Amazon Prime Day gaming deals still live: PS5 games, headsets, controllers discounted

A world that feels genuinely lived-in in a way few games have
Describing Elden Ring, one of the most heavily discounted games in the Prime Day sale.

Once a year, the marketplace becomes a kind of mirror — reflecting back what we've been meaning to do, the games we meant to play, the tools we meant to acquire. Amazon's October Prime Day, in its final hours, offers that familiar moment of reckoning for gamers: a convergence of discounted software and hardware that asks whether now is finally the time to act. From richly imagined worlds like Elden Ring to the quiet infrastructure of storage expansion, the sale maps the full terrain of modern gaming life.

  • The sale is closing fast, and the window for meaningful savings on PS5 games, peripherals, and storage is narrowing by the hour.
  • Discounts as steep as $70 on titles like Returnal and $120 on keyboards signal that some of these deals are genuinely rare, not just routine markdowns.
  • The breadth of the sale — spanning games, headsets, mice, keyboards, and console storage — creates both opportunity and the paralysis of too many choices.
  • Prime membership remains the gatekeeper, locking the best prices behind a subscription wall even as the deals themselves are widely advertised.
  • Shoppers are navigating a market where some prices are all-time lows and others, like the Seagate Xbox expansion card, remain expensive despite significant cuts.

Amazon's October Prime Day is winding down, but for gamers who've been waiting, there's still meaningful ground to cover. The deepest value lies in software: Elden Ring, Gran Turismo 7, and God of War Ragnarok have each dropped to thirty dollars, while Returnal — a roguelike shooter with an unexpectedly emotional core — sits at the same price after a seventy-dollar cut. Final Fantasy VII Rebirth and Horizon Forbidden West round out a strong lineup for those willing to invest time in longer experiences. Xbox Game Pass Ultimate offers three months for fifty-seven dollars, a reasonable entry point despite Microsoft's recent price increases.

On the hardware side, the Astro A50 X headset — capable of switching between PC, PS5, and Xbox through a single base station — is down seventy-five dollars to three hundred fifteen, its steepest discount since February. The 8BitDo Ultimate 2 controller, built with magnetic joysticks to resist drift, lands at forty-eight dollars. Several mice have hit all-time lows: the Razer Basilisk V3 at thirty dollars and the lightweight DeathAdder V3 HyperSpeed at seventy-one. Keyboard deals include the ROG Azoth at one hundred fifty-five dollars — nearly its lowest price ever after a one-hundred-twenty-dollar markdown.

Storage closes out the picture. The Seagate expansion card for Xbox Series X/S, the only official route to expanded storage on those consoles, is one hundred ninety dollars for two terabytes — a significant cut, though still a premium product. The Crucial X9 Pro portable SSD offers a more accessible option for PS5 and Switch owners at seventy-five dollars. The sale ends soon, and most deals require a Prime membership to access.

Amazon's October Prime Day sale is in its final stretch, and if you've been holding off on building out your gaming library or upgrading your setup, there's still time to find something worth buying. The discounts span across games, headsets, controllers, keyboards, mice, and storage solutions—the kind of breadth that suggests something for nearly every type of player.

The game deals are where the real value sits. Several major PS5 titles have landed at thirty dollars: Elden Ring, which pairs brutal difficulty with a world that feels genuinely lived-in; Gran Turismo 7, a racing simulator that treats cars with the reverence of a museum curator; and God of War Ragnarok, which leans into Norse mythology with the kind of excess you'd expect from the franchise. Returnal, a third-person shooter roguelike that doubles as a meditation on grief, has dropped to thirty dollars as well—a seventy-dollar discount that represents one of the steeper cuts available. Final Fantasy VII Rebirth sits at thirty-five dollars for those willing to commit to a lengthy action-RPG that assumes you've played its predecessor. Horizon Forbidden West, praised for its combat and art direction, also carries a forty-dollar markdown. For something lighter, Madden NFL 26 is down to thirty-seven dollars across multiple platforms, offering the largest discount the game has seen since launch.

