July 4, 2026
2 min read
A limited-time giveaway is letting PC players secure a permanent copy of a multiplayer title before it gets a permanent price tag.
By Eli, Senior Staff Writer
Jul 4, 2026 · Reviewed by the Nexzy newsroom

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Steam users can currently claim the cooperative multiplayer game The First Foreigner completely free of charge until July 10, 2026, when the developer plans to transition it to a standard paid model. Grab it now, and it’s yours to keep forever. Miss the window, and you’ll have to reach for your wallet.
Look, we’ve all seen developers drop free-to-play titles or run standard weekend promotions, but this one is a bit of a twist. Instead of the usual temporary promotional weekend hosted by Valve, the team behind the 2025 cooperative game is using a limited window to shift the game’s entire financial blueprint. They are letting players grab a lifetime copy for zero dollars now, before they lock it behind a traditional paywall this summer.
Why the sudden rush to give it away? According to the developer, the promotion is a deliberate strategy to transition the game from its current free distribution to a paid model. If you've been spending your week browsing other PC gaming bargains like the Steam Summer Sale, adding a permanent freebie to your library is an easy win.
Normally, when a game changes its price, it goes down. That's how time works, right? But in the wonderful world of PC gaming, sometimes the price ladder goes up instead. The developers are giving players until July 10, 2026, to secure their copies. If you hit that green "Add to Library" button before the clock strikes on the deadline, you are locked in.
It’s a clever way to build a player base. Think of it like a bakery giving away free fresh croissants on opening morning to get people talking, except these digital croissants don't go stale, and you can keep them in your Steam library forever.
The details
After the July 10 deadline, the door shuts, and the price tag goes live. The studio hasn't specified exactly how much the game will cost once it transitions to the paid model, but they have made one thing clear: the free ride is ending.
It's not the first time we've seen a developer test the waters with a free-to-paid model, but it's certainly a direct way to reward early adopters. For players looking to beef up their co-op library without spending a dime—much like claiming those classic sci-fi giveaways on GOG—it's simply a matter of clicking "Claim" before the clock runs out.
Transitioning a game from a free model to a paid one is a bold strategy to build an instant community before establishing a steady revenue stream. For a cooperative multiplayer game, player density is everything. By letting early adopters secure the game for free, the developer guarantees an active player base to welcome future paying customers, while giving budget-conscious PC players a risk-free way to expand their libraries.
Eli

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