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AU Deals: I Was Not Planning to Buy Games Today, Then These Bargains Happened

I sat down to sanity check a few discounts and somehow resurfaced hours later with a fuller wishlist and a lighter wallet. On Switch, Hades and Ori still feel like magic tricks disguised as games. Over on Xbox Series X, Red Dead Redemption 2 and Monster Hunter Wilds are absurd value for experiences that can eat entire weekends. PS5 is stacked with personality this week thanks to Astro Bot and Lies of P, while PC quietly delivers some of the strongest long form RPG and action value going around. Go get amongst it.

Contents

This Day in Gaming 🎂

In retro news, it's been 26 years since I unpeeled adventure in Donkey Kong 64, a game some called the top banana of Rare 3D platforming (I still prefer Banjo Kazooie). At the time, it looked gorgeous, sounded amazing (hello, DK Rap), and was overladen with crap to collect and unique ability Kongs to switch between. Kong made a comeback quite recently in Donkey Kong Bananza, too. I dug it.

Aussie birthdays for notable games.

- Earthworm Jim 2 (MD) 1995. Get

- Blast Corps (N64) 1997. Get

- Donkey Kong 64 (N64) 1999. Get

Nice Savings for Nintendo Switch

I keep coming back to Switch deals that reward feel over fidelity. Tight design, expressive music, and games that respect your time or gleefully steal it anyway.

  • Hades (-70%) A$11.20 Supergiant turning roguelike repetition into a strength, with reactive dialogue and gods who remember your failures. I have finished this more times than I will admit.
  • Bravely Default II (-38%) A$49.10 Old school JRPG systems with modern quality of life tweaks. Risk reward combat that actually makes grinding interesting.
  • Borderlands 3 Ult. (-50%) A$44.60 A noisy loot fountain with the best gunplay the series has managed. The writing misses sometimes, the shooting never does.
  • Ni No Kuni: WotW (-33%) A$59.90 Studio Ghibli vibes, sweeping music, and a combat system that rewards patience. Still one of the prettiest JRPG worlds around.
  • Ori And The Blind Forest Def. A$7.40 A masterclass in movement and melancholy. Platforming that feels effortless once it clicks, backed by a soundtrack that sticks.

What's Big on the Radar?
Current hotcakes selling

Or gift a Nintendo eShop Card.

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Exciting Bargains for Xbox

This batch is all about scale. Big worlds, big monsters, and games built to show off what the hardware can really do.

  • Monster Hunter Wilds (-64%) A$41.90 Methodical combat, absurd creature design, and that familiar loop of prep, hunt, celebrate, repeat. It is dangerously moreish.
  • Red Dead Redemption 2 (-75%) A$22.40 Rockstar at its most indulgent. Slow, deliberate, and emotionally heavier than most open world games dare to be.
  • Hogwarts Legacy (-57%) A$47 The castle exploration is the real star here. Flying lessons and secret passages still feel properly magical.
  • DOOM: The Dark Ages (-59%) A$49 Brutal, fast, and gloriously unsubtle. DOOM experimenting with tone without losing its steel boot to the face identity.
  • Borderlands 4 (-59%) A$49 More refinement than reinvention, but the co op chaos still sings when the guns start flying.

Xbox One
Older hardware, still ridiculous value. These are content rich packages that age far better than expected.

  • Diablo III: Eternal Col. (-54%) A$46.30 The most approachable Diablo, packed with years of tuning and seasonal hooks that keep pulling you back.
  • Mass Effect Leg. Ed. (-90%) A$9.90 Three classic RPGs, cleaned up and still emotionally devastating. An all time sci fi trilogy for pocket change.
  • Star Wars Jedi: Survivor (-85%) A$16.40 Stronger combat, bigger worlds, and a surprisingly confident story. Cal Kestis really comes into his own here.

What's Big on the Radar?
Headed out the door quick

Or just invest in an Xbox Card.

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Pure Scores for PlayStation

Personality driven games dominate on PS5 right now, with mechanical polish to match the charm.

  • Borderlands 4 (-59%) A$49 Better visuals, already excellent gunplay. Loud, silly, and technically slick.
  • LEGO Horizon Adventures (-63%) A$21.90 A surprisingly smart LEGO remix that pokes fun at Horizon lore while staying accessible for younger players.
  • Hogwarts Legacy (-45%) A$59.90 Strong production values and a setting that does most of the heavy lifting. Still easy to get lost wandering Hogwarts.
  • Astro Bot (-42%) A$64 A joyful showcase of PlayStation history and controller tech. Every level feels handcrafted with genuine affection.
  • Lies Of P (-40%) A$51.10 A Soulslike that earns its confidence. Tough but fair combat wrapped in a surprisingly coherent dark fairy tale.
  • Death Stranding 2 (-54%) A$57 Kojima doubling down on weirdness. Slower moments still hit hardest, especially when the music swells just right.