If you're looking to expand your game library without committing to individual purchases, Xbox Game Pass Ultimate is available for three months at fifty-seven dollars—a thirty-three-dollar savings from its current monthly rate, though it's worth noting that Microsoft has substantially raised the service's cost in recent months. The deal still offers access to a wide catalog if you have time to work through a backlog.

The peripheral market is equally active. The Astro A50 X headset, which allows seamless switching between PC, PS5, and Xbox via its base station, is marked down seventy-five dollars to three hundred fifteen dollars. It's not an all-time low, but it's the largest discount since February. For those who game on a single system, the standard A50 is available at two hundred thirty-seven dollars. On the controller front, the 8BitDo Ultimate 2 wireless gamepad uses magnetic joysticks designed to resist drift and works across Windows and mobile devices, now priced at forty-eight dollars.

Mice and keyboards have received substantial attention in this sale. The Razer Basilisk V3, an ergonomic wired mouse, has hit its lowest price ever at thirty dollars. The wireless DeathAdder V3 HyperSpeed, weighing just fifty-five grams for competitive play, is down to seventy-one dollars—also an all-time low. The Corsair Scimitar RGB Elite, built specifically for MMO and MOBA players with twelve side buttons, sits at fifty-five dollars. For keyboards, the ASUS ROG Strix Scope II 96 Wireless mechanical model is priced at one hundred fifty-one dollars, while the older but still highly regarded ROG Azoth is available at one hundred fifty-five dollars with a one-hundred-twenty-dollar discount—nearly matching its lowest recorded price.

Storage solutions round out the sale. The Seagate expansion card for Xbox Series X/S, the only official way to add storage to those consoles, is available at one hundred ninety dollars for the two-terabyte model—a one-hundred-seventy-dollar discount and the lowest price in a year, though it remains expensive relative to standard SSDs. For those with PS5 or Switch systems, the Crucial X9 Pro portable SSD at one hundred terabytes is priced at seventy-five dollars, matching the largest discount seen since April.

The sale ends soon, and many deals are exclusive to Prime members. If you've been waiting for a reason to upgrade your setup or fill gaps in your game collection, the window is closing.

The action-RPG Elden Ring is both challenging and darkly funny, with a world that runs incredibly deep and feels lived-in in a way few games have.
— Engadget's assessment of Elden Ring
Returnal is a third-person shooter roguelike that's at once a technical showcase, a stiff challenge and an achingly beautiful reflection on the nature of grief.
— Engadget's description of Returnal
La Conversación del Hearth Otra perspectiva de la historia
Inventor

Why does a gaming sale like this matter? It's just discounts on things people can buy anytime.

Model

Because most of these games don't drop in price this much, this fast. A seventy-dollar cut on Returnal—that's unusual. And the breadth matters: you're not just seeing one or two things on sale. It's games, headsets, mice, keyboards, storage. It signals what's actually worth owning right now.

Inventor

What's the story beneath the story here? Why are we reading about this?

Model

It's about access, really. These are expensive hobbies. A good gaming headset costs three hundred dollars. A mechanical keyboard costs one-fifty. Most people don't buy those things at full price. Sales like this are when the barrier drops enough that someone actually pulls the trigger.

Inventor

Is there anything surprising in what's on sale?

Model

The storage deals are interesting because they're so expensive even on discount. You're still paying a hundred ninety dollars for an Xbox expansion card that would cost a fraction of that if it weren't proprietary. The sale makes it slightly less painful, but the underlying problem remains.

Inventor

What about the games themselves—are these the right ones to be discounting?

Model

They're the safe bets. Elden Ring, God of War, Final Fantasy—these are games that have already proven themselves. They're not risky. But that's also why the discounts work: people already want them, they just needed a reason to buy now instead of later.

Inventor

Does this tell us anything about the state of gaming right now?

Model

It tells us that PS5 has a solid library worth revisiting, and that storage is still a pain point for console players. It also tells us that Game Pass, despite its price hike, is still being used as a loss leader to keep people in the ecosystem.

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