Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom just dropped to AU$59, its lowest price on Amazon AU

Tears of the Kingdom deal
(Image credit: Future / Nintendo)

The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom may be GOTY of 2023, and that's saying a lot considering the competition: Baldur's Gate 3, Spider-Man 2, Starfield and Skull Island: Rise of Kong, to name a few. Well, maybe not that last game.

Nintendo has a reputation for rarely steeply discounting its first-party games, at least where their tentpole releases are concerned, so it's nice to see Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom going for AU$59 on Amazon Australia at present. For reference, that's AU$30.95 beneath the AU$89.95 RRP.

It betters by AU$10 the price it was going for during the recent Amazon Big Deal Days a couple of weeks ago. If you practiced restraint back then, it looks like that's paid off.

The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom | AU$89.95AU$59 at Amazon

The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom | AU$89.95 AU$59 at Amazon (save AU$30.95)

Tears of the Kingdom is a marvellous physics sandbox wrapped around another gripping Zelda adventure. This is likely the best price we'll see it on Amazon until Black Friday, and even then, Nintendo are a bit stingy when it comes to doling out deals on its big first-party releases. 

In our review of Tears of the Kingdom, we praised its sense of freedom, and its ability to make Hyrule feel fresh. "Tears of the Kingdom builds on what Breath of the Wild did previously – and with a platform like that to work on, the result can't help but be fantastic. Though with the occasional hiccup in execution, the end result is a game as broad as it is deep, and something that comfortably justifies the six-year wait."

Need a new Nintendo Switch, or want to upgrade to an OLED? Check out our weekly updated guide to the best Nintendo Switch deals.

Shaun Prescott
Australian Editor, Games Group

Shaun is the Australian editor and news writer for our sister site, PC Gamer, but he occasionally dabbles on GamesRadar too. He mostly plays platformers and RPGs, and keeps a close eye on anything of particular interest to antipodean audiences. He (rather obsessively) tracks the movements of the Doom modding community, too.