Steam Summer Sale: Hidden Gem/ Recommendations thread

Hey all. Always enjoyed reading everyone's suggestions on more unknown games available during big steam sales.

I'll start off with one that I have been a fan of for a long time: Death Road to Canada

This game is like a zombie action Oregon Trail like game, where you manage supplies and fight through hordes of zombies on your way to the safe haven of Canada. Only US$3.74 right now and well worth it imo!

Pixelologist, (edited )

I feel obligated to recommend a Steam Deck if you have interest in one and can afford it.

We have 2 and I would get a 3rd if I could lol (with a bulky protective case etc. so I can be less careful)

The most cost efficient way to go is buy the cheapest version and then put something like this in it https://www.westerndigital.com/en-il/products/internal-drives/pc-sn740-ssd#SDDPTQD-256G

IMPORTANT NOTE: MAKE SURE YOU GET A 2230 SIZED NVME DRIVE. 2280 drives will NOT fit.

If you don't want to do that you can alternatively just get a big micro SD card and save the SSD swap for laterFor best speeds you want it to say A2 and have a 3 inside a U.

https://beehaw.org/pictrs/image/f2cb13bb-b604-4f2b-b3ef-ca92bbb1c1dc.png

Even besides playing video games it's an awesome little mini pc. Not perfect but awesome, and an amazing value at $359.

dom,

Is there a most cost effective choice for ssd that’s “known” (or was that the one you linked)

Or is it just get the cheapest 2230 you can find

sandmesomesand,

I did a lot of searching myself like 2 weeks ago because I had to swap out both mine and my partner's and AFAIK, the standard 1TB price for trustworthy 2230's are about 100 bucks unfortunately. If you still want a recommendation, this is what I bought

Catch42,
Catch42 avatar

You can swap the ssd! Why are they charging so much to upgrade to only 256gb of Nvme storage?

Pixelologist,

Probably because they're losing money on the cheapest one

BadlyDrawnRhino,

Because you still need to take the device apart to replace the drive. They’ve always been transparent about the fact that the SSD is easy to swap, but there are options available for people who want more storage who don’t want to or don’t feel comfortable about taking it apart.

Bumblefumble,

Wait does the 64GB option support M.2 NVMe? I thought it only supports eMMC and that you can't swap with a different NVMe drive, but maybe I'm wrong?

RaleighEnt,

as someone with a 64gb deck with a 512gb drive swapped in I can confirm it works!

Pixelologist,

That's a good question but no, it will work. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sSWb6jFlDk4

Yoreo,

The 64GB emmc drive in the Deck uses the m.2 expansion slot, so you can pop out the emmc drive and swap in a 2230 form factor nvme drive and be gtg after reinstalling SteamOS.

I myself went from a 256GB drive to a 1TB drive, and this weekend, I'll be popping in a 2TB drive I just received in the mail.

conciselyverbose,

It would cost more to lock out the capability than not.

Everything but the storage drive, the screen, and the case is identical between the three units.

Hellebert, (edited )

Yo Valve can you please sell them where I live already so that I don't have to pay some shitty eBay scalper or overpriced reshipper?

Pixelologist,

Do you know how much it would cost to cost to ship from the US?

Hellebert,

Looking at Shipitto it's about $65 for the cheapest option currently.

Last time I checked they were all over $100.

Xathonn,
Xathonn avatar

I had heard that swapping the ssd yourself voids warranty, is that true? Or is it only if you swap more stuff

Pixelologist, (edited )

No that is not true. Also even if you drop it they have a repair center you can ship to that charges fair prices. They have a very positive reputation about this kind of thing (also RMAs, which I went through personally)

conciselyverbose,

In the US, that's illegal (Magnuson Moss warranty act). In a lot of the rest of the first world, there are similar laws. But regardless, Valve hasn't shown any of the patterns some do of ignoring the law and forcing you to jump through hoops to exercise your rights, and there were a decent number of stories on Reddit of them fixing clear customer damage under warranty.

