Amazon’s cloud gaming service just got a lot smaller. Luna is cutting support for third-party integrations, and if you’ve been using the service to play Ubisoft or EA games, your setup is about to change.
The cuts hit fast. Some features disappear as early as June 3. And unlike Google when it shut down Stadia, Amazon isn’t handing out refunds.
Ubisoft+ and Jackbox Subscriptions Are Gone
You can no longer buy a Ubisoft+ or Jackbox Games subscription through Luna. If you already have one of those subscriptions purchased through Luna, Amazon will cancel it automatically at the end of your next billing cycle.
There’s a small window of relief for Ubisoft fans. If you bought your Ubisoft+ subscription directly through Ubisoft rather than Luna, you can still access those games via the streaming service until June 10. After that, the connection gets cut regardless.
Bring Your Own Library Shuts Down June 3
This one stings the most for budget-conscious gamers. Luna’s Bring Your Own Library feature let players stream games they already owned on EA, GOG, and Ubisoft — essentially turning Luna into a streaming layer on top of games you’d already paid for.
That feature disappears on June 3. After that date, you won’t be able to stream those titles through Luna no matter how you bought them.
The irony here is real. Cloud gaming’s biggest selling point is playing high-end games on modest hardware. So removing access to games people already own, without helping them find an alternative path, is a tough move.
Games You Bought Directly on Luna Still Work, Briefly
If you purchased standalone games outright on Luna, you can still play them until June 10. But again, no refunds.

Here’s the silver lining, such as it is. Those games stay linked to the third-party platform they came from. So your EA purchases remain in the EA App, your GOG games stay in GOG Galaxy, and your Ubisoft titles live in Ubisoft Connect. You haven’t lost the games themselves — just the ability to stream them through Luna.
For players with capable PCs or consoles, that’s probably fine. But for anyone who chose Luna specifically because their hardware couldn’t run those games locally, this is a real problem. Services like GeForce Now might fill the gap, though you’ll want to check whether GFN supports your specific titles before making the switch.
What Luna Actually Looks Like Now
Amazon has been quietly reshaping Luna for months. Back in October, the service launched a revamped version with a heavier focus on GameNight — casual party games you can play with a smartphone as the controller.
That’s a very different product from a full-featured cloud gaming service. And these third-party cuts make that direction even clearer.
Still, Luna isn’t disappearing. Prime subscribers keep access to PC game claims and streaming through the Luna Standard tier at no added cost. Luna Premium, which still includes a solid range of third-party titles, remains available too. Amazon also said it plans to offer some users a free Luna Premium subscription, though the company didn’t spell out exactly who qualifies.

“We’re doubling down on a broad range of gaming experiences, including strong third-party titles, delivered in ways that make great games more accessible, as well as new and unique gaming experiences like GameNight,” Amazon wrote in an email sent to Luna users.
So Where Does Luna Go From Here?
Amazon is betting on a narrower, more casual vision of cloud gaming. GameNight party experiences, Prime perks, and a curated Premium library — that’s the product they’re building toward.
For hardcore gamers who wanted Luna as a flexible streaming layer across multiple storefronts, that vision is probably disappointing. The Bring Your Own Library feature was genuinely useful, and its removal makes Luna feel less like a platform and more like a walled garden.
If you’re affected by these changes, the most practical move is to check which of your games are supported on GeForce Now. It’s not a perfect solution, but it’s the closest thing to what Luna was offering. And keep an eye on whether you qualify for that free Luna Premium offer — it might soften the transition a little.
Cloud gaming is still figuring out what it wants to be. Luna just made a clear choice about its identity. Whether that works out for Amazon — or for players — is still an open question.
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