would award players with an additional Prestige Point (PP) bonus for the picture. The Erotica genre specifically was available when players took pictures of certain angles of a female human or zombie character.

While the Photography mini-game is almost entirely optional, as it is not required to take pictures when completing the main story, the mechanic plays a role in several side missions Frank can complete. Regarding the omission of the Erotica genre, two optional missions require Frank to take Erotica photo(s). So, it remains to be seen how those missions will be altered due to the removal of the photo type.

Capcom did not immediately respond to IGN’s request for comment.

Otherwise, Capcom appears to have put a lot of effort into improving the overall gameplay of Dead Rising. As Capcom has previously revealed, the upcoming Deluxe Remaster has improved survivor AI, making it easier to escort survivors to safety, and a new control scheme that allows players to move while aiming, in addition to providing fully voiced NPCs, realistic lighting, and improvements to facial expressions.

Dead Rising Deluxe Remaster is out on September 19 digitally or November 8 if you prefer to obtain a digital copy. For more, check out the recent gameplay deep dive featuring the game’s director and producer.

Taylor is a Reporter at IGN. You can follow her on Twitter @TayNixster.

Prince Of Persia: The Lost Crown DLC Is Unmasked Next Month

Mask of Darkness launches in September.

The excellent Metroidvania Prince of Persia: The Lost Crown blew us away back when it launched i9n January, and Ubisoft has been providing fans with free updates since its release. But now, Sargon will be embarking on a new story chapter when the first piece of DLC lands on 17th September 2024.

Titled Mask of Darkness, the DLC was teased back at Ubisoft Forward in June. And while we don’t know too much about the DLC, we do know that we’ll be exploring a whole new interconnected world with “exclusive biomes” on Mount Qaf. Look, more exploration and combat in a new world is enough for us.

Read the full article on nintendolife.com

Mexico, 1921: A Deep Slumber Demo Available Now on Xbox

Summary

  • Get a glimpse of the artstyle and main mechanics.
  • Historical adventure launching this fall on Xbox Series S|X and Xbox One.
  • Play as two different characters in post-revolutionary Mexico.]

You can now dive into Postrevolutionary Mexico City with Xbox.

Mexico, 1921: A Deep Slumber’s Demo, a historical adventure where you’ll play as Juan Aguirre, a journalist through Mexican post revolution, is now available on Xbox.

Grab your camera, notebook and the best nosey instinct you’ve got and dive into a political adventure that will make you travel back in time to post-revolutionary Mexico. In this demo you’ll play two different moments in Juan’s story: 1928 and 1921.

Mex 1921 camera

First, you’ll have to investigate the murder of the president while playing as Inspector Roberto Cruz, the real General responsible of investigating the murder of the Mexican President. Interact with real photographs and interview suspects. Next, you travel back in time to 1921 and play as Juan Aguirre, the young journalist who will dive into a gripping political plot that will show him that Mexico is no place for the weak!

Mex 1921 cityscape

Explore Mexico City’s Zocalo during the centenary independence parade and enjoy the art style inspired by Mexican muralists. Use Nosey mode to investigate a riot, and of course learn some gossip… you might find out more than you think! Use your camera to capture evidence, you’ll have to control focus, aperture and zoom! And since you’re a journalist… use your notebook to keep track of it all!

Mex 1921 clue

Developed by Mácula Interactive a small Indie studio based in Mexico City, this game aims to honor and share Mexican culture through a fun and captivating experience. This game is developed hand in hand with local cultural institutions, you can interact with real documents, pieces of art, recipes and even meet historical characters!

Mex 1921 photo

Mexico, 192`1: A Deep Slumber is set to launch this fall on Xbox and is now available to  wishlist. Play the demo now.

Welcome to post-revolutionary Mexico!

Xbox Live

Mexico, 1921: A Deep Slumber – Demo

Mácula Interactive

Mexico, 1921. A deep slumber is an intriguing narrative adventure where you try to solve a hundred-year-old mystery: who planned the assassination of President Álvaro Obregón? You play as Juan Aguirre, a photojournalist who will interview and photograph subjects, collect historical data and report the news that will shape Mexican history. Join Juan in post-revolutionary Mexico City to discover why Mexico ain’t no place for the weak. Developed hand in hand with the National Newspaper Library and the Popular Arts Museum, this game will be an interactive archive of Mexican post-revolutionary history.

The post Mexico, 1921: A Deep Slumber Demo Available Now on Xbox appeared first on Xbox Wire.

Official PlayStation Podcast Episode 491: Darkest Shadow

Email us at PSPodcast@sony.com!

Subscribe via Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or download here


Howdy folks! This week the PlayStation Podcast gang returns with a quick episode to discuss this week’s news and new releases on the horizon. Plus the team talks Jak and Daxter, Darkest Dungeon II, and Elden Ring Shadow of the Erdtree.

Stuff We Talked About

  • Upcoming releases:
    • Madden NFL 25 | PS5, PS4
    • Cult of the Lamb: Unholy Alliance | PS5, PS4
    • Dredge: The Iron Rig | PS5, PS4
  • Dead by Daylight Update Blog
  • God of War Ragnarök PC Specs Blog
  • Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 Zombies Blog
  • Jak and Daxter
  • Darkest Dungeon II
  • Elden Ring Shadow of the Erdtree

The Cast

Sid Shuman – Senior Director of Content Communications, SIE

Tim Turi – Content Communications Manager, SIE

O’Dell Harmon Jr. – Content Communications Specialist, SIE


Thanks to Dormilón for our rad theme song and show music.

[Editor’s note: PSN game release dates are subject to change without notice. Game details are gathered from press releases from their individual publishers and/or ESRB rating descriptions.]

Take-Two Interactive Boss Says Call of Duty May Boost Game Pass, but He’s Still Skeptical

With Call of Duty, one of Microsoft’s most valuable gaming IPs, finally hitting Game Pass, Take-Two CEO Strauss Zelnick expects the popular first-person shooter to boost subscriber numbers for the service “for at least a period of time.”

Speaking with IGN’s sister site, GamesIndustry.biz, Zelnick told the publication that he believes including Call of Duty on Game Pass will push consumers to subscribe to the service, at least for some time. “I think that offering a frontline title with a premium price in a subscription service, day and date, will push consumers to that subscription service for at least a period of time,” Zelnick explained to GamesIndustry.biz.

Though Zelnick explained that Microsoft’s decision “won’t affect [Take-Two’s] decisions” and its approach to handling gaming subscription services. The company has dabbled with subscription services, like GTA+, a premium membership designed for avid GTA Online players.

Zelnick’s comments came the same week Take-Two Interactive announced its quarterly earnings, where the company reported total net bookings of $1,22 billion for the quarter while also revealing that GTA V has exceeded 200 million units solid. Zelnick revealed that while there is currently a video game voice actor strike, the company does not expect its business to be impacted by the publisher in the short term. This includes GTA VI, one of the most highly anticipated games of 2026, to remain unaffected by the strike.

Blogroll Credit: Steven Ferdman / Getty Images

Taylor is a Reporter at IGN. You can follow her on Twitter @TayNixster.