PS4
These PS4 deals are all about dense storytelling and value packed collections.

  • Crisis Core FFVII Reunion (-58%) A$35.80 Zack Fair finally gets his polished moment. Combat feels modern, the tragedy still lands.
  • Mafia Trilogy (-56%) A$44 Three crime dramas that prioritise atmosphere over open world busywork. Mafia II remains the standout.
  • Neo: The World Ends With You (-53%) A$39.90 Stylish, loud, and unapologetically anime. Combat systems layer beautifully once the full party opens up.

What's Big on the Radar?
Fast movers shifting

Or purchase a PS Store Card.

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Purchase Cheap for PC

If you want sheer hours per dollar, PC quietly wins again this week.

  • Like A Dragon: Pirate Yakuza In Hawaii (-64%) A$36.40 Ridiculous side stories, heartfelt crime drama, and now pirates. RGG Studio refusing to play it safe.
  • LEGO Star Wars: The Skywalker Saga (-90%) A$6.90 A silly, charming speed run through the entire saga. Packed with jokes and collectibles.
  • Dead Space (-85%) A$13.40 The remake nails tension and sound design. Still one of the best examples of survival horror pacing.
  • The Witcher III Comp. (-80%) A$15.70 Blood and Wine alone justifies the price. A landmark RPG that still embarrasses newer open worlds.
  • Hades (-70%) A$10.90 Fast, fluid combat and writing that adapts to how you play. It deserves every accolade it received.
  • Hollow Knight (-50%) A$10.90 Deep exploration, brutal bosses, and lore that rewards curiosity. An indie benchmark.

Or just get a Steam Wallet Card

Legit LEGO Deals

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Just like I did last holiday season, I'm getting festive with the LEGO section. In Mathew Manor, my sons and I are again racing / rating 2025's batch of LEGO Advent Calendars. Basically, we open the City, Harry Potter, Minecraft, and Star Wars ones daily and compare the mini-prizes for "Awesomeness" and "Actual Xmas-ness". 2024's winner was the Lego Marvel one, but, weirdly, there's no 2025 equivalent. So it's anybody's race this year.

Here are the cheapest prices for the four calendars we're using. Score them yourself or just live vicariously through our unboxings.

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: Killer Drops on S-Tier AC Editions and Discounts on Games Too Good To Leave Wishlisted

I have a dangerous relationship with digital storefronts, and this week did nothing to improve it. I went in to check one price, came out with a mental shopping list and a lighter conscience. These are the deals that genuinely stopped me scrolling.

Contents

This Day in Gaming 🎂

In retro news, I'm using a lit deku stick to light a 27-candle cake baked for The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time. I don't unabashedly gush about too many games, but this one warms my very soul. On launch day I happened to find myself in a place of loss and uncertainty in my life; all I wanted to do was retreat from the world. Fortunately, I found solace and, frankly, absolute wonder in the theretofore unimaginably boundless and bountiful 3D land of Hyrule. Truly, OOT is a masterpiece of gaming -- the grandpappy that sired many more masterpieces in a ridiculously storied franchise. GOAT of GOATs.

Aussie birthdays for notable games.

- Zelda: Ocarina of Time (N64) 1998. Get

- Turok 2: Seeds of Evil (N64) 1998. Get

- NES Remix (Wii U) 2013.

Nice Savings for Nintendo Switch

On Switch, this batch mixes family friendly chaos with serious time sinks. Whether you want couch co op stress or polished football, there is real value here.

  • EA Sports FC 26 (-50%) A$44 Still basically football spreadsheets with shin pads, but the on pitch flow finally feels less like players running through wet cement.
  • Super Mario 3D World + Bowser's Fury (-20%) A$64 One part joyful chaos, one part giant angry cat Bowser, and somehow still one of Nintendo's best value carts.
  • Sonic X Shadow Generations (-23%) A$69 Sonic nostalgia plus Shadow sulking dramatically, which is exactly the tone Sega was aiming for.
  • Mario + Rabbids Double Pack (-32%) A$34 Rabbids yelling over turn based tactics should not work, yet here we are, twice.
  • Overcooked! All You Can Eat (-75%) A$14.20 A cooking game that tests friendships harder than Monopoly and usually ends the same way.

Or gift a Nintendo eShop Card.

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Exciting Bargains for Xbox

This is a strong showing for long form RPGs and smart action games, with prices that finally match the time investment.

  • Borderlands 4 (-59%) A$49 Billions of guns, questionable jokes, and enough explosions to keep your brain permanently switched off.
  • Suicide Squad: KTJL Del. (-85%) A$25.30 Deeply uneven, occasionally dumb, but at this price it feels more like a chaotic rental than a regret.
  • Persona 5 Royal (-70%) A$29.90 A hundred hour anime soap opera where the real villain is your sleep schedule.
  • Slay the Spire (-75%) A$9.30 Just one more run quickly becomes three hours and mild existential dread.
  • Metaphor: ReFantazio (-50%) A$57.40 Atlus doing fantasy politics with style, confidence, and zero concern for your backlog.

