Amazon Prime Day gaming deals: 13 best discounts on PS5, Switch, Xbox games and gear

The lowest price Elden Ring has ever reached
A $39 discount on the PS5 version coincides with the launch of its major expansion.

Once a year, the marketplace pauses its ordinary rhythms and offers a brief window where the cost of play drops closer to the reach of more hands. Amazon's Prime Day 2024 has opened that window for console gamers — PlayStation, Xbox, and Nintendo Switch owners alike — presenting record-low prices on beloved titles and the hardware that sustains them. It is a fleeting moment, as such moments tend to be, where the gap between curiosity and commitment narrows, and the question shifts from whether to how soon.

  • Record-low prices on titles like Elden Ring ($39) and Final Fantasy XVI ($28) are compressing the usual hesitation between a gamer's wishlist and their wallet.
  • Storage limitations — long a quiet frustration for Switch and Xbox owners — are being directly addressed, with a 128GB microSD card at $17 and a 2TB Xbox expansion card slashed by $110.
  • Hardware itself is on the table: an Xbox Series X at $369 and a limited-edition Zelda Switch OLED at $349 blur the line between accessory deal and console upgrade.
  • Peripheral pricing has hit historic lows too, with the Xbox Wireless Controller at $44 and the Logitech G502 Lightspeed mouse at half its list price.
  • Inventory is depleting in real time — the sale remains active but the window is visibly closing, turning browsing into a decision with a deadline.

Amazon's Prime Day sale is delivering genuine value for console owners across all three major platforms, with discounts deep enough to move games and hardware that have sat on wishlists for months.

For PlayStation 5 owners, the standout is Elden Ring at $39 — a record low for a title that just received its major expansion, Shadow of the Erdtree, making now a natural moment to enter FromSoftware's world. Final Fantasy XVI has fallen to $28, Demon's Souls to $29, and Ratchet & Clank: Rift Apart to $41, rounding out a strong slate of first- and third-party offerings.

Xbox players are seeing the most consequential hardware deal of the sale: the Seagate 2TB expansion card, down from $359 to $229, effectively tripling storage on a standard 1TB console and allowing current-generation games to run without compromise. An Xbox Series X console is also available at $369, and Tekken 8 sits at $38 for those looking to fill the library.

Nintendo Switch owners face a familiar constraint — the console ships with just 32GB of built-in storage — but a SanDisk 128GB microSDXC card at $17 addresses that directly, with read speeds up to 100MB/s that also improve load times. Super Mario RPG, a full remake of the 1996 original, is $39, and the limited-edition Tears of the Kingdom Switch OLED has dropped to $349, though through a third-party seller.

Accessories round out the picture: the Xbox Wireless Controller has reached its lowest-ever price at $44, and the Logitech G502 Lightspeed wireless mouse is half off at $75. The sale is still running, but inventory at these prices is moving — the moment for deliberation is short.

Amazon's Prime Day sale is still running strong, and the gaming discounts are substantial enough to make any console owner pause and reconsider their library. Whether you play on PlayStation, Xbox, or Nintendo's hybrid system, there are real savings to be had—not just on games, but on the hardware and accessories that make those systems actually usable.

The deals span the full ecosystem. If you own a PS5, Elden Ring has dropped to $39, marking the lowest price the game has ever reached. That's a meaningful discount on a title that only recently got its major expansion, Shadow of the Erdtree, making it an ideal entry point for anyone who's been curious about FromSoftware's open-world masterpiece. Final Fantasy XVI, the latest entry in Square Enix's long-running franchise, is down to $28 from its original $49.99 price tag. Demon's Souls, the PS5 launch title that still holds up nearly four years later, sits at $29—also a record low. Prince of Persia: The Lost Crown, a side-scrolling action platformer that revives a dormant franchise, is available for $29. Ratchet & Clank: Rift Apart, which showcases the PS5's technical prowess in 4K at 60 frames per second, is marked down to $41.

Xbox players have their own slate of bargains. Tekken 8, Bandai Namco's fighting game that successfully balances accessibility with depth, is priced at $38. The real hardware win for Xbox owners is the Seagate 2TB expansion card, now $229 down from $359—a $110 savings that effectively triples storage capacity on a 1TB console and lets you run current-generation titles directly from the expansion without compromise. An Xbox Series X console itself is available for $369.

Nintendo Switch owners, meanwhile, can grab a SanDisk 128GB microSDXC card for just $17, a significant drop from its $34 regular price. The Switch ships with only 32GB of built-in storage, a limitation that becomes apparent almost immediately for anyone with a modest game collection. This card, officially licensed and capable of read speeds up to 100MB/s, solves that problem while also speeding up load times. Super Mario RPG, a full remake of the 1996 SNES original, is down to $39. The limited-edition Tears of the Kingdom Switch OLED model, dressed in Zelda-themed artwork, has been reduced to $349 from $378, though this particular listing comes from a third-party seller rather than Amazon directly.

Beyond the games themselves, accessory pricing is competitive. The Xbox Wireless Controller has hit its lowest price ever at $44, making it an affordable way to add a second pad to your setup. The Logitech G502 Lightspeed wireless gaming mouse, a favorite among PC and console gamers who want precision input, is half off at $75 from its $149 list price.

Prime Day inventory tends to move quickly, and these prices won't hold indefinitely. The sale is still active, but the window is closing. For anyone looking to expand their game library or finally upgrade their console's storage situation, the timing is worth taking seriously.

La Conversación del Hearth Otra perspectiva de la historia
Inventor

Why does storage matter so much for these consoles? Aren't they supposed to just work out of the box?

Model

They do work, but the Switch comes with 32GB and fills up almost immediately if you buy more than a handful of games. The expansion card at $17 is solving a real problem that millions of people hit within weeks of owning the system.

Inventor

And the Elden Ring price—$39 is genuinely the lowest it's ever been?

Model

According to the reporting, yes. That matters because it's a $60 game that's been out for over two years. Getting it at that price, especially with the new expansion just launching, is the kind of moment that pulls in people who've been on the fence.

Inventor

What's the actual value proposition here? Is this just marketing, or are these real discounts?

Model

These are real discounts. A $110 savings on the Seagate expansion card, for instance—that's not a rounding error. But the real win is that Prime Day creates a moment where multiple things are on sale at once. You might grab a game and a controller and storage all in one shopping trip.

Inventor

Who benefits most from this sale?

Model

Console owners who've been meaning to expand their libraries but haven't pulled the trigger. Someone with a Switch who's been putting off buying storage. Someone who wanted to try Elden Ring but couldn't justify the full price. The deals are targeted enough that they actually move people from "maybe someday" to "okay, now."

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