Ready or Not: The SWAT Sim That's Half Price, Half Broken
75% positive. #8 on Steam. But some players hit game-breaking bugs before they finish the tutorial. At $24.99, is it worth the gamble?
75% positive. #8 on Steam. But some players hit game-breaking bugs before they finish the tutorial. At $24.99, is it worth the gamble?
A Metacritic 93. Over 300,000 Steam reviews at 92% positive. Nearly 40,000 concurrent players. And right now, it's $14.99 — the lowest price in the game's history.
$7.49 gets you in the door. The real cost comes later. Here's why sim racers keep paying anyway.
Fallout 1st sits at 40% positive reviews. EA Play is at 33%. Players are paying premium prices for broken promises, vanished games, and subscriptions that get yanked without warning.
100% positive reviews. Top 10 debut. The FMV genre everyone mocked in the 90s just had a very good week.
Pakinpaks, Diggin It, and Melody Friends claim the top three spots — all casual, all discounted, and all flying under the radar. Here's what's worth your time.
The pre-launch discourse was brutal. Now Bungie's extraction shooter sits at 89% positive on Steam with nearly 50K concurrents. The gunplay is elite, the aesthetics are unmatched — but in live-service gaming, success is measured in months, not days.
97% on Steam. 89 on Metacritic. Six million copies in under a month. Capcom didn't just release a Resident Evil game — they dropped a masterclass in how to honor three decades of survival horror without getting buried under the weight of their own legacy.
A video store simulator from a small indie studio is outselling AAA titles on Steam right now. 95% positive reviews, 10K concurrent players, and it's not even close to finished.
Five years, 35 million copies, 395,000 Steam reviews at 88% positive, and a $21 price tag. The game that got pulled from the PlayStation Store is now CD Projekt Red's biggest money-maker — and its top reviews read like apology letters to a game they once buried.
A two-year-old survival horror game is outpacing most new releases on Steam this week — and it only costs $8.69. The genre's staying power is getting hard to ignore.
RE3 is 90% off at $3.99 — the cheapest AAA game in Steam's Spring Sale. Nearly 15,000 players jumped in, but its 82% positive score still trails the RE2 remake by a mile.
Sandfall Interactive expected an 80 on Metacritic. They got a 91, nine Game Awards wins including GOTY, and 5 million copies sold — on their first game. Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 is still climbing the charts nearly a year later.
Call of Duty: Modern Warfare is 90% off at $5.99 and topping Steam's Specials chart. The reviews read like a warning label. Meanwhile, Red Dead Redemption 2 at $15 looks like a steal.
Baldur's Gate 3, Cyberpunk 2077, Elden Ring, and Sons of the Forest are all charting in both Top Sellers and Specials simultaneously — with a combined 1.57 million reviews backing them up. Newer releases can barely get a word in.
A Polish indie survival RPG with 854 reviews and 7,000 concurrent players just landed at #10 on Steam's Top Sellers — three days after launch. The early buzz is real, but so are the warning signs.
The #1 new release on Steam right now has zero concurrent players and one review. The Spring Sale buried every game that launched this week under thousands of discounted classics.
A 50% discount and new DLC have Ready or Not back in the Steam top 5 with 24,000 concurrent players. But 45,000 negative reviews — many from a censorship backlash — cast a long shadow.
Embark Studios slashed its ARC Raiders team from 120 to 25 in a desperate reset. Now the extraction shooter is pulling 131,000 concurrent players with 14 million copies sold — but endgame complaints are already brewing.
A decade-old farming sim at 50% off is pulling 119,000 concurrent players. Call of Duty at 90% off tells a very different story about which games actually hold their value.