BobVersionFour,

You could also buy the 64g and get a sd card that what i did no slowing with any game and enough space for 4-5 big game or a lot of small one but i never have more than 2-3 games installed anyway otherwise i just game jump and never finish any l

Pixelologist,

To add context for people viewing, putting games on a fast micro sd card (A2, 3 in a U) has negligible performance losses compared to putting the game on an internal drive. I was skeptical at first, but other than slightly longer times loading SD cards work beautifully for steamdeck games

BobVersionFour,

thanks for adding context ! For added bonus you can use multiple micro sd so you don't have to download and install games each time just swap the card and ready to go.

HumbleFlamingo,

It's not super niche, or super on sale, but I'm really enjoying Chained Echos so far.

MadSciencePro,
MadSciencePro avatar

Hot take: Chained Echoes is a much better game than Octopath Traveler 2.

corytheboyd,
corytheboyd avatar

They’re pretty different vibes tbh. I liked both. I finished Chained Echoes, and gave up on Octopath after putting it down for a few weeks and just never getting back into it.

Chained Echoes is great, but not perfect. Some of the mechanics felt a little broken or not well polished. The difficulty was a little too insane, I had to drop it down to actually enjoy them game. But the story is there, the characters are there, and it’s cohesive and interesting and new and familiar all at the same time.

phosphorik,

Man, Octopath Traveler was such a letdown. The total lack of character interactions with other character’s stories made protagonist selection feel pointless and the story felt even more shallow than it was. Just… so meh. I couldn’t talk myself into picking up the second one.

Thaolin,
Thaolin avatar

I feel this. It felt kind of half thought out. Was so disappointed.

Glide,

Tbh, the worst part was that the advertising for 2 really seemed to suggest they’d heard that complaint about 1 and fixed it. The put so much emphasis on the Cross Paths feature. And then you get the game and discover that it is actually just 4 quests for 4 sets of 2 travelers.

I really expected genuine interaction. Character to be present in cutscenes and have minor comments on what’s occuring. You know, stuff the story can technically progress without, but really flesh out the world and the characters. Bosses acting like they’ve caught out a single character only to initiate a fight against my party of 4 just feels weird as hell.

Chariotwheel,

Yeah, maybe 8 characters is too many. but now they can't go back and rename it to Quadropath travellers.

vanquesse,
vanquesse avatar

They could do a 3 franchise mashup and name it "Bravely Quad Strategy"

Whirlgirl9,
Whirlgirl9 avatar

just grabbed god of war, disco elysium, and hellblade senuas sacrifice...

as far as recommendations go, Mass Effect legendary edition and dragon age are very enjoyable if you like RPG with a focus on lore, story and characters. Red Dead Redemption 2 is a wonder and a steal at $20. Witcher 3 for $12. Horizon Zero Dawn for $16.50

iAmTheTot,
iAmTheTot avatar

Hellblade must be played with headphones. Great game.

Entropywins,
Entropywins avatar

Scary game!!! For me personally it give me the heebee jeebees in all the best ways

Hyacathusarullistad,
Hyacathusarullistad avatar

I'll also recommend Mass Effect LE, Witcher 3, and Horizon Zero Dawn. They're all incredibly cheap at the moment, and they're all phenomenal games.

Hyperreality, (edited )

Red dead 2 is available for less elsewhere.

IRC Witcher 3 is available for the same price on GOG, DRM free. Same goes for Disco Elysium.

TLDR: do your research. Other stores do offers during the steam summer sale

circuitfarmer,
@circuitfarmer@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

No Linux client = no having me as client

eu,

I love GOG and their anti-DRM stance but I just can't bring myself to buy games there when they don't even have a native Linux launcher. Steam, on the other hand, just works.

hypelightfly,

When the game is available on both platforms the Steam version is frequently (not always) DRM free as well. In this case both Disco Elysium and The Witcher 3 are DRM free on Steam.

https://steam.fandom.com/wiki/List_of_DRM-free_games

Zorque,

So many hidden gems.

