Was Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League that bad? Apparently so, if Amazon is giving it away for free next week, just six months after launch. Stuff’s gamers, fortunately, didn’t subject themselves to Rocksteady Studio’s dumpster fire of a live-service title that spits on the ashes of its Arkhamverse ancestors. But even we won’t pretend we’re above adding it to our accounts when it goes free from 16 July 2024.
You won’t want to miss this
Amazon isn’t just giving away a free copy of Suicide Squad (thank goodness). It’s also handing out codes for Chivalry II and Rise of the Tomb Raider – both of which stand a far better shot of ever being opened on our PCs. Of course, not just anyone can claim these games on 16 and 17 July. You’ll need to be a Prime subscriber (if your country supports that) or a Prime Video member for South Africans looking to claim some free games.
Before you can begin claiming, you’ll need an R80/m Prime Video subscription, after which you’ll be permitted to enter the Prime Gaming website. When the time comes – 12AM PST or 9AM SAST – on 16 July, head over to the site, find the ‘free games’ tab and click on the games you want (i.e. all of them). Then head over to the Epic Games Store, shove the code into the ‘Redeem Code’ section and voila! Three free games.
Read More: Amazon is giving away 15 free PC games to Prime Video subscribers
Be warned. You’ll only have two days to whack those codes into the Epic Games Store before the promotion ends, so don’t be faffing about. It’ll all be worth it in the end, considering that these titles will remain in your library forever, even after the Prime Video membership linked to them has lapsed. Well worth the R80, in our opinion.
The promotion follows on from Amazon’s last big PC gaming giveaway, which saw the company dolling out 15 free games to Prime Video subscribers in the build-up to Prime Day sales taking place elsewhere. You might be too late to pick up Hitman: Absolution, but stick around and Shredder’s Revenge as well as Knights of the Old Republic II will become free for Prime Video subscribers later today.