offline accessBuy Close Combat: Last Stand Arnhem Steam Offline Account
A Close Combat: Last Stand Arnhem offline account costs $9.99 on bonege, against the full Steam price of about $39.99 — that's roughly 75% off. You receive a shared Steam account that already owns the game; you log in, switch Steam to Offline Mode, and play the full single-player campaign. Delivery is instant and automated, payment is in crypto, and it works worldwide with no region lock.
Key facts
- Price on bonege
- $9.99 — one-time
- Full Steam price
- ~$39.99 (save ~75%)
- What it is
- Shared Steam account that owns Close Combat: Last Stand Arnhem
- How you play
- Steam Offline Mode — single-player campaign
- Delivery
- Instant & automated
- Payment
- Crypto — USDT (TRC20), BTC, ETH, LTC
- Region
- Worldwide, no region lock
- Guarantee
- Free replacement if access stops
What you get
- Steam account that already owns the game
- Step-by-step offline-mode guide
- Instant automated delivery after payment
- Replacement guarantee if access stops
Buy Close Combat: Last Stand Arnhem cheap — offline account
What you get
You get login access to a shared Steam account that already owns Close Combat: Last Stand Arnhem. This is not a Steam key, not a gift, and not a subscription — there is nothing to redeem and nothing to activate against your own library. After payment clears, the account credentials arrive automatically, you sign in through the normal Steam client, and the game is sitting right there ready to download and run. The full release is included, so you reach the complete strategic layer, every operation, and the real-time tactical battles across the Arnhem theatre without paywalls or trimmed content.
The price on bonege is a flat $9.99, one time. The full Steam price for Close Combat: Last Stand Arnhem sits around $39.99, so you are paying roughly 75% less for the same game. There is no monthly fee, no card required, and no upsell after checkout. If you have been hunting for a cheap Close Combat: Last Stand Arnhem Steam deal or the cheapest price on this fairly niche wargame, the offline account route gets you in for a single small crypto payment instead of the standard storefront tag.
Every purchase is backed by a free replacement guarantee. If access to your account ever stops working, message support and you get a working replacement at no extra cost. That covers the practical worry most buyers have with a shared account — you are not left stranded if something changes on the account side later on.
How a Close Combat: Last Stand Arnhem offline account works
The mechanics are simple. You receive the account login, enter it into the Steam desktop client, and let the game files download once. After the install finishes, you open the Steam menu and select Go Offline, which puts the client into Offline Mode. From that point Steam stops checking in for that session and you can launch Close Combat: Last Stand Arnhem and play the campaign without staying tied to the live account session. This is the intended way to use a shared offline account, and it keeps your play sessions stable.
Close Combat: Last Stand Arnhem is built for exactly this kind of access because it is a single-player strategy and simulation title at heart. The grand operations, the turn-based deployment of battlegroups, and the tense real-time engagements all run locally once installed. You command German or Allied forces across the 1944 Market Garden setting, manage morale, supply, and unit fatigue, and fight battle after battle without any need for an online connection. Offline Mode suits the game perfectly — nothing essential lives on a server.
A few honest notes on the offline-account model: you are playing on a shared account, not on your own personal Steam profile, so achievements and cloud saves belong to that account rather than to you. You play in Offline Mode rather than staying signed in online. For a deliberate, save-heavy wargame like this one, that is rarely a problem — you fire it up, play your campaign, and close it down whenever you want.
Cheaper than a Steam key
A standard Steam key or a full-price store purchase of Close Combat: Last Stand Arnhem runs around $39.99. The bonege offline account is $9.99, which is about 75% cheaper for access to the identical game. The difference comes down to the model: instead of buying a fresh license that lands in your own library, you are sharing an account that already holds the title, which is why the cost drops so sharply. For a back-catalogue wargame that rarely sees deep discounts on the storefront, that gap is significant.
It is worth being precise about what a key gives you that this does not. A key registers the game permanently to your personal account, with your own achievements, your own cloud saves, and online features tied to your profile. The offline account does not do that — it trades personal ownership for a much lower price and instant, card-free access. If your goal is simply to play through the Arnhem campaigns and the tactical battles for as little as possible, the shared account wins on price by a wide margin.
