EA’s Steam Spring Into Play Sale 2026: Best Deals Right Now (Jedi Survivor for $2)

Star Wars: Jedi Survivor is $1.99 right now. Not a typo. EA’s Spring Into Play Sale hit Steam this week with some of the deepest discounts the publisher has ever run, including a 95% off Jedi Survivor, 90% off Mass Effect: Legendary Edition, and 90% off Titanfall 2. If your Steam wishlist is full of EA games you kept skipping at full price, this is the weekend to finally pull the trigger.

The sale is live now on Steam through late March 2026. Here are the seven deals worth your money.

🏆 Star Wars: Jedi Survivor — $1.99 (95% off, normally $39.99)

Jedi Survivor is one of the best Star Wars games ever made. The combat system — lightsaber stances, force abilities, tight parrying — is genuinely excellent, and the open-world exploration borrows the right lessons from the soulslike genre without making you feel punished for playing on Normal. It runs for about 20-25 hours on a clean playthrough, closer to 40+ for completionists.

At $1.99, this is a no-brainer. The game launched at $69.99 in April 2023 and has been sitting at $39.99 as its “sale” price for the past year. A 95% discount to under two dollars is essentially EA saying “just take it.” Metacritic: 85/100. OpenCritic: 86, 89% of critics recommend. Steam: Mostly Positive (though early reviews were rough due to PC optimization issues that have since been patched).

If you haven’t played Jedi Fallen Order first, it’s fine — Survivor works as a standalone. But Fallen Order is also on sale for $39.99 listed (check the sale page, individual discounts vary).

Verdict: Buy it. Immediately. This is the deal of the sale.

Mass Effect: Legendary Edition — $5.99 (90% off, normally $59.99)

Three games. Dozens of hours. One of gaming’s best sci-fi stories. The Legendary Edition includes Mass Effect 1, 2, and 3 plus virtually all of the original DLC content — including Lair of the Shadow Broker and Citadel, which are among the best DLC packs ever made for any game.

ME1 feels dated by 2026 standards (Mako driving is rough, combat clunky), but ME2 is a masterpiece and ME3’s ending debate has cooled enough that it mostly doesn’t ruin the experience anymore. If you never played this trilogy, $5.99 is the easiest recommendation on this list.

Metacritic: 93/100. The Legendary Edition improvements to ME1 specifically — faster elevators, better combat tuning, improved textures — make it the definitive way to experience the trilogy.

Verdict: Unmissable. Best deal on this list by total game-hours-per-dollar.

Titanfall 2: Ultimate Edition — $2.99 (90% off, normally $29.99)

Titanfall 2’s single-player campaign is a legitimate top-10 FPS campaign of all time. The “Effect and Cause” level alone — where you phase between two points in time mid-gunfight — is genuinely one of the most clever level design moments in any shooter. The whole campaign takes about 6 hours, and it never stops throwing ideas at you.

Multiplayer is a different conversation. The servers still exist, the player base is small but dedicated, and if you can find matches, wall-running at 60fps is still something special. Metacritic: 89/100 (critics loved it, but it launched against Battlefield 1 and Call of Duty: Infinite Warfare in the same week, which killed it commercially). Eighteen million people missed this game. At $2.99, you have no excuse.

Verdict: Buy it for the campaign. The multiplayer is a bonus if servers cooperate.

Dead Space (2023) — $8.99 (85% off, normally $59.99)

The 2023 Dead Space remake is one of the best horror games of this generation. Motive Studio rebuilt it from scratch — same core structure as the 2008 original, but with a voiced protagonist, overhauled audio, dynamic suit damage, and some genuinely meaningful story additions. Isaac Clarke now reacts to what’s happening around him, which makes the horror significantly more personal.

It’s about 12 hours long on a normal playthrough, longer if you’re exploring the USG Ishimura thoroughly. Runs well on PC now (early launch had some stuttering issues that are long fixed). Metacritic: 89/100.

Verdict: Strong buy. If you liked RE2 Remake, this is in the same tier.

Dragon Age: Inquisition GOTY Edition — $9.99 (75% off, normally $39.99)

This is the 2014 Game of the Year, so expectations should be calibrated. By 2026 standards, the combat and UI feel dated — it’s a slower, more deliberate RPG than modern audiences expect. But the story, characters, and world-building are legitimately great, and the GOTY Edition includes all major DLC including Jaws of Hakkon, The Descent, and Trespasser.

If you played Dragon Age: The Veilguard (also on sale) and liked it, Inquisition is worth going back to. If you’ve never played any Dragon Age, start here — Veilguard is the fourth game in a series with 15+ years of lore.

Metacritic: 85/100. HowLongToBeat: ~50 hours main story, 125+ for completionists.

Verdict: Good RPG value at $10. Know what you’re getting into — this isn’t a fast-paced game.

STAR WARS Battlefront II: Celebration Edition — ~$2.39 (92% off)

The Celebration Edition includes every hero, villain, skin, and cosmetic that was ever released for Battlefront II — all the content that caused the infamous “loot box controversy” at launch in 2017. EA removed the monetization, made all progression earnable through play, and the end result is a genuinely solid multiplayer Star Wars shooter.

Servers are still active, especially around big Star Wars release events. The game modes cover a huge range of eras — Clone Wars, Rebellion, First Order — and the Starfighter Assault mode is particularly good. For $2-3, it’s worth having in your library even if you only fire it up occasionally.

Verdict: Claim it. The controversy is long dead and the game underneath is good.

Dragon Age: The Veilguard — ~65% off (from $69.99)

Veilguard is a contentious one in the Dragon Age community. It simplified the RPG systems significantly compared to Origins and Inquisition — more action-combat, less strategy — and the writing quality is uneven in places. It also sold well below expectations at launch.

That said: if you want a polished action-RPG with great production values and you’re not invested in the previous Dragon Age lore, it’s a perfectly enjoyable 40-hour game. The boss fights are especially well-designed. At 65% off from $69.99, you’re looking at roughly $24-25.

Verdict: Wait for a deeper discount if you’re on the fence. Buy now if you liked Inquisition and are curious.

How to Access the Sale

Open Steam, go to the store, and search for “Spring into Play” or visit the EA publisher sale page directly. The sale covers hundreds of EA games — the ones above are the standouts, but browse the full list if you have specific games in mind. Deals are already live as of March 14 and should run through approximately March 27-28.

If you’re on the fence about any of these, check IsThereAnyDeal.com — it tracks historical lows and can tell you if a specific game has ever been cheaper. For most of these deals, it’s either an all-time low or very close to one.

Also worth noting: if you already have Xbox Game Pass Ultimate, some of these — including Dead Space — might be in the library already. Check the Game Pass lineup before buying.

The Short Version

Priority buys:

  • Jedi Survivor — $1.99 (get this no matter what)
  • Mass Effect: Legendary Edition — $5.99 (three games for six bucks)
  • Titanfall 2 — $2.99 (best FPS campaign you probably haven’t played)
  • Dead Space 2023 — $8.99 (best horror remake in years)
  • DA: Inquisition GOTY — $9.99 (if you want a 50+ hour RPG)

Total for all five: $28.96. That’s less than one full-price game, and you’re getting somewhere north of 200 hours of content.

Sale ends late March — don’t wait. Deals this deep don’t usually come back for 12-18 months.

Looking for free options while you decide? Isonzo and Cozy Grove are currently free on Epic until March 19. And the Humble Choice March 2026 lineup has Tempest Rising and Chants of Sennaar for $14.99 if you’re into subscription bundles.