If you were eyeing up last month's array of Humble Choice picks to grab for yourself and expand your games library on the cheap, then now is the last chance saloon as June has ended and July has begun - to be specific, you've got until July 7th to claim these games before this bundle is gone.

This month's picks include a vast array of titles whose value far exceeds the princely £11.49/$14.99 monthly price tag for the Humble Choice subscription, and it's quite the strong selection of games, too, including games we particularly like across a wide range of genres, such as RPG, simulation and real-time strategy.

Humble Choice Bundle - June 2026

£11.49 / $14.99 per month

See at Humble

At a glance, here are the games included in this month's bundle:

  • Octopath Traveler 2 (Steam)
  • The Riftbreaker (Steam)
  • Life is Strange: Double Exposure (Steam)
  • INDIKA (Steam)
  • Citizen Sleeper 2: Starward Vector (Steam)
  • Construction Simulator (Steam)
  • Hell Clock (Steam)
  • Overlooting (Steam)

And now for a little more detail - Octopath Traveler 2 first released back in February 2023, and during a May 2023 'What We've Been Playing' column, former Deputy News Editor Ed Nightingale remarked about the game's lovely art style to the point he couldn't stop taking screenshots, plus the game's "incredibly satisfying turn-based combat system" and the fact it's a "brilliant RPG underneath the presentation". He concludes that "For anyone lamenting the lack of traditional combat in Final Fantasy 16, I can wholeheartedly recommend Octopath Traveler 2 as a link to the past. Just make sure you've got memory space for all those screenshots." That's quite high praise.

Moving over to The Riftbreaker, this launched in October 2021, and while we didn't give it a full review, Bertie was full of praise in an early preview he played in June 2020. His top line thought was that it's essentially "StarCraft, They Are Billions and Diablo" all rolled into one, working out to be a fun "real-time strategy game with a dollop of action-RPG on top". His final takeaway was that: "It's in these ways Riftbreaker keeps you on the move. It wants you hopping between bases and it wants you out roaming. It wants action. It's not a game about being shy and reserved. You don't have time before the enemy horde comes. This is how it keeps the tension and excitement up, and it's that, hand in hand with the beautiful way it's put together, which makes Riftbreaker a joy to play."

Life is Strange: Double Exposure is perhaps one of the bigger releases in this bundle, although it only got a three-star review from former Editor in Chief Tom in October 2024. His review was fair and balanced, praising the second half of the game specifically, with it having more replayability to go back over key moments. He also called it a "real joy to checking back in on Max all these years later, to feel and hear the similarity in the character - but also see the natural changes in her as she's grown in the interim.", even if it's debatable as to whether a sequel should have been made in the first place.

Matt's 4/5 star review of Indika in May 2024 was stronger, where he described this third-person adventure title as a "an astonishingly confident experience, so full of swagger and style, so fearless in its presentation and thematic reach", praising some of its clever world design and storytelling, although he did feel some of the game's puzzle elements were a little too safe and predictable at times.

Our first five-star title is Citizen Sleeper 2 that first released in January 2025. In Bertie's review, his top-line thought is that has "improved the RPG formula in every way". In particular, he's very complimentary about the game's clever writing, its brand new and innovative mechanics against the first Citizen Sleeper title and the simple fact it lets you know failure is an option - as he says, "knowing you can fail does a tremendously powerful thing: it grips you, pulls you forward, and makes you pay close attention to what you're doing". While there are some very small gripes mentioned at the end of the review, he notes that he is "really splitting hairs" and calls Citizen Sleeper 2 "terrific". Seems like it's worth the price of admission alone.

Construction Simulator shifts gear entirely, and sees you take on the job of moving around licenced heavy machinery to build all manner of things on quite a hefty scale if you're into that kind of thing. Meanwhile, Hell Clock is a hack-and-slash ARPG set in the aftermath of the War of Canudos in Brazil in 1896, bringing fast-paced combat and roguelike elements to make for quite an enticing title it seems. Overlooting is the final game of the bundle, bringing an inventory management roguelite RPG to round off things nicely.

As a reminder, Humble Choice members get the added perk of up to 20% off in the Humble store, too. On top of that, 5% of your Humble Choice membership goes to support a charity each month, and June's is It Gets Better.

I think that's all there really is to say on this rather varied and rich Humble Choice bundle for June 2026 - if you've been eyeing up, then the £11.49/$14.99 monthly price tag seems worth it - just remember you've only got until July 7th to grab it.