Because payment is in crypto, there is also no card processing, no regional storefront pricing, and no chance of a purchase being blocked by your location. You pay the flat $9.99 in USDT, BTC, ETH, or LTC from anywhere in the world and get the same access a buyer in any other country would. That combination — low price plus no region lock — is hard to match through the normal key market.
Is it safe?
We are upfront about what this is: a shared, offline Steam account, not an official key and not a personal license. We do not claim it is an official sale or pretend you are getting your own copy. Used as intended — log in, install, switch to Offline Mode, and play the single-player content — it is a straightforward way to access Close Combat: Last Stand Arnhem cheaply, and it has worked reliably for buyers of this and many other titles in the catalogue.
The main thing to keep in mind is to stay in Offline Mode for play sessions and treat the account as shared. Do not change the account credentials, do not attach it to anything personal, and do not try to use it for online services it was not meant for. Follow that and the experience is smooth. The free replacement guarantee is your safety net: if access ever drops, support issues a working replacement, so a single hiccup never means losing the game you paid for.
Delivery itself is automated and instant, which removes another common risk — there is no manual handoff, no waiting on a person, and no window where a code might be intercepted. You pay, the credentials are released to you immediately, and you are playing within minutes. For a $9.99 outlay backed by replacement support, the practical risk is low.
About Close Combat: Last Stand Arnhem
Close Combat: Last Stand Arnhem is part of the long-running Close Combat series and is built on the foundations of the highly regarded Close Combat – A Bridge Too Far. It recreates Operation Market Garden in September 1944, the Allied airborne gamble to seize a chain of bridges across the Netherlands and punch a route into Germany, with the fight for the Arnhem bridge as its centrepiece. The game blends a grand operational layer with real-time tactical combat, so you handle the big strategic picture and then command the soldiers on the ground.
On the operational map you move battlegroups, manage supply lines, and decide where to commit your forces across the campaign. When forces meet, the game drops into detailed real-time battles where morale, cover, suppression, and unit cohesion matter as much as raw firepower. Troops who take heavy fire can break and rout, veterans hold the line longer, and a clumsy advance across open ground gets punished. That focus on the human side of combat is what has always set the Close Combat series apart from more arcade-style strategy games.
With Simulation and Strategy at its core, Last Stand Arnhem rewards patience and planning over reflexes. Expanded maps, refined modelling, and the full Market Garden scope make it one of the more complete entries in the franchise, and it remains a favourite among serious wargamers. Picking it up through a bonege offline account for $9.99 is an easy way to dig into one of the better WWII tactical campaigns without paying the full storefront price.
// pros
- Around 75% cheaper than the full Steam price ($9.99 vs ~$39.99)
- Instant, automated delivery — playing within minutes
- Full single-player Market Garden campaign playable in Offline Mode
- Crypto payment (USDT, BTC, ETH, LTC) — no card, no region lock
- Free replacement guarantee if access ever stops
// good to know
- · Single-player / offline only — no online features tied to your own profile
- · You play in Steam Offline Mode on a shared account, not your own personal account
Playing Close Combat: Last Stand Arnhem offline
Pay with crypto
Checkout in USDT, BTC, ETH or LTC — no card needed.
Get the login
We deliver the account that owns the game, automatically, in minutes.
Play offline
Sign in, switch Steam to Offline Mode with our guide, and enjoy the full game.
Close Combat: Last Stand Arnhem — questions
Can you play Close Combat: Last Stand Arnhem offline?
Yes. You log into the shared account, install the game once, then switch Steam to Offline Mode and play the full single-player campaign locally. The game is built for offline play, so nothing essential needs a live connection.
How much is Close Combat: Last Stand Arnhem on bonege?
It is a flat $9.99, one time, versus the full Steam price of about $39.99 — roughly 75% off. No subscription and no card needed.
How fast is delivery?
Delivery is instant and automated. Once your crypto payment confirms, the account credentials are released to you right away, so you can be playing within minutes.
How do I pay?
Payment is in crypto only — USDT (TRC20), BTC, ETH, or LTC. There is no card option, and there is no region lock, so you can buy from anywhere.
What's the difference vs a Steam key?
A key registers the game to your own account permanently with your own achievements and saves. This is a shared offline account you log into and play in Offline Mode — no personal ownership, but about 75% cheaper at $9.99.
Is it safe?
Used as intended — log in, install, play in Offline Mode — it works reliably. It is a shared offline account, not an official key, and every order is backed by a free replacement if access ever stops.



