Amazon Luna Major Changes 2026: Purchases, Third-Party Stores & Libraries Removed

Amazon just dropped a bombshell on its cloud gaming service Luna — and it’s going to hit every single user.

Starting today (April 10, 2026), Luna is killing individual game purchases, third-party stores, “Bring Your Own Library,” and third-party subscriptions. After June 10, 2026, any game you bought through EA, Ubisoft, GOG, or any other partner store will stop working entirely.

This is a massive pivot. Amazon is ditching the “buy what you want and play anywhere” experiment and going all-in on a pure subscription model.

Amazon Luna logo with red 'Changes Incoming' overlay

Amazon Luna’s major overhaul in April 2026 removes purchases and third-party libraries — shifting to subscription-only.

What’s Actually Changing

The changes are sweeping and immediate:

  • No more individual game purchases — You can no longer buy games outright through Luna.
  • Third-party stores are gone — EA, Ubisoft, GOG, and other partner stores are being removed from the service.
  • “Bring Your Own Library” ends — Your existing Ubisoft+, EA Play, or other third-party subscriptions will no longer work on Luna.
  • Purchased games have a hard cutoff — Anything bought through third-party stores via Luna remains playable until June 10, 2026. After that date, they disappear.

Jackbox games and other third-party subscription content are also being pulled.

Why Amazon Is Doing This

Luna has always been a bit of a hybrid service — part subscription, part storefront, part cloud streaming for games you already own. That model never gained serious traction. By going subscription-only, Amazon is simplifying the experience and focusing entirely on its Luna+ library and Prime Gaming perks.

The company is betting that a cleaner, more predictable subscription model will be easier to market and scale — especially as competition from Xbox Cloud Gaming, GeForce Now, and others heats up.

Luna interface showing removed purchase options

The Luna store and purchase options are being removed — the service is now subscription-first.

Real Talk: This Is a Brutal Reset

Let’s be honest — this stings for anyone who actually bought games on Luna expecting to keep them forever. Cloud gaming was sold on the promise of flexibility and ownership-like access. Amazon just pulled the rug out from under that promise.

For users who only used Luna+, this changes almost nothing. For anyone who mixed in Ubisoft+ or bought individual titles, it’s a painful loss of access after June 10.

This move also signals that Amazon is no longer pretending Luna is a full “buy and play anywhere” platform. It’s now just another subscription service fighting for the same $15–20/month that Xbox Game Pass Ultimate and others are chasing.

What This Means for You Right Now

  1. If you bought games via third-party stores — Play them before June 10, 2026. After that date they vanish.
  2. If you rely on Ubisoft+ or EA Play on Luna — Those integrations end immediately.
  3. If you’re a Luna+ subscriber only — Your experience stays mostly the same, but the library is now the only thing available.
  4. Prime members — You still get the free Luna+ tier with included games, but nothing extra beyond that.
Frustrated gamer checking Luna library

Many users who purchased games through Luna are now facing a hard deadline in June 2026.

The Bigger Picture for Cloud Gaming in 2026

Amazon’s move reflects a wider industry trend: cloud gaming services are struggling to make the hybrid “buy + subscribe” model work profitably. Most are simplifying to pure subscriptions to cut complexity and focus on recurring revenue.

Whether this helps Luna grow or just alienates the small but loyal group of users who actually bought games on it remains to be seen. One thing is clear — the era of “buy once, stream anywhere” on Luna is officially over.

Don’t Sleep on This Signal

This is Amazon admitting that its original vision for Luna didn’t work as planned. By going all-in on subscription, they’re betting the future of the service on monthly fees rather than one-time purchases.

If you have any games tied to third-party accounts on Luna, the clock is now ticking. June 10, 2026 is the hard cutoff. After that, Luna becomes a much simpler — and much more limited — experience.

The cloud gaming wars just got a little more cutthroat.

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