Home / Software & Gaming / New Humble Bundle with Android arrives

New Humble Bundle with Android arrives

Chances are you haven't finished playing even half the games that Humble Bundle has put out in recent months, but it's time for another bundle, this time with Android support – get your smartphones ready. It comes complete with Aquaria, Fractal, Organ Trail: Director's Cut, Stealth Bastard Deluxe and Pulse, using the pay-what-you-want model.

Of course as usual, if you pay above the average, (thereby raising the average, clever system ey?) you'll also unlock Frozen Synapse and the director's cut of Broken Sword too. Each of the games comes complete with a downloadable soundtrack and as usual, a portion of all purchases go to the two charities, Child's Play and the Electronic Frontier Foundation. [yframe url='http://www.youtube.com/watch?fv=T9uYrY2DqzE']

The video above features all the usual impressions of Arnie, Ted Theodore Logan and Mr Connery himself.

At the time of writing, there's been around 80,000 purchases, with the average price at just $4.66. It's not much, but it's already racked up nearly $400,000. Expect that number to increase dramatically in the next few days.

Kitguru Says: As usual, Windows users are lagging behind our Mac and Linux cousins in average purchase price. Come on guys, represent. 

Become a Patron!

Check Also

DLSS 5 NVIDIA

KitGuru Games: DLSS 5 misses the point

It would be hard to argue that NVIDIA’s DLSS technologies haven’t been a net positive to the PC space, with the machine-learning based upscaler successfully translating lower resolution inputs into a final image which is perceivably sharper while hogging fewer resources. Though somewhat more contentious, the next evolution of DLSS came in the form of Frame Generation, using ML in order to generate additional frames for high-refresh rate gaming. Both techniques can have their issues, but generally speaking they’ve allowed for more people to experience higher-end titles at increased frame rates. DLSS 5, however, takes a sharp pivot, with a very different end goal in mind than the performance-boosting versions that came before.