After approving an 8% tax on violent video games like GTA and Call of Duty scheduled for January 2026, Mexico’s president just cancelled it entirely. Here’s how gamers won this fight.
AllYouPlay just dropped Detroit: Become Human to its lowest price ever at $3.64. This Quantic Dream masterpiece about android consciousness has sold over 10 million copies. Here’s why this deal is unmissable.
Zoom Platform’s 2025 Holiday Sale offers up to 90% off DRM-free games including exclusives like Duke Nukem and hidden gems like cyberpunk immersive sim Peripeteia. Here’s why this GOG alternative deserves your attention.
Shadow Gambit: The Cursed Crew drops to under $9 on Playsum with code CHEERS. This is the final game from legendary stealth-tactics studio Mimimi Games, and it’s one of 2023’s best that nobody played.
GamersGate just slashed the price on Uncharted’s PC collection to $14.03 with code TWOTOPTIERGAMES. Two complete games, remastered for PC with 4K support and ultrawide compatibility. Here’s why this deal matters.
Timeslip Softworks’ Prometheus Wept is getting its first discount since launching in June 2025. This hardcore turn-based RPG about a world where all technology died overnight deserves way more attention than it’s getting.
After years of analyzing video games on YouTube, Matthewmatosis finally made one himself. Logic Bombs launched on Nintendo Switch this week, featuring 160 logic puzzles that run on actual Game Boy hardware.
Famitsu’s annual poll asked Japan’s biggest game developers to pick their favorites from 2025. While Clair Obscur took the crown, the individual choices reveal fascinating insights into what creators actually play when nobody’s watching.
The tactical shooter Squad thought making combat harder would improve the experience. Instead, the Infantry Combat Overhaul alienated veterans, confused newcomers, and sent Steam reviews plummeting. Now the developer is scrambling to fix what it broke.
Obbe Vermeij, who worked on GTA 3 through GTA 4, just confirmed what fans suspected for years: Grand Theft Auto Tokyo was real, nearly happened, and would have been made by an external Japanese studio. Here’s why it never saw the light of day.