
Game intel
Exfil
In Exfil, you become a member of one of 4 competing teams tasked with retrieving intel. Using GPS skills, your goal is to locate and recover the intel then suc…
I like Escape from Tarkov’s tension, but I don’t love its gatekeeping difficulty. That’s why Exfil stood out to me in Humble’s new Point Blank bundle: it promises the high-stakes, get-out-alive thrill without Tarkov’s initiation ritual. For $15 / £13.40, you’re getting seven shooters that cover a lot of moods-from gritty extraction to surreal puzzle-gunning-and for once, the headliner alone justifies the buy.
Bundles live or die on whether there’s one great anchor and meaningful variety around it. This one checks both boxes. The headline saving is real—Humble pegs the total at a $161 / £116.31 value—though that only matters if you’ll actually play more than one game. The smart play: grab it for Exfil and let the rest be the pleasant surprises they should be.
Here’s everything included:
If you’re allergic to padding, good news: these are distinct experiences, not seven flavors of the same military corridor.
Exfil is an early access tactical extraction shooter that openly borrows Tarkov’s anxiety while leaning into squad readability you’d expect from Ghost Recon. The loop is clean: coordinate with your squad, grab intel, rescue allies, and get out alive. What you won’t find—at least right now—are the modern “live service” flourishes that bloat other shooters: limited-time drops, endless loot treadmills, and fear-of-missing-out checklists. It’s refreshingly focused on the op, not the storefront.
The devs are iterating at a steady clip. A recent update added a new map with better firefight sightlines and replaced instant respawns with helicopter redeploys—a small touch, but it sells the fantasy. That said, it’s still early access, which means you should expect evolving balance, occasional jank, and content gaps. My practical read: if they can tighten AI behavior, expand map variety, and double down on co-op tools (pings, comms, clear extraction intel), this could become the go-to “Tarkov for humans.”

High on Life remains a love-it-or-leave-it tour through grimy, neon sci-fi with weapons that talk, roast you, and occasionally help. The combat’s solid popcorn fare; the writing is the swing. If the humor clicks, it’s a great palette cleanser between heavier tactical sessions.
Superhot: Mind Control Delete is a stand-alone expansion that turns the original’s “time moves when you move” hook into a meatier, roguelite-tinged campaign. It scratches the “one more run” itch because every encounter feels like solving an action puzzle you get to execute in style.
Wild Bastards mashes up FPS shootouts with a strategic layer, pushing you from planet to planet in scrappy, cowboy-sci-fi skirmishes. It isn’t just corridor blasting—there’s planning and risk management between firefights that gives it legs.

Rising Front goes the other direction: think sprawling, WWI-flavored battles where scale is the spectacle. It’s less about pristine gunfeel and more about orchestrating (and surviving) chaos across a sea of soldiers.
POSTAL: Brain Damaged is a throwback “boomer shooter” with tight arenas, chunky feedback, and the series’ trademark crassness dialed to 11. If you grew up bunny-hopping through painkillers and secrets, you’ll feel right at home.
Empty Shell brings a grimmer industrial-horror vibe with shooter DNA and roguelite elements. It’s the moody, flashlight-in-teeth counterpoint to the bundle’s louder entries.

Several of these run nicely on handheld PCs. Superhot’s minimalist style is practically built for it, and retro-leaning shooters like POSTAL: Brain Damaged usually fly. High on Life and Exfil are heavier; expect to tinker with settings and cap frames for stable battery-friendly sessions. Early access builds can swing wildly with patches, so don’t treat any performance snapshot as gospel.
If you’ve been Tarkov-curious but turned off by the punishment, Exfil alone makes the bundle worth it. The rest of the lineup adds legitimate variety instead of filler, and the price is hard to argue with. The only real caution flag is the usual early access uncertainty—feature roadmaps are promises, not guarantees. But if you’re comfortable with that, this is one of the better FPS bundles in recent memory.
Seven shooters for $15 / £13.40, headlined by Exfil’s approachable extraction loop. Strong value, real variety, and the usual early access caveats. If you want Tarkov tension with fewer headaches, this is an easy pick-up.
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