Amazon Drops Support for Third-Party Game Stores: Paid Games Unavailable Until June 10

Amazon has announced it is dropping support for third-party game stores within its platform, with paid games becoming unavailable to users until at least June 10. The move affects Amazon gaming ecosystem and represents another chapter in the ongoing consolidation of the digital game distribution market, as major platforms reassert control over their storefronts.
What Is Changing?
Amazon is removing support for third-party game stores from its platform, meaning customers who purchased games through these channels will temporarily lose access to paid titles. The blackout period extends until June 10, after which Amazon says it will provide an updated path for game distribution that aligns with its new platform policies.
Free-to-play games are understood to be unaffected by the immediate changes, though details on how the transition will work for existing game libraries remain limited. Amazon has not clarified whether purchased titles will be migrated, refunded, or permanently removed from user accounts.
Context: Amazon Gaming History
Amazon has a complicated history in gaming. The company invested heavily in game development through Amazon Game Studios, with mixed results — notably the troubled development and eventual success of New World, alongside several cancelled titles. Amazon Luna, its cloud gaming service, has shown more promise, but the platform has struggled to compete with established players like Xbox Cloud Gaming, NVIDIA GeForce Now, and PlayStation Now.
The decision to restrict third-party game store access may be tied to Amazon effort to consolidate its gaming offerings under the Luna umbrella, pushing users toward its own cloud gaming subscription rather than supporting a fragmented marketplace of competing distributors.
What Players Should Know
Gamers who have purchased titles through Amazon-integrated third-party stores should document their library and purchase history before the June 10 deadline. It remains unclear whether compensation, refunds, or alternative access will be offered for paid titles that become inaccessible during the transition period.
Platform users are advised to contact Amazon customer support for specific guidance on their game libraries and check for official communications about the transition plan as the deadline approaches.
The Bottom Line
Amazon decision to drop third-party game store support is another sign of the gaming industry ongoing platform consolidation. Whether this move strengthens Amazon Luna and its gaming ecosystem or simply frustrates users who relied on third-party stores remains to be seen — but the June 10 deadline gives gamers little time to prepare.