offline accessBuy Iris and the Giant Steam Offline Account
This is an Iris and the Giant offline account on bonege for $9.99 — a one-time price versus the regular Steam price of about $17.99, so you save roughly 44%. You log into a shared Steam account that already owns the game, switch Steam to Offline Mode, and play the full single-player run. Delivery is instant and automated, payment is crypto only, and it works worldwide with no region lock.
Key facts
- Price on bonege
- $9.99 — one-time
- Full Steam price
- ~$17.99 (save ~44%)
- What it is
- Shared Steam account that already owns Iris and the Giant
- How you play
- Steam Offline Mode — single-player only
- 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 Iris and the Giant cheap — offline account
What you get
You get login access to a shared Steam account that already owns Iris and the Giant, plus clear instructions to set Steam to Offline Mode and start playing. For $9.99 you are buying the access, not a key, not a gift, and not a subscription. Nothing gets added to your personal Steam library, and you never have to redeem a code. You sign in with the credentials we send, flip Steam into Offline Mode, and the game launches from the library that the account already holds.
Iris and the Giant is a compact game built around runs rather than a long open map, so an offline account fits it well. The full card-battling campaign, the metaprogression that unlocks new cards and characters between attempts, and every difficulty tier are all there because they live entirely on the account locally. You are not getting a stripped trial or a time-limited demo — it is the complete game as the owner account installed it.
Because this is a shared offline account, the practical workflow is simple. After payment clears you receive the account details automatically, you log in once, you let Steam download or verify the files, and then you switch to Offline Mode so you can play whenever you want without staying connected. If access ever stops working, the free replacement covers you, which matters more than the small upfront cost for most buyers.
How an Iris and the Giant offline account works
The Iris and the Giant offline account works through Steam's built-in Offline Mode, a normal Steam feature that lets you launch installed games without an active connection to Steam's servers. You install the Steam client if you don't already have it, log in with the shared credentials we provide, install Iris and the Giant once while online, and then choose Steam menu, then Go Offline. From that point the game runs locally on your machine.
This matters for how a roguelike deck-builder actually plays. Iris and the Giant is entirely single-player — you fight your way upward through Iris's imaginary world card by card, and your progress, unlocked cards, and run history are stored in the local save. None of that needs a live server, so Offline Mode keeps everything intact between sessions. You can close the game, come back the next day, continue building toward better deck synergies, and never touch an online connection.
Using Offline Mode also keeps the shared account stable for everyone. Because you are not driving the account's online status, the setup stays quiet and reliable, and your own Steam profile, friends, and other purchases are never involved. The trade-off is straightforward: this is an offline, single-player arrangement, so it is the right pick for the Iris and the Giant campaign and the wrong pick if you were hoping for some online feature, which this game does not have anyway.
Cheaper than a Steam key
At $9.99 the Iris and the Giant offline account costs less than the regular Steam price of about $17.99, which is a saving of roughly 44%. A standard Steam key for the game generally tracks the full store price unless there is an active sale, so outside of a sale window the offline account is the cheaper way to get into the campaign. You pay once, you get access right away, and there is no waiting for a discount event to come around.
The reason the price can sit lower is the model itself: a shared offline account spreads one underlying license across the offline use it supports, rather than selling you a fresh standalone license. That is the honest mechanics behind why an Iris and the Giant offline account or shared account is listed cheap compared to a key. It is a different product from a key, not a discounted version of the same thing, and the lower price reflects that you are buying offline access rather than a copy you own forever.
If your goal is to play through Iris's run-based journey, complete the unlock tree, and see the story to its end, the math is simple. You are getting the complete single-player game for $9.99 instead of around $17.99, with instant delivery and a replacement guarantee. For a focused indie roguelike RPG like this one, that is a clean, low-cost way to start without committing to the full retail price.
Is it safe?
It is reasonable to be cautious, so here is the plain version. You are buying access to a shared Steam account, and you play in Offline Mode. We do not claim this is an official Steam product, and we are not reselling a key or a gift — it is an offline account, and that is exactly how it is described. Being clear about what it is helps you decide whether it fits how you want to play.
On the practical side, delivery is automated, so the account details arrive immediately after your crypto payment is confirmed, with no manual back-and-forth that could leak your information. Paying with USDT (TRC20), BTC, ETH, or LTC means you never hand over card numbers, and there is no region check to pass, so the same purchase works the same way wherever you are. We recommend you keep Steam in Offline Mode as instructed, which is the most stable way to use the account.
The free replacement is the real safety net. Iris and the Giant is a single-player game, so once it is installed and you are offline, your saves and progress sit on your own machine. If access to the account ever stops for any reason, you contact us and we replace it at no extra cost. That guarantee, combined with instant delivery and crypto-only payment, is what makes the cheap price worth it rather than a risk.
About Iris and the Giant
Iris and the Giant is an indie game that blends collectible card battling, RPG progression, and roguelike structure into a single tightly focused experience. You play as Iris, a young girl who travels through an imaginary world to confront her fears, and the whole journey is wrapped in a quiet, melancholic tone that sets it apart from louder deck-builders. Each card you play is an action in a turn-based fight, and the deck you assemble shapes how you push deeper into the world.
The roguelike side means each attempt is a fresh run: you climb upward through stacked enemy encounters, manage a limited hand and a draw pile that doubles as your health, and decide which cards and bonuses to take as you go. When a run ends, you carry forward unlocks that open new cards, abilities, and characters, so the metaprogression gives every failed attempt real weight. The RPG and strategy roots show in how carefully you have to plan each turn around what you can draw next.
What keeps people coming back is the combination of approachable rules and a genuinely emotional frame — the fights are simple to learn but the story and the unlock tree pull you forward. As an offline, single-player game it is an ideal candidate for a Steam offline account, since everything that makes it worth playing happens on your own machine, run after run, with no online layer required. If you want a thoughtful card-based RPG roguelike to sink into, Iris and the Giant delivers a complete journey from the first card to the last.
// pros
- $9.99 instead of ~$17.99 — save about 44%
- Instant, automated delivery after payment
- Full single-player campaign and unlocks playable offline
- Crypto payment (USDT, BTC, ETH, LTC) — no card, no region lock
- Free replacement if access ever stops working
// good to know
- · Single-player / offline only — no online features
- · You play in Steam Offline Mode on a shared account, not your own
Playing Iris and the Giant 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.
Iris and the Giant — questions
Can you play Iris and the Giant offline?
Yes. You log into the shared account, install the game once, then switch Steam to Offline Mode and play the full single-player run with no connection needed.
How much is Iris and the Giant on bonege?
It's $9.99 as a one-time price, versus about $17.99 on Steam — a saving of roughly 44%.
How fast is delivery?
Delivery is instant and automated. The account details are sent to you right after your crypto payment is confirmed.
How do I pay?
Crypto only — USDT (TRC20), BTC, ETH, or LTC. No cards are accepted and there is no region restriction.
What's the difference vs a Steam key?
A key adds a copy you own to your own library. This is access to a shared account you play in Offline Mode — a different product, which is why it's cheaper than a key.
Is it safe?
It's a shared offline account, described honestly as that. Delivery is automated, payment is card-free crypto, and a free replacement covers you if access ever stops.



