AU Deals: A Ghost of Yotei Bargain Worth Unsheathing, Cheap Thrills With Spideys, Samus and More!
If you’ve ever stared down a stack of unplayed titles while adding more to cart anyway, welcome to my constant, salary-destroying conundrum. I keep telling myself I will clear the backlog, but when prices dip like this, resistance evaporates. Without further ado, let’s just load you up with a mix of Nintendo classics, wild Xbox sales, PlayStation blockbusters, and a few PC gems that still command cult devotion.
Contents
Today, I’m igniting 20 birthday candles (via an exploding Takedown crash) for Burnout Revenge, that high-octane racer that turned destruction into an art form. Sliding into PS2 and Xbox 360 garages back in 2005, it was the fourth entry in a series already famous for speed, but this one added traffic-checking (i.e., civilian cars can be shunted like empty Coke cans).
The above was a weird change that I had to rewire my brain to appreciate. Otherwise, I have fond memories of slamming rivals into buses and watching the chaos ripple across intersections in glorious slow motion. This game still wasn’t just about crossing the finish line; it was about humiliating one’s opponents with “polaroid snap” Signature Kills. So much to love here.
Aussie birthdays for notable games.
– Pokémon Pinball: Ruby & Sapphire (GBA) 2003. eBay
– Soulcalibur II (GC,PS2,XB) 2003. eBay
– Burnout Revenge (PS2,X360) 2005. eBay
On Switch, Super Smash Bros. Ultimate offers timeless mayhem. I still remember Masahiro Sakurai saying he worked himself ill trying to make sure “everyone is here,” and it shows in the absurdly stacked roster. Meanwhile, The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom is proof lightning can strike twice. Its building system had me gluing rockets to minecarts just to see what would happen, and I always discovered something new.
What’s Big on the Radar?
Current hotcakes selling
Or gift a Nintendo eShop Card.
Over on Xbox Series X, System Shock deserves attention as the progenitor of BioShock and Prey. SHODAN remains one of the best villains ever coded, smug as she berates your every move. Battlefield 2042, despite its rocky launch, has been patched into something closer to DICE’s original chaos simulator, and few games deliver spectacle on that scale.
Xbox One
What’s Big on the Radar?
Headed out the door quick
Or just invest in an Xbox Card.
On PS5, Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 3 + 4 tapped into pure muscle memory for me, and its soundtrack is still a nostalgia nuke. Then there is God of War Ragnarok, a sequel so dense with detail that even Odin’s ravens have deep lore. I lost hours just listening to Mimir while paddling.
PS4
What’s Big on the Radar?
Fast movers shifting
Or purchase a PS Store Card.
Lastly on PC, Halo: The Master Chief Collection has evolved into the definitive way to relive every major moment of the saga. And Diablo IV + Vessel of Hatred is already teasing the kind of expansions Blizzard once made famous, with gritty lore and loot showers that drag me back in for “just one more run.”
Or just get a Steam Wallet Card
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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