Even by Humble Bundle standards, the Humble Bundle V contains some fantastic games. They’re all so great, in fact, that I’d be surprised if you haven’t played pretty much all of them already.
Yep, it’s Humble Bundle time again — this time it’s the sequel to the Android bundle!
Man, Mojang — these guys are like the A-Team of the game development world. First Notch offered to bankroll a Psychonauts sequel, now they’re creating games for charity? If you have a problem, if no-one else can help, and you can find them, maybe you can hire… Mojang.
The Humble Indie Bundles never seem to stop. We have lost count of how many bundles have been created and the bundles we’ve bought have formed their own pile of gaming shame. Now that pile can grow some more… on the mobile platform.
The Humble Indie Bundle isn’t so much a bundle as a great big whopping hessian sack stuffed full of quality games, charity warm-and-fuzzies and potatoes. The latest numbers show that, while the potatoes have been sorely neglected, 421,000 bundles have been purchased, amounting to $US2.2 million spent on sweet indie gaming entertainment.
The latest Humble Indie Bundle, which offers farcical bang-for-buck, has been for many a great way to get a load of great games for a reasonable price. Sadly, for others, it’s been a way to try and scam a very lucrative competition.
The new Humble Indie Bundle is terrific. For a price of your own choosing, you can get indie gems Super Meat Boy, Bit. Trip Runner, Jamestown, Shank and Nightsky, as well as Cave Story + and Gratuitous Space Battles for paying more than the average selling price.
The word awesome is criminally overused. It may actually now be meaningless. But when I say the latest Humble Indie Bundle is ‘awesome’. I mean it’s awesome. Really.
The latest Humble Indie Bundle just got a whole lot bundlier. The Humble Introversion Bundle now comes with Dungeons of Dredmor for those who pay above the average, as well as six additional indie games.