Humble Choice’s April 2026 lineup is headed by ”Assassin’s Creed Valhalla”, and the rest of the package leans hard into variety: ”Daemon X Machina: Titanic Scion”, ”The Lord of the Rings: Return to Moria”, and five more PC games are bundled in for $14.99, along with one month of IGN Plus. It’s a familiar Humble pitch – a big-name anchor, a handful of smaller surprises, and just enough bonus value to make the subscription feel less like a one-game coupon.

April 2026 Humble Choice games

The full lineup includes ”Until Then”, ”Planet of Lana”, ”Artisan TD”, ”The Procession to Calvary”, ”Buddy Simulator 1984”, and one month of IGN Plus. For players who like their subscriptions to cover wildly different moods, this is a decent month: a sprawling open-world RPG up front, indie and strategy picks in the middle, and a couple of oddball titles to keep things from feeling algorithmically assembled.

  • Assassin’s Creed Valhalla
  • Daemon X Machina: Titanic Scion
  • The Lord of the Rings: Return to Moria
  • Until Then
  • Planet of Lana
  • Artisan TD
  • The Procession to Calvary
  • Buddy Simulator 1984
  • One month of IGN Plus

What you get for $14.99

At $14.99, the value case depends on whether you were already eyeing one of the heavy hitters. ”Assassin’s Creed Valhalla” alone is the sort of long, time-hungry game that can swallow a season whole; Ubisoft built it for players who want a lot of map, a lot of loot, and a lot of excuses to ignore the main quest. That makes Humble’s usual gamble obvious: convince subscribers that the month’s leader justifies the fee, then let the rest of the slate do the selling.

There’s also the small-print perk economy that subscription services love. Humble says 5% of each membership goes to REVERB this month, and members can skip a month or cancel whenever they want. That flexibility is doing a lot of work here, because it turns a so-so month into a low-commitment yes-or-no rather than a sunk-cost shrug.

IGN Plus and the charity split

The included month of IGN Plus adds a second layer of promotion, giving members ad-free browsing and access to free games. It’s a neat bundle if you already spend time around IGN’s ecosystem; if not, it’s the kind of bonus that sounds better in a checklist than in day-to-day use. Still, subscriptions are increasingly built on exactly this sort of stacking, where the extra perks matter almost as much as the games themselves.

April’s Humble Choice is less about one perfect lineup than about breadth: blockbuster, indie, strategy, and a couple of left-field curiosities. The open question is whether that mix is enough to pull in new subscribers, or whether most people will simply do the most modern thing possible and buy one month, claim the games, and vanish.

Source: Ign

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