Monster Hunter Wilds is now available on PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X|S, and PC, and Capcom is offering the game in three different editions. The Premium Deluxe Edition sits at the top of the pricing tier at $109.99, which is a $40 premium over the Standard Edition's $69.99 price tag. That's a significant jump for what amounts to purely cosmetic content, so let's break down exactly what you're getting and whether it's worth the investment.
The Premium Deluxe Edition bundles the base game with the Monster Hunter Wilds Cosmetic DLC Pass. This pass includes three separate DLC packs, with all content now available. You're paying for cosmetic content that was released in stages throughout 2025.
The first pack is the Deluxe Pack, which includes 16 cosmetic items like the Feudal Soldier layered armor set, Felyne Ashigaru armor for your Palico companion, unique gestures like Battle Cry and Uchiko, and two hairstyles called Hero's Topknot and Refined Warrior. You also get decorations for your Seikret mount, pendants, makeup options, sticker sets, and a special nameplate.
Cosmetic DLC Pack 1 includes another 16 items. This pack features the Noblesse layered armor set, additional pendants with color variations, photo poses, a BGM set, and customization options for your pop-up camp. Cosmetic DLC Pack 2 rounds out the offering with 14 items, featuring the Cypurrpunk layered armor set, new hairstyles like Wild Braids and Futuristic Crop, gesture sets, and more pendants. Of course, there are already some post-launch extras you may miss out on here, but they're not a huge deal, arguably.
The Premium Bonus includes Wyverian Ears layered armor, a hunter profile set, and a 2025 recording of the series theme Proof of a Hero. That music track is already available on YouTube for free, which tells you everything you need to know about the value proposition here.

At $109.99, the Premium Deluxe Edition costs $40 more than the Standard Edition. The Deluxe Edition sits in the middle at $89.99, giving you the base game plus the Deluxe Pack for $20 extra. That means the two additional cosmetic packs and the Premium Bonus are valued at $20 when you step up from Deluxe to Premium Deluxe.
To put this in perspective, $40 is typically what developers charge for major story expansions. The Elden Ring: Shadow of the Erdtree DLC launched at $39.99 and included an entirely new region, dozens of hours of content, new weapons, and challenging boss fights. The Monster Hunter Wilds Premium Deluxe Edition gives you armor skins and emotes.
Everything in the Premium Deluxe Edition is purely cosmetic. There are no stat boosts, no exclusive weapons, no additional quests, and no gameplay content whatsoever. The layered armor system in Monster Hunter already lets you wear the appearance of any armor you've crafted over your actual gear, so these cosmetic sets don't provide functionality that isn't already built into the base game.
The DLC packs don't add new monster hunts or story content. You're paying $40 for the privilege of looking different while doing the exact same activities that Standard Edition players are doing. For a series that has always been about earning your gear through hunts and crafting, paying extra to bypass that visual progression feels oddly disconnected from what makes Monster Hunter special.

Here's the crucial detail that Capcom mentions in the fine print: all of this content is available to purchase separately. If you buy the Standard Edition and later decide you really need that Cypurrpunk armor set, you can grab it individually without committing $40 upfront for a bundle of cosmetics you might not even want.
This approach gives you flexibility to choose which cosmetic packs actually appeal to you. The Premium Deluxe Edition forces you to commit to all three packs, with no refunds if you end up regretting the purchase.
The Premium Deluxe Edition makes sense for a very specific type of player. If you're a longtime Monster Hunter fan who values cosmetic customization above all else, has disposable income, and wants to support Capcom regardless of the value proposition, then go ahead and grab it. For everyone else, the Standard Edition is the smart choice.
The cosmetic DLC Pass doesn't offer enough content to justify doubling down on a $70 base game. You can spend that $40 on other games, or save it to purchase individual cosmetic packs later if something really catches your eye. The Standard Edition gives you the complete Monster Hunter Wilds experience with no missing gameplay features or content.
Players with save data from Monster Hunter: World or Iceborne will receive bonus items when they start Wilds, regardless of which edition they purchase. These bonuses include equipment for your Palico and a nameplate for your Hunter Profile.
Is Monster Hunter Wilds Premium Deluxe Edition worth $110? Our guide covers all cosmetic DLC packs, release dates, and whether you should buy it.