September 2025’s Humble Choice bundle is now available. If you want to snag it for yourself or send it as a gift, you’ve got plenty of time to do so as of this article’s publication. September’s Humble Choice bundle will be live until Tuesday, October 7th, 2025, at 10 AM Pacific Time. September’s Humble Choice bundle offers eight games that can all be redeemed on Steam, as well as a one-month IGN Plus subscription if that interests you. I’ve prepared a brief rundown of everything on offer in the first Humble Choice bundle of Autumn 2025, so let’s have a look!

As usual, up first is this bundle’s “headliner.” It’s the least expensive edition of WWE 2K25, the most recent entry in 2K’s annual wrestling game series. I can neither vouch for WWE 2K25 nor warn you to stay away from it since I haven’t played a WWE game — or regularly watched WWE programming, for that matter — since the late PlayStation 2 era. WWE 2K25 has “mixed” reviews on Steam (at the time of writing) and nearly $300 worth of DLC, both of which I find concerning. Still, getting it in this bundle for $14 as opposed to $60 might be a great deal.

Next up is 2025’s so-called “Legacy Collection” of downloadable content for Destiny 2. I can’t tell you much about this one either, I’m afraid. At least with WWE 2K25, I have an idea of what to expect, but I’m clueless here. Steam says this bundle includes the following: The Final Shape Standard Edition, Lightfall Standard Edition, The Witchqueen Standard Edition, Beyond Light Pack, Shadowkeep Pack, Forsaken Pack, 30th Anniversary Pack, Pit of Heresy Dungeon, Shattered Throne Dungeon, and Grasp of Avarice Dungeon. “Dungeon keys” (whatever those are) for the listed expansions are apparently “sold separately,” so you might want to keep that in mind.

Next in line is The Plucky Squire, developed by All Possible Futures and published by Devolver Digital. You play as Jot, a storybook character who fills the titular role, as he and his allies take on the stereotypical storybook villain in the form of an evil sorcerer. However, you won’t be confined to the pages of your home storybook for long. The Plucky Squire has “very positive” reviews on Steam, and Alexx also reviewed it here if you want to learn more about it. I’ve had The Plucky Squire on my “to-play” list for a while, so perhaps this is the universe giving me a sign.

Fourth up is SpellForce: Conquest of Eo, from developer Owned by Gravity and published by THQ Nordic. Conquest of Eo describes itself as an “ever-changing turn-based strategy role playing game” in which you’ll “[f]ield armies and heroes in tactical combat, finish hundreds of quests, and gather spells and artefacts [sic] to become the most powerful mage of all.” Well, I’ve always been a Paladin main in World of Warcraft, but I’ve also always wished I were a powerful Mage. Perhaps playing SpellForce: Conquest of Eo will allow me to finally live out that fantasy to the extent that I desire.

Offering number five is Return to Monkey Island, developed by Terrible Toybox and published by Devolver Digital, which now makes their second appearance in this bundle. I’ve never played any of the Monkey Island games or any of the other point-and-click adventure game franchises for which Sierra Online is famous, so I can’t tell you much about this one. However, Return to Monkey Island touts the fact that series creator Ron Gilbert returned to helm its development, so perhaps that will mean more to anyone in our readership who has experience with and/or nostalgia for any games from Sierra’s heyday.

Next up, we’ve got Eastern Exorcist, developed and published by Wildfire Game (yes, “Game” is apparently intentionally singular). Eastern Exorcist describes itself as “a stunning 2D side-scrolling action RPG set in a fantasy eastern world with the [sic] vicious spirits and monsters.” The grammatical error in that description and the fact that Eastern Exorcist has “mixed” Steam reviews are both concerning to me. Still, I shouldn’t judge a book by its cover, or a game by its grammatically incorrect description, as it were. I just hope its Steam Store page is where its grammatical troubles end, though I rather doubt it.

The penultimate offering in September 2025’s Humble Choice bundle is Warhammer 40,000: Speed Freeks, developed by Caged Element Inc. and published by Wired Productions. Speed Freeks presents itself as a racing game with a particularly heavy emphasis on vehicular combat. Think Twisted Metal, but set in the Warhammer 40K universe. If you know anything about Warhammer 40K’s Orks, you know they speak with ridiculous accents, they’re terrible at spelling, and they have no sense of self-preservation whatsoever. Speed Freeks drops a league of them into a vehicular combat arena with customizable vehicles, so I’m sure it’ll be an enjoyable spectacle.

Lastly, we have Grapple Dog, developed by Medallion Games and published by Super Rare Originals. Grapple Dog basically does exactly what it says on the tin: It’s a “2D action-platformer” in which you play as a dog with a grappling hook. There wouldn’t be much point in any games that featured grappling hooks if those games didn’t put proper emphasis on using said grappling hooks, so I’m sure Grapple Dog features plenty of movement mechanics based on “grappling around at the speed of sound,” if you will. There’s one last offering in September’s Humble Choice bundle, plus these eight games.

That last offering is a one-month subscription to IGN Plus, which was also offered in August’s Humble Choice bundle. If you choose to take advantage of it, it’ll give you a handful of perks on the website whose owners acquired Humble Bundle in 2017. Personally, the fact that IGN Plus subscriptions have been offered in Humble Choice bundles for some time now strikes me as something of a desperate move on the part of IGN and its conglomerate owners, but that’s just the perspective of a single outsider. I’ll take my leave for now and return when October’s Humble Choice bundle goes live!

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David Sanders

David Sanders is, at his core, a man who's just trying to get through his game backlog before the heat death of the universe, and yet can't seem to stop adding to said game backlog. He greatly enjoys many different varieties of games, particularly several notable RPGs and turn-based strategy titles. When he's not helping to build or plan computers for friends, he can usually be found gaming on his personal machine or listening to an audiobook to unwind.

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