
Steam free weekend events typically feature more than one game, but it appears Wasteland 2 is the lone choice this time around. It was released in 2014 thanks to a successful Kickstarter campaign, bringing a sequel that fans had waited more than 25 years for. InXile Entertainment's RPG is the follow-up to the original Wasteland from 1988, which was a predecessor of sorts to the first Fallout.

With either version, you also get a copy of the original Wasteland and both the Director's Cut and non-Director's Cut versions of Wasteland 2. The standard edition is $20 (down from $40), while the digital deluxe edition-which comes with a copy of The Bard's Tale, three digital novellas, and a digital soundtrack-is $30 (down from $60). If you do feel like plunking money down, there's even an option to buy every god, now and forever, that has been and ever will be added to the game.If you decide you want to continue playing after the weekend event ends, Steam also has the game on sale. Smite's cartoony visual style and often flashy, sometimes goofy animations are certainly appealing, and the sheer variety of its deity selections ensures that you'll find a god of your own to master and/or worship.

Like any MOBA, Smite comes with a cycling rotation of free-to-try heroes, and earning your favorites for keeps is simply a matter of some moderate time invested. The primary mode is the classic 5v5 on a three-lane map, but there are a wealth of additional modes and maps to try out. You may already think you're a god at highly competitive multiplayer games - but what kind of god? Greek? Egyptian? Norse? These are but a few of the mythologies represented by the gigantic roster in Smite, a MOBA played from a behind-the-back third-person perspective that puts you at ground level for all that sweet minion-slaying, kill-spreeing action. With so many different types of Warframe armor and weapons to pick from, plus numerous ways to slice and dice foes, there are hundreds of hours of entertainment here for the grand price of absolutely nothing. The maps are also brilliantly varied, including Pluto, the Moon, the dwarf planets of Ceres and Sedna.

Whether diving into quest-driven PVE action or dabbling in competitive deathmatches, Warframe always feels like its own unique entity.

If you’re feeling flush you can buy some Platinum on the Xbox Store, but you don’t spend all your pennies on sci-fi bling to enjoy Warframe - the pleasure of zipping about with its somersaulting stars is gratifying enough as is. Best of all, despite being free-to-play, even the most frugal firefight fans can enjoy breakneck multiplayer without ever prying open their change purses. Thanks to regular updates, Warframe has attracted a hardcore community, and the game’s blend of gravity defying melee attacks and boisterous sci-fi blasting are unlike anything else out there.