ANuStart,

This comment made me sharply exhale cocaine chunks

ColonelSanders,
ColonelSanders avatar

I suppose it depends on what a person considers a hidden gem because everyone's tastes are different. I'll list a few categories and at least 1-2 of my favorites in those categories that I've found on Steam and are currently on sale:

Exploration/Base-Building:

  • Grounded
  • Raft
  • Rimworld
  • Subnautica/Subnautica: Below Zero

Story based/Farming/Romance:

  • My Time at Portia*
  • My Time at Sandrock

Visual Novels:

  • Basically anything made by PixelFade (Ace Academy, Ethereal Enigma, Crystalline). One of the few English-based VNs that are fully voiced in English and have a pretty decent plot/story. Interactive with different choices affecting different outcomes and even some minigames at least in EE.
  • Nekop-er, Hush Hush. Ok, listen. I'll admit there IS an 18+ DLC for this but it's not necessary to enjoy the game. It honestly has a pretty interesting story/premise and I did get pretty heavily emotionally invested in the characters.

*Note that MTAP has been fraught with issues. Although these issues don't necessarily make the game unplayable, and it's still enjoyable, be aware that it is was Pathea's (the studio) first such attempt and as such they were still learning. Their second game Sandrock has solved a lot of the issues and it's not necessary to play the first one

AmberPrince,
AmberPrince avatar

Oh I love Subnautica! Best Horror game I've played in a long time.

eldrichhydralisk,

Donut County is only $3.89. It’s a short, funny, cute puzzle game where you make everything fall in a hole. Really good.

Digimon Story Cyber Sleuth is $12.49 and a much better 80hr RPG then it has any right to be. And I never even touched the second game in the collection!

LegendofDragoon,
LegendofDragoon avatar

Hackers memory is better than cyber sleuth in just about every conceivable way in my opinion, definitely worth the try.

Matthias720,
Matthias720 avatar

I believe that the Steam version comes with both Cyber Sleuth and Hacker's Memory, or at least the version I have does.

iAmTheTot,
iAmTheTot avatar

Donut County was so quirky and fun.

oblast,

APICO, a nice little beekeeping simulator with bee-breeding mechanics and building.

Ages of Conflict: World War Simulator, an incredibly cheap God-game/nation simulator. Not comparable to WorldBox, though. Just a little game for making nations fight and painting maps

nxtequal,

A Hat in Time: 50% off at £12. A really cute 3D platformer.

Wobbledogs: 40% off at £10. Looks and plays like a pet simulator but is almost more about genetics and seeing what kind of bizarre "dogs" you can create.

Let's Build a Zoo: 45% £9. I've seen this described as similar to a Bullfrog game (think Theme Hospital) and that's good way to put it. It's a zoo simulator, but full of silly humour and things you can do, like butcher your animals for meat. A big feature of the game is breeding, including crossbreeding animals to create hybrids like a snake/pig monster.

Sherlock Holmes vs Jack the Ripper: 80% at £2. It's an old game and the dating shows, and nor is it a brilliant masterpiece of writing (it's Sherlock investigating Jack the Ripper after all) but it does scratch the detective game itch. It's fun to explore London as it was in Sherlock's day, and it does provide its own theory as to who Jack the Ripper was, as well as laying out the events in a way that are much easier to follow than reading a book. I'd recommend it for true crime and mystery fans and I look forward to the other games in the series.

My picks for some (actually) hidden gems :)

Vodulas,

It is not hugely discounted, but Dave the Diver has been fantastic. Exploration with chill music mixed with running a sushi restaurant

Drusas,

That looks like a good one, thanks for sharing. But at only 10% off and still $18, I'll just add it to my wishlist for now.

kosure,
kosure avatar

Fair dues. But I want to point out that it's more than the sum of it's parts. There are tons of mechanics, and they're all engaging in and of themselves. But the balance and the complementary gameplay loops make the game punch above it's weight.

JustEnoughDucks,
@JustEnoughDucks@feddit.nl avatar

I’m going to come in with some actual more hidden gems:

natori,

Dorfromantik is a lot of fun, strong carcasonne vibes. Makes for a very pleasant "I just need to relax for a while" kind of game.

Onihikage,
@Onihikage@beehaw.org avatar

I'll just go through my library and pick out the ones that I don't think are very well-known or might have been missed by anyone who got into gaming more recently.

