UK-based mental health charity, Safe In Our World, has released its new charity bundle for 2026. The Safe In Our World Bundle includes 22 PC games on Steam, with a minimum purchase price of $17.99. The bundle is valued at over $340, with all proceeds going to the charity’s ongoing support of mental health tools, training, and resources.

The Safe In Our World Bundle is available from game store Fanatical. All games are digitally redeemed through Steam. The bundle includes the following games:

  1. Easy Delivery Co.
  2. Frog Detective 1: The Haunted Island
  3. Golf It!
  4. Gourdlets
  5. Ikonei Island: An Earthlock Adventure
  6. Jumanji: The Videogame
  7. Little Problems: A Cozy Detective Game
  8. Master of Magic
  9. Midnight Ramen
  10. Minami Lane
  11. Paquerette Down the Bunburrows
  12. PEAK’ from Landfall
  13. Pumpkin Jack
  14. Quilts & Cats of Calico
  15. Re:Fresh
  16. STUFFED
  17. The Falconeer
  18. Timerift
  19. Tin Hearts
  20. Tiny Life
  21. Winter Burrow
  22. Wordatro!

I can’t speak for the quality of all these games; I didn’t even know there was a Jumanji video game (it has a Mixed user rating on Steam).

But there are some gems here. Peak is a cooperative, physics based platformer as friends try to scale a large mountain. Minami Lane is a cute and charming life sim with a picture book art style. And Easy Delivery Co is a low poly driving game about making deliveries.

“We’re incredibly proud of what we’ve achieved over the past few years”, says Sarah Sorrell, Charity Director, Safe In Our World, “We wouldn’t be where we are today without our wonderful community – from the talented people who donate games to the bundle to those who purchase it. We knew we wanted to bring our supporters another fantastic line-up of games this year, so we’re thrilled to be launching such an exciting and diverse bundle of games.”

Although the minimum purchase price is $17.99, consumers can donate as much as they like. The bundle deal ends Friday, February 27.

Established in 2019, Safe In Our World raises awareness of mental health issues in the gaming industry, raising money to support tools and resources for developers, publishers, content creators, and players.


This article was written by

Eric has been writing for over nine years with bylines at Dicebreaker, Pixelkin, Polygon, PC Gamer, Tabletop Gaming magazine, and more covering movies, TV shows, video games, tabletop games, and tech. He reviews and live streams D&D adventures every week on his YouTube channel. He also makes a mean tuna quesadilla.