// PC GAMER — GAMING
Steam Week in Review: Steam sales are the best time to hoard dozens of forgotten '90s PC gaming oddities
All the interesting Steam facts for the week ending June 28.
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Even if building a gaming PC is prohibitively expensive for most people in 2026, software continues to be cheap and abundant. Valve launched its Steam Summer sale last week and all the normal things happened: Red Dead Redemption 2 got a 75% discount for the 14th time since January 2025. The Witcher 3 got its fifth 95% discount since July 2024 (though it's been discounted 15 other times since then, at slightly lower percentages). After eight 65% discounts since June 2025, Cyberpunk 2077 finally got a new record (75% off).
Big publisher games—especially from the likes of Ubisoft, Sega, Sony, 2K and Bethesda—obviously dominate the front page, with major indie mainstays like Terraria, Satisfactory and Dead Cells sharing some of the limelight. Nowadays it's rare to be surprised by an especially steep discount during a seasonal sale: publishers normally increase the discount percentage incrementally as a game gets longer in the tooth. If you've got a wishlist, you probably gravitate towards browsing that.
Rather than splashing out on games that might be conventionally fun to play, this sale has prompted me to spend most of Sunday afternoon browsing Steam's ever-surprising abundance of '90s PC gaming obscurities. It's an especially deep, fascinating and occasionally troubling rabbit hole. I'm talking about real forgotten obscurities like—to pull an example randomly out of the air—this Accolade-published 1994 FMV motorbike racer.
For every carefully updated Nightdive Studios reissue like I Have No Mouth And I Must Scream, or D: The Game there's something like the straight-to-DOSBox Wolfenstein engine obscurity Operation Body Count, which had the great misfortune of releasing a year after Doom. I wouldn't recommend playing it necessarily, but for $2.44 it's fascinating as an insight into how devs were pushing that engine at the tail end of its relevance.
Or what about Interphase, a still-unique 1989 cyberpunk adventure puzzler whose better version was on Amiga? Or Corpse Killer, a 1995 FMV rail shooter with straight-to-VHS presentation, by the guy who directed Child's Play 2? Keeping to the FMV theme, what about The Dame Was Loaded, a 1996 Australia-made detective noir point 'n' clicker with laughable accents? How could you possibly resist?
You don't even need to buy these games: sometimes watching the trailer, looking at the screenshots, and then Googling other material—videos, contemporary reviews, forum threads—is enough. I wouldn't necessarily advise you to go and finish the whole Realms of Arkania trilogy (though please feel welcome), but loading Blade of Destiny and simply beholding its gorgeously ornate pixel art immediately evokes the fragrance of the '90s (the chemical smell of magazine paper, in particular).
Like Red Dead Redemption 2 and Cyberpunk 2077, these are all discounted as part of the Steam Summer Sale. For a good entry point to Steam's collection of forgotten oldies, this Retro Games curator page is worth a browse.
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