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AU Deals: From Bananza to Wukong, These Discounts Actually Deserve Your Time and Moolah

There's a difference between a series of discounts and a bunch of price correction mistakes. Most of today's deals feel like the latter. A handful of these games are finally priced where their risk to reward ratio makes complete sense. I say get amongst them before they're goneski.

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This Day in Gaming 🎂

In retro news and with some serious overkill, I’m using a lightsaber to light 20 candles for Star Wars: Empire at War. This bad boy is an all-timer RTS and one of the best Star Wars tie-ins one could get in a sea of ordinary to bad ones. I remember being held in a Force Choke-esque thrall by its dual-layer strategy system: a galactic map for turn-based empire management and real-time battles on both land and in space. It translated into planet conquering, fleet building, and grand-scale warfare unlike any far, far away game at the time.

But mostly, I was tickled by the iconic hero units it offered and cool Easter eggs hidden. For the former, who wouldn’t dig hewing through rebels as an unstoppable Vader, like his horror visage in Rogue One? And I loved making a battle drag on too long to ensure an escaping Millennium Falcon would spawn.

Aussie birthdays for notable games.

- Star Wars: Empire at War (PC) 2006. Get

- Guitar Hero: Van Halen (PS2/3,Wii,X360) 2010. eBay

Nice Savings for Nintendo Switch

  • Donkey Kong Bananza (-19%) - A$89 DK still understands momentum better than most studios understand fun. Bananza feels spring loaded and deliberate. Late game spikes hurt, but that sting is the point.
  • Spyro Reignited Trilogy (-65%) - A$24.40 Three old school collectathons rebuilt with almost suspicious care. The camera can wobble, the nostalgia is thick, but the value here is quietly ridiculous.
  • Crash Bandicoot 4: It's About Time (-67%) - A$23 This is Crash without rose tinted glasses. Inventive, mean, and obsessed with precision. Completionists will suffer. Everyone else gets a sharp, modern platformer for cheap.
  • Hyper Light Drifter - Special Ed. (-75%) - A$7.50 Clean combat, zero chatter, all mood. It drops you in and trusts you to cope. Sometimes that trust feels misplaced. At this price, it is earned.
  • OlliOlli World (-75%) - A$7.40 Silky controls hiding a quiet cruelty. Landing a perfect line feels brilliant. Missing it feels personal. Cheap entry to a very healthy obsession.

Or gift a Nintendo eShop Card.

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Exciting Bargains for Xbox

  • DOOM: The Dark Ages (-17%) - A$99 A more terrestrial, heavier DOOM that swaps ballet for brute force. Combat still sings once you adapt. Not a deep cut, but solid if you need fresh demons.
  • Cyberpunk 2077 (-65%) - A$31.40 Finally the RPG it promised to be. Smart builds, sharp side quests, the odd lingering bug. At this price, Night City feels like a confident yes.
  • Dragon's Dogma 2 (-60%) - A$43.10 Gloriously inconvenient fantasy. Pawns talk too much, travel takes patience, but the combat chaos is rare. You buy this for stories you did not script.
  • Need for Speed Unbound (-65%) - A$37.90 Loud, stylish, slightly try hard. The handling clicks after a few upgrades. Cheap enough to forgive the attitude.
  • Ori and the Blind Forest Def. Ed. (-75%) - A$7.40 Still heartbreakingly pretty. Platforming demands focus, escape sequences demand calm. For under ten dollars, it is hard to argue with that craft.

Xbox One

  • DOOM Eternal (-35%) - A$35.90 A jumpy combat chess match disguised as a shooter. Weapon swapping is mandatory, not optional. If you meet it halfway, it still rules.
  • Injustice 2 (-60%) - A$21.70 Surprisingly strong story for a capes brawler. Gear systems get bloated, couch matches stay fun. Cheap entry to DC melodrama.
  • Unravel Two (-70%) - A$8.90 A quiet co op platformer about not messing up together. Short, occasionally fiddly, but sweet without being syrupy.

Or just invest in an Xbox Card.

