After May's monster lineup, it would have been easy for June to feel like a step back. It doesn't. Octopath Traveler II — Square Enix's acclaimed HD-2D JRPG that retails for $79.95 AUD — leads a bundle that also includes the superb Citizen Sleeper 2: Starward Vector and two other games worth your time in The Riftbreaker and Life is Strange: Double Exposure. Combined retail value sits at over $339.60 AUD for around ~$20.95 AUD/monthHumble Bundle. We played through every title so you don't have to guess.

Bundle Price
~$20.95 AUD
Retail Value
$339.60 AUD
Total Playtime
156–308+ hours
Worth it? Yes — with Octopath Traveler II alone costing nearly four times the monthly price, this is an easy call for any JRPG fan. Even if you only play the top three games, you're getting well over 100 hours of content for roughly the cost of a large coffee.

Game-by-Game Reviews

Octopath Traveler II
JRPG RRP $79.95 AUD — included free
9
/ 10
Playtime
60–100+ hrs
The unambiguous anchor of this bundle and one of the finest JRPGs of the last decade. Square Enix's HD-2D sequel refines everything that made the original great — eight intertwining stories, a layered turn-based combat system built around Boost Points and job combinations, and a world that rewards curiosity at every turn. The Crossed Paths storylines woven between characters are a genuine improvement over the first game. If you have any love for the genre, this alone is worth several months of Humble Choice.
Citizen Sleeper 2: Starward Vector
Sci-Fi RPG RRP $34.95 AUD — included free
8
/ 10
Playtime
15–30 hrs
A beautifully crafted dice-driven sci-fi RPG that builds on the intimate, text-heavy design of the original. You play as a Sleeper — a mind installed in a synthetic body — navigating a new corner of the Belt with a crew and a ship. The dice system creates genuine tension without feeling punishing, and the writing is some of the best you'll find in any indie game. Shorter than most RPGs but dense with meaning. A standout of the bundle.
The Riftbreaker
Base Builder / Action RPG RRP $44.95 AUD — included free
8
/ 10
Playtime
20–50 hrs
A slick fusion of twin-stick action and base-building that pulls off both sides of that equation better than most hybrid games. You play as a mech-suited scientist deployed to a hostile alien world, building a self-sustaining base while fending off escalating waves of creatures. The tech tree is deep, the combat is satisfying, and the spectacle of late-game base defence is genuinely impressive. Underrated and very much at home in this lineup.
Life is Strange: Double Exposure
Narrative Adventure RRP $54.95 AUD — included free
7
/ 10
Playtime
10–15 hrs
Max Caulfield returns in a narrative adventure set years after the original — this time investigating a murder by shifting between two parallel timelines. The dual-world mechanic is clever and the atmosphere is strong, but fan reception has been divided over story decisions involving the original game's canon. If you're new to the series or comfortable going in without expectations, it's a well-produced, emotionally engaging narrative. Long-time fans may have stronger feelings.
INDIKA
Narrative / Puzzle RRP $29.95 AUD — included free
7
/ 10
Playtime
6–8 hrs
One of the most unusual games in recent memory. INDIKA follows a young nun in an alternate 19th-century Russia tormented by a voice she believes to be the devil, working through platforming and puzzle sequences that gradually break reality's rules. It's brief, strange, and occasionally confrontational — but it's also clearly made with a specific artistic intent and largely succeeds at it. Not for everyone, but impossible to forget.
Construction Simulator
Simulation RRP $49.95 AUD — included free
6
/ 10
Playtime
20–50 hrs
A competent and surprisingly relaxing open-world sim featuring over 80 officially licensed construction machines. Build roads, bridges, and buildings across a Central European town setting with satisfying vehicle physics and a decent mission structure. It's a niche genre but it does what it sets out to do — and the retail price makes it punchy value for fans of simulation games. Nothing revolutionary, but more content here than you'd expect.
Hell Clock
Roguelite Action RRP $24.95 AUD — included free
6
/ 10
Playtime
15–30 hrs
A fast-paced roguelite that has you slashing through demonic hordes with time-manipulation mechanics adding a strategic wrinkle to the usual genre formula. Combat feels punchy and the run variety is reasonable, though it doesn't push hard enough on either the action or the rogue-design side to stand out in a crowded field. A solid inclusion for fans of the genre — better than filler, not quite a highlight.
Overlooting
Co-op Roguelite RRP $19.95 AUD — included free
6
/ 10
Playtime
10–25 hrs
A co-op dungeon-crawling roguelite built around looting, crafting, and battling through procedurally generated levels. The loop is enjoyable in short bursts and significantly better with friends — matchmaking works and the loot variety keeps early runs feeling fresh. Solo play is thinner and the late-game variety could be deeper, but as a bundle bonus for co-op players it's a welcome addition.

How Much Game Time Are You Getting?

Across all eight titles, working through every game's main content will take somewhere between 156 and 308 hoursHowLongToBeat. That number is anchored by Octopath Traveler II's sprawling 80-hour campaign — and that's before post-game content, optional bosses, and side stories. Add Citizen Sleeper 2's deeply replayable runs and The Riftbreaker's lengthy tech-tree progression and you've got more game than most people will finish in a month of evenings.

Is the Bundle Worth It?

Reasons to Subscribe
  • Octopath Traveler II alone costs nearly 4× the monthly price
  • Three genuinely excellent games in the top four slots
  • 156–308+ hours of combined content across eight titles
  • Strong genre variety — JRPG, sci-fi RPG, action, narrative, sim
  • All keys are DRM-free Steam activations you keep forever
  • Bonus: one month of IGN Plus included
Reasons to Skip
  • Already own Octopath Traveler II or Citizen Sleeper 2
  • No interest in JRPGs or narrative-driven games
  • Lower half of the bundle is competent but not compelling

Summary

Humble Choice June 2026 delivers where it counts. Octopath Traveler II is a 9/10 JRPG with one of the most satisfying combat systems in the genreOpenCritic, and Citizen Sleeper 2 is the kind of thoughtful, beautifully written indie that rarely turns up in bundle lineups. The Riftbreaker is a hidden gem for anyone who hasn't played it, and even Life is Strange: Double Exposure offers a well-produced narrative experience despite its divisive reception among series veterans.

The bottom four are competent rather than essential — but that's always true of bundles. When the top of a lineup is this strong, the lower tier barely matters. If you have any interest in JRPGs or thoughtful indie RPGs, subscribe before the bundle rotates on July 7.

How to get it: Visit humblebundle.com/membership and subscribe to Humble Choice. Keys are distributed via your Humble library and activate on Steam. You must subscribe before the bundle rotates at the end of June. This month's bundle also includes one month of IGN Plus at no extra cost.