Xbox One

  • Celeste (-75%) A$7.40 Precision platforming so tight it somehow makes repeated failure feel emotionally healing.
  • Ni No Kuni: WotWW (-80%) A$13.90 A Saturday morning cartoon that politely asks you to grind for twenty hours.
  • Disco Elysium The Final Cut (-70%) A$17.90 A detective RPG where your biggest enemy is your own internal monologue.

Or just invest in an Xbox Card.

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Pure Scores for PlayStation

Big budget spectacle meets pure joy platforming in this PS5 lineup.

  • Death Stranding 2 (-54%) A$57 More walking, more weirdness, more proof Kojima will never be normal.
  • Borderlands 4 (-59%) A$49 Loud, shiny, endlessly generous, and allergic to subtlety.
  • Astro Bot (-38%) A$68 Weaponised joy in platformer form, with controller tricks that feel like black magic.
  • Kingdom Come Deliverance II (-57%) A$49 Historically accurate misery that absolutely refuses to go easy on you.
  • No Man's Sky (-30%) A$49.10 The redemption arc that simply refuses to end, now stuffed with content.

PlayStation 4

  • Call of Duty Black Ops 7 (-30%) A$76.90 Slick shooting, loud explosions, and multiplayer chaos that eats weekends.
  • Trials of Mana (-46%) A$41.80 Colourful, earnest, and just janky enough to feel charming.
  • Far Cry 5 (-66%) A$34.10 America but with cults, chaos, and a suspicious amount of fishing.

Or purchase a PS Store Card.

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Purchase Cheap for PC

If you want sheer volume of content per dollar, PC wins this week easily.

Or just get a Steam Wallet Card

Legit LEGO Deals

Just like I did last holiday season, I'm getting festive with the LEGO section. In Mathew Manor, my sons and I are again racing this year's batch of LEGO Advent Calendars. Basically, we open the City, Harry Potter, Minecraft, and Star Wars on the daily and compare the mini-prizes for "Awesomeness" and "Actual Xmas-ness". 2024's winner was the Lego Marvel one, but, weirdly, there's no 2025 equivalent. So it's anybody's race this year.

Here are the cheapest prices for the four calendars we're using. Score them yourself or just live vicariously through our unboxings.

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: Quality Games, Aggressive Discounts, Zero Filler

In this week’s deals haul, I fell down the familiar rabbit hole of "just checking prices" and somehow emerged with a shortlist of games I have already sunk irresponsible hours into. Some of these are comfort food, some are long overdue, and a few are perfect excuses to cancel weekend plans. No regrets.

Contents

This Day in Gaming 🎂

In retro news, I’m using a precision railgun shot to simultaneously light 26 candles on a cake baked for Quake III Arena. I have extremely fond memories of my older, vastly more employed brother building his first PC to play this at launch as I watched on in awe. It was an absolute batcomputer of a rig packing a Pentium II 266 MHz, 64MB RAM, and a beastly 4MB video card. The latter was very much needed because, unlike most other games released at the time, the idTech3 engine demanded an OpenGL-compliant graphics accelerator to run.

From the first FMV frames of a stogie-chewin’ Sarge making his last stand, I was hooked. The Quake series wasn’t really known for its narrative depth, so pinging around a meticulously crafted Thunderdome with 15 other bots/players was a clever pare back of all the puzzle solvin’ and key findin ‘for pure, unadulterated killin’ at a greased lightning pace. Never shall I forget those all-nighter LANs, the arsey rocket jumps, and railgun duelling across The Longest Yard.

Aussie birthdays for notable games.

- Quake III Arena (PC) 1999. Get

- Spyro 2: Gateway to Glimmer (PS) 1999. eBay

- Racing Gears Advance (GBA) 2004. eBay

- Metal Slug Advance (GBA) 2004. eBay

- Tekken 6 (PSP) 2009. eBay

- Tales From the Borderlands (PS3/4) 2014. Get

Nice Savings for Nintendo Switch

On Switch, this lot covers chaos, catharsis, and comfort food. Whether you want couch rivalries, moody JRPG soul searching, or a magical school fantasy that absolutely knows its audience, these are all easy recommends at these prices.

