Get a freebie copy of Redfall with your Nvidia RTX 40-series GPU or laptop buy

Redfall RTX bundle
(Image credit: Arkane / Nvidia)

Hot on the heels of AMD's The Last of US bundle with Radeon graphics, Nvidia's doing the same thing with the special Bite Back Edition of the upcoming release of Redfall, handing out the game for free with sales of its latest graphics cards and laptops.

The Redfall Bite Back Edition of the hotly anticipated co-op vampire shooter is normally $99 of your earth dollars. Along with a Steam copy of the game, which unlocks on launch day, May 2, you get a bunch of other goodies and DLC.

That includes a Redfall Hero Pass with two future heroes, Laser Beam Multi-Weapon Skin, Tactical Knife Stake Weapon Attachment and a bundle of four outfits.

The offer is limited to buyers of Nvidia's currently available RTX desktop GPUs, so that's the RTX 4070 Ti, the 4080 and the 4090. On the mobile side, only RTX 4080 and 4090 graphics qualify, which is disappointing for anyone buying an RTX 4050, 4060 or 4070 laptop.

Unsurprisingly, Redfall is fully part of the Nvidia stable, complete with support for DLSS 3. Frame generation is mentioned specifically by Nvidia, but we'd expect that to be in the mix with the rest of the DLSS 3 feature set.

Nvidia also says that the game will support ray tracing, though this won't be available at launch. Instead it will be added via a post-launch update, the date for which hasn't been revealed.

While you wait for the May 2 release, why not head over to our deep dive into everything Redfall. You can school up on the vampire-infested plot lines, the Left 4 Dead-style cooperative game play, the open-world mechanics and more, plus link through to all the blood soaked trailers and videos. 

For more details on the bundle, head over to Nvidia's official landing page. Nvidia says the bundle will be available for "a limited time" but hasn't provided dates. It's also not clear if the upcoming RTX 4070 will be included, should it launch before the game goes on sale and while the offer is live. But we suspect not, based on the limited laptop offerings. Good luck.

Image


<a href="/best-gaming-monitor/" data-link-merchant="pcgamer.com"" target="_blank">Best gaming monitor: Pixel-perfect panels
<a href="/best-high-refresh-rate-monitor-for-gaming/" data-link-merchant="pcgamer.com"" data-link-merchant="pcgamer.com"" target="_blank">Best high refresh rate monitor: Screaming quick
<a href="/best-4k-monitors-for-gaming/" data-link-merchant="pcgamer.com"" data-link-merchant="pcgamer.com"" data-link-merchant="pcgamer.com"" target="_blank">Best 4K monitor for gaming: High-res only
<a href="/best-4k-tv-for-gaming/" data-link-merchant="pcgamer.com"" data-link-merchant="pcgamer.com"" data-link-merchant="pcgamer.com"" data-link-merchant="pcgamer.com"" target="_blank">Best 4K TV for gaming: Big-screen 4K PC gaming

Jeremy Laird
Hardware writer

Jeremy has been writing about technology and PCs since the 90nm Netburst era (Google it!) and enjoys nothing more than a serious dissertation on the finer points of monitor input lag and overshoot followed by a forensic examination of advanced lithography. Or maybe he just likes machines that go “ping!” He also has a thing for tennis and cars.