
Maximum PC: The infamous Humble Bundle is proof positive that not all gamers are cheapskates. You know the drill -- you donate $1 or more and, as a reward, you receive a collection of titles. Many people choose to donate more than a buck, and there are incentives for doing so, but if you're strapped for cash, nobody's going to give you the stink-eye for what amounts to legal robbery. This week's Humble Bundle features "epic THQ games."

Humble Bundle has recently amended its terms of service and it's not looking good for those games you purchased three years ago.

A friendly reminder that you don't own anything on Steam.
Makes sense as everyone knows the game was just released and was meant to be full price. Not necessary but it would have been nice to offer those people a 10-15% discount on the purchase of the game.
If GameStop accidentally marked a new release as a 25 cent game and I bought it, I'd get to keep it.
Keys should not be revocable especially if they've been redeemed. If Humble messed up, they should have to pay for the keys. That seems like common sense for incompetency. Otherwise they can theoretically just keep doing it to profit from the free advertising around major game releases.
Rare L from Valve here.
But the torrent has been up and with the latest update, so yes you can own it and post the link to the game on Steams twitter account, telling them who owns what now? 😂 https://files.mastodon.soci...

Humble Bundle is joining in with the Black Friday festivities, offering up 17 Disney games for around $10 - now available for a limited time.