Demon Truck is a devilishly arcadey game, and at 90% off it is fifty cents so you are legally required to buy it right now. Once you play it for a few minutes, you'll want the BANGER soundtrack too, which was done by Zircon, costs $3, and is worth every penny. Here's a sample on YouTube if Bandcamp doesn't work for you. Game is a 40 megabyte download. What are you waiting for?

Approaching Infinity - What if No Man's Sky was a turn-based roguelike with retro tile-based sprite graphics? If that appeals to you, give it a look. The developer also has a more fantasy-oriented game called The Curse of Yendor.

Devil Daggers is worth trying if you enjoy fiendishly hard FPS games with pixel graphics.

Bots Are Stupid - it's a tight platformer where you control the character by writing a script to control its actions down to the individual frame if necessary. It has a level creator as well. If you've ever seen tool-assisted speedruns (TAS), this game is basically creating a TAS for something like Super Meat Boy.

If you have PCVR, give Ancient Dungeon a look. It's early access, but it already has that particular spark that tends to (and did) hook me, and it does a number of things phenomenally well, such as knife-throwing. In lists of top VR games, however, I rarely see it get a mention.

Distance is a racing game with where your car can jump, do flips, fly, stick to walls or the ceiling, and potentially get cut in half by the road hazards. It's by the same developers and is the successor to the equally fun and completely free Nitronic Rush.

It's not on sale, but at $5, Noitu Love 2: Devolution doesn't need a sale to be well-worth the price.

Lastly, Timespinner is a pixel-art metroidvania with time travel. I thought it was pretty fun.

stopthatgirl7,
stopthatgirl7 avatar

Norco! It’s this post-apocalyptic Southern gothic point and click game. I downloaded the demo and got hooked.

anji,

+1. Super cool game. Best point and click adventure I've played in a long long time. Perfectly creepy too.

Unebrion,

I did a video of some games I don't think should be missed. If you've got 10 minutes free check it out.
https://youtu.be/0ewJUbcF08I

comicallycluttered, (edited )

Huh. Didn't realize it started today. Will have to check my wishlist.

Anyway, recs in no particular order:

  • Kena: Bridge of Spirits is a lovely little game. Some great East Asian influences, and a really great art style. Combat is sometimes surprisingly difficult. Some fun puzzles and platforming make up a lot of the game.
  • Death and Taxes is a short and darkly humorous game where you take on the role of the Grim Reaper and decide who lives and who dies in an workplace-like fashion. If you're a fan of the web series, Purgatony, this might remind you of that. It's got a touch of satire to it as well, but not super pronounced. Mostly in the details and consequences of who you let live and who you let die.
  • Heaven's Vault is a narrative game that takes place in space. Linguistics (or rather translating text) plays a role in the game and it's got a hand drawn, cel-shaded kind of art style.
  • A Story About My Uncle is a first person, narrative driven, and entirely nonviolent game, with a bunch of cool swingy mechanics (so lots of gameplay, just not shooty bang stuff) and a fairly sweet story. You meet all sorts of fantastic, alien creatures on your adventure, platforming through a strange and beautiful world. Art direction is lovely, honestly.
  • ABZÛ is just straight up awesome relaxation (with a few less relaxing points every so often) from some of the devs who brought you Journey and Flower. This time, it's all about diving and swimming through fascinating locations that vary from colorful reefs to areas reminiscent of long forgotten temple ruins (the name comes from the Sumerian and Akkadian word referring to underground aquifers that played an important part in some Babylonian mythology).
  • Quantum Conundrum - Do you like Portal but wish it had a little John DeLancie commenting on your actions? Then this is for you! A fun puzzle game heavily inspired by Portal (the lead dev worked on the original Portal, if I recall). It's aimed at a slightly younger audience, but I think it works for everyone. Good vibes all around.
  • Jade Empire is another great East Asian-influenced RPG developed by BioWare back in the day. It's basically KOTOR, but with real time combat heavily inspired by various martial arts and the odd bit of mythology here and there. If you like movies like Crouching Tiger, you may enjoy this. Actually, if you enjoy RPGs in general, you might like this.
  • Blacktail is a game I haven't finished yet, but it's an interesting retelling of the old Baba Yaga myths and tales. Main character is voiced by the same actress who voiced Meg in Hades. A lovely, husky voice if ever there was one.

