Indie games have always had a discoverability problem. They spike on launch, then quietly disappear into the storefront void. Indie.io, an independent game publisher and platform, aims to address this issue.
The company is launching Indie Pass, a subscription service built exclusively for indie titles, at $6.99 a month. It goes live on April 13 with over 70 games ready to play on PC.
To put that price in perspective, Microsoft’s Game Pass Ultimate runs $30 a month. Indie Pass is a fraction of that, and it’s focused on a very specific kind of game.
According to Indie.io’s Director of Growth, Jess Mitchell, the titles on the platform will typically be solo player experiences built by small teams or solo developers, offering a genuine artistic experience. Live-service and massive multiplayer games aren’t part of the plan.
What else does Indie Pass offer?
For players, Indie Pass comes with a dedicated launcher and a recommendation engine that tracks your engagement and play style. It factors in things like whether you prefer a controller or keyboard, and even your region, to surface games localized for you.
Think of it as Steam’s algorithm, but built entirely around indie titles. Launch titles include the cozy farming sim Echoes of the Plum Grove, the tactical RPG Dark Deity series, and the farm-based shooter Air Hares, with more added regularly.
Why Indie Pass is a win for developers too
For developers, the appeal is discoverability and back-catalogue revenue. Indie Pass pays creators based on player time spent in their game, following what Mitchell calls an egalitarian model where subscriber money follows player attention.
Most importantly, Indie Pass is non-exclusive, so studios can list their games on other storefronts simultaneously. “We take making developers successful very seriously,” Mitchell told GamesIndustry.biz. “Rather than just sticking to traditional publishing, we try to reinvest in solutions and ways to help our developers gain additional exposure.”
With over 20,000 titles reportedly hitting Steam last year alone, getting noticed is genuinely hard. Indie Pass won’t solve that problem overnight, but it’s a focused, affordable bet on a community that deserves a better spotlight.





