March's Humble Choice Helps Education for Girls and Gives You Access to BIOMUTANT and More

Humble recently launched the new games available to Humble Choice (affiliate link) members in the month of March. The list includes Jurassic World Evolution 2 and Biomutant among others. Choice members also get access to the Humble Games Collection, access to the Vault in the Humble app for PC, and up to 20% off in the Humble Store. In addition, for the month of March, 5% of Choice membership will support Malala Fund which “champions every girl’s right to 12 years of free, safe, quality education by investing in education advocates and activists who are challenging the policies and practices that prevent girls from going to school in their communities.” What are you pumped to play?

  • Biomutant

    • Set out on a journey into a fantastical post-apocalyptic world on the brink of a terrifying new apocalypse in Biomutant, a science-fiction fairy tale that blends imaginative open-world exploration and flexible combat with a bit of Watership Down and nature documentary from an adjacent universe. Customize your own mutant forest creature, then evolve your abilities as you survive and search for a way to save the Tree of Life in a beautiful but bio-contaminated wilderness. Check it out when you’re on a quest for a world to get lost in.

  • Jurassic World Evolution 2

    • Build and manage the dinosaur park you’ve been dreaming of since you first saw Jurassic Park in the acclaimed sim sequel from the creators of Planet Zoo, Planet Coaster, and Elite Dangerous. Jurassic World Evolution 2 has modes for whatever you’re in the mood for: a story campaign that takes you through capturing and keeping dinos (and dealing with the inevitable disaster); a “what if?”-style Chaos Theory mode; a Challenge mode for park managers who want to test their limits; and a Sandbox mode for when you just want to chase that dino dream.

  • Demon Turf

    • There’s an apocalyptic turf war raging in the Demon World—and there’s no time like the present to turn chaos into opportunity and claim the ultimate throne for your own. In this colorful indie platformer that mashes up stylish 2D illustrations with 3D exploration, you play the role of Beebz, a millennium-old demon (that’s young in infernal years) on a quest to depose the Demon King himself. If you’re looking for a personality-filled platformer with lots of creative goals to pursue, challenge Demon Turf to a duel.

  • Hero’s Hour

    • Take an auto-battler, a strategy RPG, minimalistic pixel graphics, a town-builder, real-time battles, and throw them in a blender, and you’ll get Hero’s Hour. Explore the world and develop your town to churn out more effective armies that duke it out in fast-paced battles. Influence combat with spells that buff or debuff units in this chaotic, procedurally generated game that moves at a breakneck pace, sure to make any gamer’s knuckles white as snow.

  • Edge of Eternity

    • Edge of Eternity is a role-playing game that makes little effort to hide its Final Fantasy inspiration. You’ll explore an open world with your party and fight dangerous enemies in gorgeously imaginative environments as you navigate a dramatic and epic story of personal loss, political corruption, and a world on the brink of war. It’s a confluence of many elements from different JRPGs that comes together as a love letter to the genre. If you’re eager for a new world to get lost in with some challenging, strategic combat, then journey to the Edge of Eternity.

  • Rogue Lords

    • A macabre rogue-lite, Rogue Lords will feel familiar to anyone who’s played Darkest Dungeon and other dark fantasy games that blend turn-based role-playing and tactics. What sets Rogue Lords apart is the fact that you play as the freaking devil themself, leading a team through turn-based combat encounters, branching narrative paths, and a ghoulish overworld. The devil doesn’t play fair, so neither do you, as you find small, interesting ways to tip the scales in your favor before banishing the boss at the end of each level.

  • Monster Crown

    • Long live the 90s! Monster Crown feels like a game that fell out straight out of the Game Boy Color, and has you taming beasties like it’s the heyday of pixelated monster catching. Replete with puzzles, charming character and monster design, and tense turn-based battles, Monster Crown melds some of the best of 90s gaming with modern sensibilities. If you like old school adventures with a slightly more mature story and world (and maybe reliving some purposely unnamed childhood favorites), then check out Monster Crown.

  • Golden Light

    • Everything is meat in Golden Light, a survival horror rogue-lite where any inanimate object could turn into a living, meaty creature hellbent on stopping you from saving your girlfriend. Brown and red are the most prominent colors, evoking a real nostalgic feel for PS1/PS2-era horror art direction. With procedurally generated nightmarish hellscapes, haunting monster and sound design that are peak indie horror, and dark sense of humor, Golden Light is a game we recommend playing during daylight hours.

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