These next few are very hit or miss and some may find them either unpolished or just not that enjoyable. I'm listing them because they've got either an interesting story, or interesting mechanics. You'll notice that two have a "mixed" rating, so this is more about "if you like the idea, maybe try it".

  • The Vale: Shadow of the Crown is a narrative game that puts you in the shoes of a blind princess. It was made to be a game that blind people can enjoy, and the controls and mechanics are fairly basic (and it's keyboard only as far as I remember, but there might be controller support, I don't know), but the audio design is fantastic (for obvious reasons). There's some very basic combat, and it's all about timing and listening for cues. I honestly think it's a fantastic game, but it's not for everyone. Good news is that it has a demo! Try it out first. Also, WEAR HEADPHONES. It's actually a necessity here. Binaural recording and object placement is entirely dependent on your ability to hear things (since you can't see anything, though it's got some pleasant screensaver-type visuals which do fit the theme of the area you're in).
  • eXperience112 is a bit of a weird game. It's kind of a point and click adventure, but you don't control the main character. It takes place on an ocean vessel where something's gone wrong. You essentially play a camera operator and what seems to be the only survivor speaks to you directly so you can point her in the right direction. Also, she remembers when you last saved. If you don't play for a while, she'll comment on the fact that you left her alone for a while. It's buggy and got some jank, but it's got some interesting ideas.
  • Republique is pretty similar to the above game in that you take the role of a camera operator helping out the main character by being her eyes. Instead of it being more of an adventure game, it leans heavily into stealth and takes place in a dystopian cyberpunk type setting. Also, it's FREE, which I only just discovered. Apparently they just straight up made it free last year, so no need to worry about wasting your money if you don't like it. And no need to rush before it goes off sale either.
  • The Occupation is kind of the middle ground between a walking sim and immersive sim, which sounds like a weird description. It has narrative and some gameplay elements that you'd find in immersive sims (open-ish levels, multiple characters to speak to and ways to complete a level, some stealth, etc.), and every level takes place in real time, which is important because you'll have scheduled appointments for interviews and you'll be gathering evidence before that time is up, so you'll be looking at your in-game watch often. That watch is the reason I find it gets into walking sim territory, because you're kind of restricted by it and it sometimes makes things feel a little "on-rails". The whole thing takes place after some terrorist event killed someone close to the main character, set in a kind of dystopian London, but with a very '70s/'80s vibe in aesthetics. It has a demo, so try that first. If you don't like it at all, you won't like the game. If you find it intriguing, later levels get more intense, so you might be interested in buying the full game. If you like the demo, then yeah, maybe buy it. It's not too long to complete.
  • (Note: I initially had this up in the regular recommendations, but thinking it over, this is pretty hit or miss for various reasons.) Not a hidden gem exactly, but if you like space, No Man's Sky isn't the disappointing game it was on release. I'd urge anyone who likes space and exploration to at least give it a shot. You can turn on creative mode and not worry about any survival elements as well. It's got a bit of a plot to get you used to the galaxy (and also explain some of the lore), but you can just do whatever you want and ignore that. There are three major alien races and you can learn words from their language by interacting with them or interacting with pillars on various planets that will teach you a word. I like this part of the game a lot for some reason. There's some other lore hidden around as well, but it's really up to you if you want to discover it or not. The reason I'm putting it down here instead of with the others at the top is that they've actually added so much content that it may be a bit overwhelming. I'd focus on a few aspects you like and ignore the rest if you do end up playing it.

Most of the games I listed aren't too long or time-consuming. The only significant exceptions are Kena, Jade Empire, and No Man's Sky. The rest can be generally completed in a few hours or a couple of days. Kena isn't super long either, but it does require a bit more of a commitment than the others.

Edit: I somehow managed to accidentally delete this comment and wasn't quick enough to restore it in its original form, but managed to have most of it all in my clipboard, thankfully.

