Humble Bundle's June gaming bundle is stacked. For $14.99, subscribers gain access to eight PC titles that would cost considerably more purchased separately, making this month's Humble Choice selection a rare bargain for players building their Steam library.
The headliners tell the story. Octopath Traveler 2 arrives alongside Life is Strange: Double Exposure, a narrative-driven adventure that earned critical praise for its writing and character development. Citizen Sleeper 2: Starward Vector, the follow-up to the original dice-heavy sci-fi game, rounds out the marquee titles. Beyond those three sit The Riftbreaker, INDIKA, Construction Simulator, Hell Clock, and Overlooting, each bringing different genres and vibes to the mix.
Life is Strange: Double Exposure scored a 9/10 in review, with critics highlighting the quality of its storytelling and the appeal of its new supernatural mechanics. Citizen Sleeper 2: Starward Vector landed an 8/10, praised for refining the original's slow-burn gameplay with fresh stress systems and multi-character missions that deepen the experience. The Riftbreaker and Octopath Traveler 2 also earned solid marks at 8 and 7 respectively, suggesting the bundle leans toward quality over novelty.
The variety here matters. This isn't a collection of similar games grouped for bulk appeal. Subscribers get tactical RPG depth, narrative adventure, strategy, indie weirdness, and management simulation in one go. That range means something for different moods and play styles.
Sweetening the deal, Humble Choice membership includes a one-month subscription to IGN Plus, which removes ads from the site and grants access to some free games. Members also unlock 20% discounts in the Humble store, and 5% of each subscription fee supports a charity. For June, It Gets Better receives the donation.
The timing works well for anyone planning to game indoors through the summer months. Rather than hunting for individual sales or paying full retail prices, this bundle consolidates access to well-reviewed titles under one low monthly cost.
Author Emily Chen: "This is the kind of lineup that makes subscriptions worthwhile, assuming you actually want to play these games rather than hoard them."
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