First, the brutal truth for collectors: Ubisoft has never released a single SKU called the “Rocksmith 2014 Complete DLC Pack.”
When Rocksmith 2014 launched in October 2013 (followed by the Remastered edition in 2016), Ubisoft’s strategy was to sell content à la carte or in small themed packs (like the Bachsmith Pack or Radiohead Pack). Over the game’s lifespan, they released over 1,500 official tracks across hundreds of individual DLC packs.
Why no "Complete Pack"?
Licensing. Music rights are a nightmare of expiring contracts. A song by The Rolling Stones might cost $2.99 today, but the license could expire tomorrow (and many did—looking at you, “Paint It Black”). Because Ubisoft cannot guarantee perpetual rights to every song, they cannot bundle everything into one permanent, discounted package.
Published by: The Riff Repeater
Reading Time: 9 Minutes
For nearly a decade, Rocksmith 2014 has held the crown as the most effective guitar and bass learning tool in the digital realm. Unlike its predecessor or the newer Rocksmith+, this version offered a unique value proposition: a massive, purchasable DLC library that didn’t require a subscription. Among the most searched—and often misunderstood—phrases in the community is the holy grail: “Rocksmith 2014 complete DLC pack custom dlc -...”
If you have typed this into a search engine, you are likely looking for one of two things: either the elusive, all-in-one official DLC bundle that includes every licensed song, or you are trying to filter out user-generated “CDLC” (Custom DLC) to find the legitimate, high-quality official tracks.
Let’s break down what this keyword actually means, where the official “Complete Pack” stands today, and how to navigate the murky waters between official DLC and custom content.
As of 2024-2026, hundreds of official DLC songs have been delisted (removed from sale). This includes massive artists like The Black Keys, Velvet Revolver, and specific tracks by Muse. There is no legal way to buy these anymore unless you already own them.
This scarcity is precisely why people search for “complete DLC pack”—they hope to find a backdoor archive of delisted songs. That archive, when found, is almost always Custom DLC recreations, not official files.