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Pure Scores for PlayStation

  • Gran Turismo 7 (-39%) - A$75.90 A museum you can race in. The grind divides opinion, the driving feel does not. If you care about cars, this still delivers. Also, a VR must-own.
  • No Man's Sky (-39%) - A$42.60 The comeback story that will not stop updating. Infinite planets, occasional repetition, endless tinkering. A long term hobby at a sensible price.
  • RoboCop: Rogue City (-60%) - A$21.90 Stiff animations, immaculate vibes. It understands RoboCop better than most licensed games understand themselves. Cheap enough to embrace the clunk.
  • Visions of Mana (-48%) - A$52 Bright, earnest, mechanically tidy. It plays it safe, but plays it well. Comfortable RPG calories at a fair cut.
  • Rise of the Ronin (-50%) - A$62.40 Open world samurai drama with sharp combat. Structure feels familiar, duels feel electric. You are here for the steel, not the checklist.

PS4

  • The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim VR (-50%) - A$49.60 Yes, Skyrim again. Swinging the sword yourself changes the maths. Rough edges remain. The immersion still lands.
  • Assassin's Creed Mirage (-64%) - A$29 A leaner Assassin's Creed that remembers stealth exists. Shorter, sharper, less bloated. At this price, it feels focused and fair.
  • Persona 5 (-70%) - A$25.80 Stylish, slow, occasionally indulgent. The cast carries it, the calendar demands patience. For this money, that time sink feels justified.

Or purchase a PS Store Card.

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Purchase Cheap for PC

  • Black Myth: Wukong Digital Del. Ed. (-30%) - A$73.40 Boss fights as spectacle. Demanding combat, uneven performance, undeniable ambition. A moderate cut, but the craft is real.
  • Silent Hill 2 (-61%) - A$39.90 Oppressive and deliberate. Combat feels awkward by design. The atmosphere does the heavy lifting and still wins.
  • The Bionic Commando Pack (-82%) - A$4.30 Old school grapple chaos in bulk. Some design has aged, the core loop has not. Curiosity alone justifies four dollars.
  • Ghosts 'n Goblins Resurrection (-90%) - A$4.40 Still cruel. Still precise. Still laughing at you. For under five dollars, that humiliation feels oddly acceptable.
  • Kingdom Come Deliverance: Royal Ed. (-81%) - A$11.30 Hardcore medieval sim that values realism over comfort. Slow burn start, deep immersion payoff. At this price, patience is rewarded.

Or just get a Steam Wallet Card

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Adam Mathew is a passionate connoisseur, a lifelong game critic, and an Aussie deals wrangler who genuinely wants to hook you up with stuff that's worth playing (but also cheap). He plays practically everything, sometimes on YouTube.

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AU Deals: Console Blockbusters And PC Classics For Loose Change

Some weeks feel curated. This one feels dangerous for anyone pretending they are done buying games for a while. I have played most of these, paid full freight for a few, and seeing them at these prices stings in the best way.

Contents

This Day in Gaming 🎂

In retro news, I'm using a brazier-lit stick to light a 24-candle cake baked for Shadow of the Colossus. One of the most critically acclaimed and adored games of all time, SotC was an early games-as-art milestone, thanks to its minimalist landscape designs and the emotional weight of Wander's journey. Core memories for me: marvelling at the PS2-era "fur shell" tech and clocking the game 4 times to get into that Secret Garden.

Aussie birthdays for notable games.

- Final Fantasy IX (PS) 2001. Get

- Shadow of the Colossus (PS2) 2002. Get

- Metal Gear Solid HD Col. (PS3,X360) 2012. eBay

Nice Savings for Nintendo Switch

  • FC 26 (NS2) (-46%) - A$59.50 The football is still slick and surprisingly tactical on Switch, with Career Mode depth intact. Visual compromises are real, but at this price it is a portable time sink.
  • Metroid Prime 4: Beyond (-28%) - A$65 A confident return to first person isolation and scanning everything that moves. It is deliberate, sometimes slow, but that tension is the point.
  • Fire Emblem Warriors: Three Hopes (-40%) - A$47.80 Musou chaos layered over Three Houses politics works better than it should. Repetition creeps in, yet the character writing carries it.
  • DOOM Eternal (-80%) - A$10.90 Still the most aggressive rhythm shooter around, even on scaled back hardware. Demands focus, punishes panic, rewards flow.
  • Mortal Kombat 11 Ult. (-88%) - A$10.70 A ridiculous amount of content for loose change. It is messy, loud, and mechanically sharp once you push past the tutorials.