  • Mario Kart 8 Del. (-26%) A$59 Still the best party racer ever made. I have played hundreds of races and still get shell shock every time I hit second place.
  • Shin Megami Tensei V (-60%) A$40.30 Brutal, stylish, and absolutely uninterested in holding your hand. Pokemon for people who enjoy consequences and philosophy homework.
  • Pokemon Violet (-25%) A$60 Rough edges aside, the open world formula works. I accidentally lost an entire weekend chasing shinies and felt zero shame.
  • Everybody's Golf Hot Shots (-33%) A$47 Golf that remembers games should be fun. Perfect for zoning out while still pretending you are good at sports.
  • Hogwarts Legacy (-51%) A$44 A wizard fantasy that absolutely nails atmosphere. I spent far too long ignoring quests just to explore corridors.

Or gift a Nintendo eShop Card.

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Exciting Bargains for Xbox

On Series X, this batch swings hard. Big open worlds, tight competitive fighters, and some old school FPS energy that refuses to die quietly.

  • Assassin's Creed Shadows (-55%) A$49.90 Stealth finally feels cool again. I actually planned assassinations instead of sprinting and hoping for the best.
  • S.T.A.L.K.E.R. 2 Heart of Chornobyl (-40%) A$53.90 Hostile, moody, and deeply stressful. Exactly how fans wanted it. Do not expect mercy or tutorials.
  • Painkiller (-42%) A$34.90 Dumb, loud, and gloriously fast. Sometimes you just want demons, metal, and zero narrative responsibility.
  • Far Cry 6 (-80%) A$19.90 A gorgeous mess with moments of brilliance. At this price, the chaos is more than worth it.
  • Street Fighter 6 (-50%) A$31.40 The best Street Fighter has felt in decades. Accessible, deep, and dangerously good for your ego.

Xbox One

  • Dying Light 2 Stay Human (-52%) A$47.90 Parkour still slaps and the nights are still terrifying. Play with friends or accept your fear alone.
  • Monster Hunter Rise (-80%) A$11.30 One of the best action RPGs ever made at a laughable price. Say goodbye to your free time.
  • Yoku's Island Express (-85%) A$4 A pinball platformer that should not work but absolutely does. Pure joy from start to finish.

Or just invest in an Xbox Card.

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Pure Scores for PlayStation

PS5 owners get a stacked lineup here, from prestige blockbusters to quietly brilliant surprises.

  • Ghost of Yotei (-21%) A$99 Stunning presentation and deliberate combat. This one rewards patience and vibes over button mashing.
  • Prince of Persia The Lost Crown (-70%) A$24 Ubisoft accidentally made a masterpiece. Tight combat, clever platforming, zero filler.
  • Kingdom Come Deliverance II (-57%) A$49 Historically accurate misery, now even better. You will lose fights, arguments, and dignity.
  • Rainbow Six Siege Del. (-74%) A$12.90 Tactical chaos that still has legs. Communication optional, panic guaranteed.
  • Split Fiction (-33%) A$47 A clever narrative hook that sticks the landing. I did not expect to care this much.
  • Pulse Explore Wireless Earbuds (-15%) A$278 Expensive, yes, but excellent spatial audio. My ears noticed the upgrade immediately.

PlayStation 4

  • Red Dead Redemption 2 (-74%) A$23 One of the best stories in games. Slow, deliberate, and emotionally devastating.
  • Lies of P (-37%) A$53 Soulslike combat with real confidence. Hard, fair, and far better than it has any right to be.
  • Divinity Original Sin 2 Def. (-75%) A$21.20 One of the smartest RPGs ever made. I restarted three times and loved every second.

Or purchase a PS Store Card.

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Purchase Cheap for PC

PC players absolutely clean up this week, with horror, absurdity, and action all deeply discounted.

  • Silent Hill f (-53%) A$54.90 A bold new direction for the series. Creepy in ways that linger long after you shut it down.
  • Silent Hill 2 (-62%) A$38.90 A respectful remake that understands the original. Still deeply uncomfortable in the best way.
  • Dave the Diver (-58%) A$12.50 Cozy chaos perfection. I meant to play for twenty minutes and resurfaced four hours later.
  • Katamari Damacy Reroll (-66%) A$9.80 Weird, wonderful, and impossible to explain. Just roll the ball and trust the process.
  • Resident Evil 4 (-66%) A$20.30 The gold standard for remakes. Tense, modernised, and still an absolute thrill.
  • RoboCop Rogue City (-90%) A$6.30 Shockingly faithful and way better than expected. I laughed, then stayed for the gunplay.

Or just get a Steam Wallet Card

Legit LEGO Deals

Just like I did last holiday season, I'm getting festive with the LEGO section. In Mathew Manor, my sons and I are again racing this year's batch of LEGO Advent Calendars. Basically, we open the City, Harry Potter, Minecraft, and Star Wars on the daily and compare the mini-prizes for "Awesomeness" and "Actual Xmas-ness". 2024's winner was the Lego Marvel one, but, weirdly, there's no 2025 equivalent. So it's anybody's race this year.

Here are the cheapest prices for the four calendars we're using. Score them yourself or just live vicariously through our unboxings.

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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