AU Deals: A Tonne of Wishlist Worthy Games Are Finally Hitting Sensible Prices
AU Deals: A Tonne of Wishlist Worthy Games Are Finally Hitting Sensible Prices
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I went in intending to grab one thing and came out mentally justifying half a library refresh. That is usually how these weeks go. If you have ever told yourself you are absolutely done buying games this month, you are among friends here.
In retro news, I’m celebrating the Aussie birthday of a rare and expensive bird, the SNK Neo Geo CD. Released in limited numbers in Oz around the $600 ballpark ($1,299 in ’25 bux), this bad boy delivered near-perfect arcade-quality games, though it was a “budget” alternative to the hilari-expensive, cartridge-based Neo Geo AES. Being CD-based marred this unit with lonnng load times, though the gruelling wait for Metal Slug, Samurai Shodown, and Fatal Fury was always worth it. Here’s a shot of the beast I sold a kidney and a lung for. Laser: still going strong.
Mario Kart 8 Del. (-25%) A$59 Still the gold standard for pick up and play multiplayer, with immaculate track design and endless replay value thanks to its absurdly polished handling.
Minecraft (-27%) A$29 A creative sandbox that somehow keeps reinventing itself, whether you are building dream houses or falling into lava five minutes in.
Shin Megami Tensei V: Vengeance (-60%) A$40.30 A far stronger version of an already excellent JRPG, with smarter pacing, added story paths, and punishing combat that demands respect.
Final Fantasy XII: The Zodiac Age (-48%) A$41.30 Political fantasy with MMO inspired systems that still feel fresh, especially if you enjoy tinkering with party roles and gambits.
No Man’s Sky (-60%) A$31.90 A redemption story turned content monster, now packed with systems, expeditions, and space weirdness worth getting lost in.
Apollo Justice: Ace Attorney Trilogy (-37%) A$47 Courtroom melodrama at its finest, with absurd cases, great character arcs, and that unbeatable feeling of yelling objection.
EA Sports FC 26 (-55%) A$44.90 A slick presentation and refined match flow make this an easy recommendation if you play even semi regularly.
Assassin’s Creed Shadows (-57%) A$47 Stealth focused Assassin’s Creed with a strong sense of place and some genuinely smart systemic design.
Mafia: The Old Country (-48%) A$47 A moody crime story that leans into atmosphere over open world bloat, which I appreciate more every year.
Star Wars Jedi: Survivor (-61%) A$42.70 Bigger, bolder, and more confident than Fallen Order, with excellent level design and proper Star Wars swagger.
The Callisto Protocol (-69%) A$31.20 Visceral sci fi horror that looks incredible, even if it occasionally prioritises vibes over mechanical depth.
Diablo IV (-73%) A$30 The best the series has felt in years, especially now that seasonal updates have smoothed its rough edges.
Xbox One
Like A Dragon: Infinite Wealth (-70%) A$34.40 A joyful, heartfelt RPG that balances absurd humour with surprising emotional weight.
Unravel Two (-85%) A$4.40 A beautiful co op puzzle platformer that communicates warmth without saying a word.
Dave The Diver (-45%) A$16.40 Part restaurant sim, part deep sea adventure, and entirely impossible to stop playing once it hooks you.
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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