Or gift a Nintendo eShop Card.

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Exciting Bargains for Xbox

  • Sonic Racing: Crossworlds (-37%) - A$68 Bright, fast and unapologetically arcade. Track design is playful, rubber banding can sting, but couch sessions shine.
  • Ride 6 (-10%) - A$89 Sim leaning bike racing with serious handling depth. Not friendly to newcomers, very rewarding if you commit.
  • Diablo IV (-73%) - A$30 Loot grind done with polish and constant seasonal tweaks. Endgame balance still shifts, but value here is undeniable.
  • Star Wars Jedi: Survivor (-67%) - A$36 Weighty lightsaber combat and proper planet hopping spectacle. Performance patches helped, though it still pushes the hardware.
  • Battlefield 6 (-55%) - A$49 A back to basics reset with tighter maps and cleaner class roles. Launch scars linger, yet the gunplay feels right again.

Xbox One

  • Mafia Def. Ed. (-46%) - A$38 A lovingly rebuilt crime drama with deliberate pacing. Driving feels old school, story still lands.
  • Elden Ring (-38%) - A$34 Vast, cryptic and quietly generous if you pay attention. Still punishing, still unmatched in atmosphere.
  • SoulCalibur VI (-85%) - A$14.90 Weapon based fighting with sharp footsies and flashy supers. Story mode drags, versus remains strong.

Or just invest in an Xbox Card.

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Pure Scores for PlayStation

  • Battlefield 6 (-55%) - A$49 Cleaner combat loops and less chaos than its predecessor. Needs a squad to truly sing.
  • Lost Sphear (-68%) - A$22.70 A nostalgic JRPG with classic turn based systems. Safe, sometimes overly familiar, but comforting.
  • Stray (-29%) - A$28.20 Short, focused and powered by feline curiosity. Puzzle design is light, atmosphere does the heavy lifting.
  • Diablo IV (-40%) - A$66.30 Same addictive loot chase, smoother on current gen. Price is higher here, but couch co op helps.
  • Stellar Blade (-12%) - A$109.90 Stylish, combat first action with demanding parry windows. Story wobbles, boss fights absolutely deliver.

PS4

  • Assetto Corsa Competizione (-48%) - A$40.30 Hardcore racing sim with obsessive physics modelling. Not casual friendly, deeply satisfying for purists.
  • Mortal Kombat 11 Ult. (-90%) - A$8.90 Almost everything NetherRealm built in one package. Story is bonkers, mechanics remain tight.
  • Lost Judgment (-65%) - A$35.10 A detective drama stuffed with side cases and minigames. Combat is crunchy, pacing occasionally indulgent.

Or purchase a PS Store Card.

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Purchase Cheap for PC

  • Like A Dragon: Pirate Yakuza In Hawaii (-73%) - A$27.40 Ridiculous premise, earnest heart and turn based brawling. It is long, proudly weird, and worth it.
  • Dark Souls Rem. (-50%) - A$28.40 The blueprint for modern action RPG tension. Clunky edges remain, design brilliance overshadows them.
  • Dark Souls II SotFS (-54%) - A$29.40 The odd one out, yet full of bold ideas. Enemy placement can frustrate, build variety shines.
  • Persona 4 Golden (-65%) - A$13.40 A slow burn school year that sneaks up emotionally. Dungeons are repetitive, characters carry it.
  • Monster Hunter Rise + Sunbreak (-84%) - A$14.50 Fast, vertical hunting with endless build tinkering. Grind is real, loop is addictive.

Or just get a Steam Wallet Card

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Adam Mathew is a passionate connoisseur, a lifelong game critic, and an Aussie deals wrangler who genuinely wants to hook you up with stuff that's worth playing (but also cheap). He plays practically everything, sometimes on YouTube.

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