Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League will be free to claim next week

Alongside Chivalry and Tomb Raider
Rocksteady / WB Games

It’s never a great sign for a game to become free to claim during its release year, but with how prominent the failure of Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League has been developer Rocksteady and publisher WB Games can probably justify any desperate measures at this point: Launched earlier in 2024, co-op shooter Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League will be completely free to claim on July 16 and 17, 2024, via Amazon Prime for members of the service.

Prime Day 2024 will make medieval first-person brawler Chivalry 2 and action-adventure game Rise of the Tomb Raider free to keep as well, in case Suicide Squad sounds so unappealing to you that you don’t even want it for free.

All Amazon Prime members have to do to add the three titles to their library is to visit the Prime Gaming page on the appointed day and claim the freebies. It’s worth noting that all three offers come in the form of Epic Games Store codes.

The free trio becomes available on July 16, 2024, at 3am ET – check below what that means for your timezone:

  • July 16, 2024, 12am PT
  • July 16, 2024, 2am CT
  • July 16, 2024, 3am ET
  • July 16, 2024, 8am BST
  • July 16, 2024, 9am CEST
  • July 16, 2024, 12:30pm IST
  • July 16, 2024, 3pm CST
  • July 16, 2024, 4pm KST/JST
  • July 16, 2024, 5pm AEST
  • July 16, 2024, 7pm NZST

For more Amazon-related freebies, check out how to claim Zenless Zone Zero Twitch Drops.


Published
Marco Wutz
MARCO WUTZ

Marco Wutz is a writer from Parkstetten, Germany. He has a degree in Ancient History and a particular love for real-time and turn-based strategy games like StarCraft, Age of Empires, Total War, Age of Wonders, Crusader Kings, and Civilization as well as a soft spot for Genshin Impact and Honkai: Star Rail. He began covering StarCraft 2 as a writer in 2011 for the largest German community around the game and hosted a live tournament on a stage at gamescom 2014 before he went on to work for Bonjwa, one of the country's biggest Twitch channels. He branched out to write in English in 2015 by joining tl.net, the global center of the StarCraft scene run by Team Liquid, which was nominated as the Best Coverage Website of the Year at the Esports Industry Awards in 2017. He worked as a translator on The Crusader Stands Watch, a biography in memory of Dennis "INTERNETHULK" Hawelka, and provided live coverage of many StarCraft 2 events on the social channels of tl.net as well as DreamHack, the world's largest gaming festival. From there, he transitioned into writing about the games industry in general after his graduation, joining GLHF, a content agency specializing in video games coverage for media partners across the globe, in 2021. He has also written for NGL.ONE, kicker, ComputerBild, USA Today's ForTheWin, The Sun, Men's Journal, and Parade. Email: marco.wutz@glhf.gg