
Wait, what? 45 hours?!? This game sucked me in extremely fast. In either case, the offer expires on March 6.I write this review 45 hours later. The two-for-one offer isn't available on Steam, but as I say, buying via Humble gets you Steam codes for both games anyway, or alternatively you can go DRM-free with the ever-so-slightly pricier GOG edition. Two for the price of one is a brilliant deal for two of the best PC games of the past decade - if you've never dabbled in either before, both have my full-throated endorsement.


So was FTL (also one of the best space games on PC, for our money), in its own way, though its random cruel events and manic real-time combat can make it a significantly more demanding and less fair game. It is, I think I can say, a masterpiece of design elegance. Alternatively, it's a puzzle game with mechs and aliens. Into The Breach tears away all the flab and downtime of strategy games while retaining all of - and even amplifying - the tactical tension, as well as applying a ludicrously appealing time-travelling robo-tanks vs Godzilla-sized bugs theme to it. In my Into The Breach review yesterday, I declared that I can think of no reason why I would even consider uninstalling this remarkable wee thing any time soon, and I promise you that I am not completely mad. The offer for this double-whammy of Subset Games gold only runs until March 6, so try not to spend too much time deliberating about it. got all hot'n'bothered about Into The Breach's ultra-deft, ultra-lean apocalyptic turn-based strategy without ever having played its brutal star-trekking predecessor FTL, good news! If you buy Into The Breach via Humble or GOG (and the former delivers you a Steam key, FYI), you'll get a free copy of FTL. However, if you've managed to come to this backwards, i.e.

This is perhaps a slightly perverse offer, seeing as so many folks who have been jonesing for Into The Breach have the jitters and the sweats specifically because it's the follow-up to the revered FTL.