Should mostly be fixed.

rjh,

I loved Heaven's Vault, it hit all the things I love: detective/mystery novel, rich dialogue trees, languages. The only problem is when it's over there aren't any other games like it.

hotchurkey,

+1 for Heaven’s Vault. Really excellent indie gem, and a fun spin on the detective game.

sodiumbromley,
@sodiumbromley@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

I feel like over time No Man's Sky feels increasingly like I have too many mods installed. Every update felt like it had its own hub and NPCs and progress track that didn't interact with any of the others. The game is still huge and it has turned into the game everyone was disappointed it wasn't at launch, but I felt overwhelmed on which things were part of the core story I needed to complete and which parts were rabbit holes that wouldn't connect to that.

natori,

Yeah. I think the issue in NMS is that they keep adding new systems (good) that do the same things as other systems (hmm) and can't interface with those systems (bad). Like, why is town building not at all like base building? Why does base building have its own rudimentary town building part, but it kinda just stops? Why do they have beautifully realized frigates in space, and crashed frigates ont he ground, but no relationship between the two?

I really want to love it, it contains essentially everything I like in a game, but it just constantly falls short on depth each time. I'm due to go back and sink another few hours into it but I also feel pretty confident that I'll finish off again feeling the ache of missed opportunity.

All that, and also I just think the writing in the game is phenomenally bland. It's not bad at all, it just never captures my interest in the slightest. I'd love to get my hands on the basic framework of the story and totally rewrite it.

comicallycluttered,

Oh, shit. I forgot about settlements. That whole mechanic suuuuuuucks to me. I had to just ignore it.

And yeah, plot's paper thin. Mainly there to just edge you in the right direction with learning mechanics and whatnot, but I still find some of it interesting, mostly in theory. Maybe because I just fill in the gaps with my own headcanon, I guess.

Not that there's much canon to be had, but there is at least some lore to be discovered relating to how certain races came to be and the whole Atlas and "Traveler" concept essentially being the quick explanation for why literally everyone's experience is "canon".

Still, do agree for the most part. Also, I must admit that my recommendation was based on my time with it a few updates ago. Played it recently and there's definitely a lot more, some interesting, some "too much" (like settlements).

Might move it down into my "maybe" category because it probably fits better there.

minishoemaze,
@minishoemaze@beehaw.org avatar

Hidden Gem you say? (obligatory)

chloyster,

Figured I'd get one of these lol

vanquesse,
vanquesse avatar

There's bound to be a few uncracked eggs out there about to feel some strange emotions over a little indie platformer.

dmegatool,
@dmegatool@lemmy.ca avatar

Playing D-sides right now (Reflections). What a fucking game…

somefool,
@somefool@beehaw.org avatar

I fell in love with Submerged when I played it. It's an exploration game set in a flooded city, where you play a young girl looking for supplies for her injured brother. Lots of navigating between buildings in a little boat, climbing around, and taking in the scenery. Incredibly relaxing to play.

nlm,
@nlm@beehaw.org avatar

Those games has been on my radar for a while! Have you played both of them?

somefool,
@somefool@beehaw.org avatar

Not yet! I just grabbed the second one, actually, can't wait to play it!

nlm,
@nlm@beehaw.org avatar

I've heard it's even better than the first!

PositiveNoise,
PositiveNoise avatar

90% off! I just bought it for 3$. Should be quite a nice little game for the price

Xeelee,
Xeelee avatar

It was €2 here. Guess i can fit that into the budget

blanketswithsmallpox,
blanketswithsmallpox avatar

An actual proper summer sale price too. Only $2. Thanks for the recommend!

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • gaming@beehaw.org
  • PowerRangers
  • DreamBathrooms
  • tacticalgear
  • magazineikmin
  • vwfavf
  • Youngstown
  • ngwrru68w68
  • ethstaker
  • slotface
  • rosin
  • mdbf
  • thenastyranch
  • kavyap
  • modclub
  • provamag3
  • Durango
  • cubers
  • osvaldo12
  • GTA5RPClips
  • everett
  • khanakhh
  • InstantRegret
  • Leos
  • tester
  • normalnudes
  • cisconetworking
  • anitta
  • megavids
  • All magazines