Story-driven adventure game, The Uncertain: Last Quiet Day, available for free on Steam until March 9th

ComonGames has announced that its story-driven adventure game, The Uncertain: Last Quiet Day, is available for free on Steam until March 9th. As such, PC gamers can acquire their free copy by visiting the game’s Steam store page.

The Uncertain is an story-driven adventure game set in a post-apocalyptic world. The game came out in 2016 and has Very Positive reviews on Steam.

Players will experience the mysterious vibe of each of carefully explored locations. They will also solve diverse puzzles, make fateful decisions and discuss intriguing matters to find out the whole truth.

You can get your free copy of the game from here. Below you can also find its key features.

  • Classic 3D Adventure with unique story
  • Beautiful graphics and immersive atmosphere
  • Original indie soundtrack
  • Made using NVIDIA GameWorks HBAO+, DoF and FXAA technologies

Have fun!

The Uncertain: Last Quiet Day - Release Trailer

12 thoughts on “Story-driven adventure game, The Uncertain: Last Quiet Day, available for free on Steam until March 9th”

  1. Story-driven adventure “game”
    they’re not games for fck sake, they’re 3D story applications.

  2. Story-driven adventure “game”
    they’re not games for fck sake, they’re 3D story applications.

  3. hmmm I wonder if Valve is losing too much sales to EGS. Maybe they will be giving more games for free in response to Epic.

    I was just reading an article that claimed there are 85 million accounts on EGS. Probably a lot of those are Fortnite players but even though some people are angry over Sweeney paying for exclusives there are probably quite a lot that get an account just for the free games.

    You could get the games for free by pirating but then you won’t get updates and patches.

      1. The Developers would need to make most of the decision but Steam would need to want to offer the games for free as well since they are hosting the games for free. The bill that they pay for bandwidth must be huge. They average 450 to 500 petabytes per month in downloads.

        1. Not really, data transfer doesn’t scale wide like that. There are smaller hubs that valve uses to move data. It’s cheaper and more scaleable to use smaller hubs. Valve honestly doesn’t care about pricing for games, since there are other games that can cover the cost.

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