Helldivers 2 Adds New $50 and $100 Super Credit Bundles

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MaxLeveled

Posted Tuesday, March 17 2026

As of Patch 6.1.0, the Acquisition Center has two new Super Credit bundle options that weren’t there before. Arrowhead has added a 5,800 SC for $49.99 bundle, and a 13,000 SC for $99.99 bundle to the store. Just in time to buy the new Entrenched Division Warbond.

Bundle
Price
SC/Dollar
vs. Base Rate
150 SC150 SC
1.991.99
75.4 SC/$
Baseline
375 SC375 SC
4.994.99
75.2 SC/$
~0%
1,000 SC1,000 SC
9.999.99
100.1 SC/$
+33%
2,100 SC2,100 SC
19.9919.99
105.1 SC/$
+39%
5,800 SC5,800 SC
49.9949.99
116.0 SC/$
+54%
13,000 SC13,000 SC
99.9999.99
130.0 SC/$
+72%

What’s the best value?

The new $99.99 tier gives you 72% more value per dollar than the cheapest options. Put another way: buying thirteen $1.99 packs to get roughly the same amount of SC would cost you $25.87, except you’d only get 1,950 SC instead of 13,000. The bulk pricing is aggressive.

Why this matters?

The total cost of all current premium content in Helldivers 2 sits around 40,000 Super Credits if you’re starting from zero that’s all nineteen Premium Warbonds (19,000 SC), both Legendary Warbonds (3,000 SC), and the full Superstore catalog.

With the Entrenched Division Warbond dropping today and Arrowhead continuing to push out new premium content regularly, the amount of SC a completionist needs keeps climbing. These new tiers seem like a direct response to that, giving catch-up buyers a better deal when they’re dropping serious money.

Should you care?

If you’re someone who farms SC on Trivial runs and occasionally tops up with a $9.99 purchase, this changes nothing for you. The existing tiers are untouched.

But if you were already planning to buy multiple Warbonds at once, or you’ve been away from the game and want to grab a bunch of content in one shot, the $49.99 and $99.99 tiers are objectively the best value the store has ever offered. Whether spending $100 on premium currency in a $40 game is worth it is a different question entirely, but at least the per-credit rate is significantly better than stacking $20 purchases.