As another Steam Holiday Sale comes to a close, I have spent roughly $100 to purchase 22 games. In the past 2 months I have picked up 3 Humble Bundles. Not a month ago I spent around $50 on 11 games in the Steam Fall Sale. By the time the next Steam Holiday Sale rolls into town I will be lucky if I have played half of these games. I have a problem. I am a Compulsive Collector. And after 1,400 gamers took my recent survey on their game-buying habits, I know that I am not alone.
We’ve seen the Humble Bundle be used to introduce some big games to new platforms in the past, and the latest offering is no exception. The 9th edition of the Indie Bundle sees both indie game favorite Fez and Mark of the Ninja making their debut on Mac and Linux. Along with those, you’ll get FTL: Faster Than Light, Trine 2 and Brutal Legend, plus the beta version of Eets Munchies, which is making its debut on all three platforms. As usual, you can pay whatever you like for the bundle and choose how much goes to the developers and charities (EFF, Child’s Play and Watsi), but you’ll have to pay more than the average to get Fez and FTL. Those not up on their indie gaming can get a taste of what’s in store in the video after the break — just don’t get your hopes up for a Fez sequel if you like what you find.
Filed under: Gaming
Source: Humble Bundle
The Humble Bundle tends to be associated with not just low prices, but also indie video games (and occasionally music). Today’s bundle, however, centers on the literary-minded among us, offering a set of eight e-Books for just under $10. Of course, a main staple of the bundle is its pay what you want price model, which applies here as well — should you only want six of the books, you can pay any price (one penny for six books! hot dog!). If you want access to John Scalzi’s Old Man’s War and Signal to Noise by Neil Gaiman and Dave McKean, you’ve gotta shell out over the average payment price (currently sitting at $9.84). If you want that sub-$10 price, we’d suggest heading over sooner than later. Another good reason? You’ve only got two weeks before this humble e-Book bundle disappears forever.
Continue reading Humble Bundle goes literary, offers octuplet of books at a humble price
Filed under: Tablets, Software, Alt
Humble Bundle goes literary, offers octuplet of books at a humble price originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 09 Oct 2012 13:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Humble Bundle returns with five pay-what-you-want games for Android, Mac, Windows and Linux
Posted in: Today's ChiliSo let us get this right. You can pay what you want, and get another stack of games for your Android — or, indeed Mac, Windows or Linux machine? And help charity? And this is actually proving very popular? Yes, Fieldrunners, Bit.Trip Beat, Uplink and SpaceChem, are the latest games to get the Humble Bundle treatment on the aforementioned platforms (the latter two are tablet-only when buying for Android). Oh, and if you’re generous enough to pay above the average, you’ll unlock the Spirits platform-puzzler, too. We’re finding it pretty hard to argue with, especially as you get to decide the distribution of cash (between charity, the hardworking devs, or the platform-providing Humble). Judging by the real-time stats on the site, people aren’t holding back on the cash, either. Still not convinced? Hop on the free-for-life video after the break to see the games in action.
Filed under: Gaming
Humble Bundle returns with five pay-what-you-want games for Android, Mac, Windows and Linux originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 16 Aug 2012 08:47:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
The Humble Bundle tries something different, lets you name your price for albums from They Might Be Giants, Jonathan Coulton, and more
Posted in: Today's ChiliThe Humble Bundle may have gone mobile on Android earlier this year, but that’s proven to be a relatively small jump compared to the organization’s latest expansion. It’s now rolled out its first Humble Music Bundle, a collection of six albums that, as always, you can name your price for. Those include an album of rarities from They Might Be Giants, Jonathan Coulton’s Greatest Hit (Plus 13 Other Songs), an exclusive MC Frontalot collection, Christopher Tin’s Calling All Dawns, and game composer Hitoshi Sakimoto’s Best of the Valkyria Chronicles — plus OK Go’s Twelve Remixes of Four Songs if you pay above the current average price. Naturally, all of the albums are DRM-free and available in both MP3 and FLAC formats, and you’re able to choose what percentage of your payment goes to the artists, charities (Child’s Play and the Electronic Frontier Foundation) and the Humble Bundle organization itself. You can get a taste of what’s in store in the video after the break, or get previews of each album before you buy at the link below.
Filed under: Internet
The Humble Bundle tries something different, lets you name your price for albums from They Might Be Giants, Jonathan Coulton, and more originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 26 Jul 2012 13:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.