Normal view

There are new articles available, click to refresh the page.
Before yesterdayLifehacker

The 25 Best Indie Games to Play on Your Nintendo Switch

23 May 2024 at 12:30

So you finally got a Nintendo Switch, just in time for Nintendo to start hinting that the Switch 2 is dropping sometime next year. Well, don’t fret—being behind the gaming curve can be a good thing!

You might feel like you’re years late to the game, but actually, you’re lucky: You’ve got eight years' worth of catching up to do, and the Switch library is one of the best in gaming history—particularly if you look beyond beloved first-party properties like Mario, Zelda, and Pokémon to the massive library of indie titles available for download with a single click. (And usually for a great price—especially if you wait for a good sale.)

Here are 25 of the best to get you started—from platformers, to puzzle games, to RPGs. And you’re only scratching the surface.


Animal Well

IGN rating: 9

This just-released puzzle platformer has already garnered rave reviews, if not instant classic status. It's an ingenious twist on the "metroidvania" format: You play as a nondescript blob wandering a darkened forest atmosphere, and your only goal (at first, anyway) is to figure out how to progress to the next screen by solving increasingly complex environmental puzzles. That all sounds simple (and familiar) enough, but what sets Animal Well apart is its singular atmosphere (the pixel graphics are deceptively simple), excellent and ever-changing play mechanics, and quirky sense of humor.

Read the IGN review.

Buy it digitally (24.99)


Disco Elysium: The Final Cut

IGN rating: 10

A cross between a role playing game and an interactive novel, Disco Elysium is as difficult to describe as it is to get out of your head once you've started wandering down its myriad winding narrative rabbit holes. You play as a detective who has lost your memory and must navigate a fictional seaside city still recovering from a war years in the past. Through conversations with NPCs that involving branching conversational choices, you come to learn more about your past and discover your place in a strange world where reality (or your sanity) are less than reliable. This isn't a game for people who love a lot of action and combat, but it is unmatched as an example of interactive storytelling.

Read the IGN review.

Buy it digitally ($39.99) | Buy a physical copy ($25.50)


Pentiment

IGN rating: 10

Originally an Xbox exclusive, this unique role-playing game puts you in control of Andreas Maler, an artist in 16th-century Germany who becomes embroiled in a succession of murder mysteries that you can solve by investigating the possible subjects through exploration and conversations. The narrative is uniquely open, allowing you to weigh the evidence you collect to decide who to accuse of the crime—whether you think they did it, or you just think they are most deserving of being punished. All of this unfolds via gorgeous 2D graphics based on the style of medieval paintings, manuscripts, and woodcuts, giving the impression you're playing one of the protagonist's artworks come to life.

Read the IGN review.

Buy it digitally ($19.99)


Braid: Anniversary Edition

IGN rating: 8.5

A standout success from the early days of indie console gaming, Braid has finally made its way to the Switch in an anniversary edition with significantly overhauled graphics but the same tried-and-true play mechanics. Braid is a puzzle-based platformer (or a platforming-based puzzler?) in which you play as a boy name Tim trying to save a princess, though the story is a lot more complex than it seems on the surface, with lots of text boxes that reveal the hero's inner thoughts and motivations. But that's all window dressing for the gameplay itself, which requires you to use a series of evolving time-manipulating mechanics to solve increasingly complex environmental puzzles. If it feels a little familiar in 2024, it's still a fantastic game.

Read the IGN review.

Buy it digitally ($19.99)


The Case of the Golden Idol

IGN rating: N/A

If you grew up with the early '90s point-and-click adventures from companies like Sierra Games, you'll adore The Case of the Golden Idol, a throwback detective story in which you attempt to solve an archeological mystery spanning four decades by exploring crime scenes, collecting clues, and piecing together the story as you go. You can play in either "exploration" more, which unfolds like one of those aforementioned vintage point-and-click titles as you pore over moments "frozen" in time and across history; or "thinking" mode, which opens a menu of fill-in-the-blank sentences that allow you to add in words collected in exploration mode to uncover the game's backstory. (Confused? Here's a video that explains how it plays out.) This is a game that will test your wits and ask you to use deductive reasoning to figure out what's going on—it's more reflective than active, but still entirely satisfying.

Buy it digitally ($19.99)


Shovel Knight: Treasure Trove

IGN rating: 9

Have you ever played Mega Man? Shovel Knight is kinda like that. Did you ever play Duck Tales? Shovel Knight is also kinda like that. You play as the titular warrior (guess what your weapon is) on a quest to save your best friend from a group of villains calling themselves the Order of No Quarter. As you progress through each of their themed stages, you’ll navigate unique terrain and perfect your skills—which you’ll need to defeat the boss at the end. And once you’ve finished playing as Shovel Knight, you can replay the game as one of the baddies (most of whom don’t turn out to be quite as evil as they seem). More than simple reskins, these are (almost) entirely new adventures with their own play mechanics and control quirks. I couldn’t stop playing until I had finished all four of them.

Read the IGN review.

Buy it digitally ($39.99) | Buy a physical copy ($31.45)


Fez

IGN rating: 9.5

Fez is one of the most mind-expanding games I have ever played, a hybrid of platformer and puzzler in which you play a little dude living in a two-dimensional world who suddenly gains the ability to see in three dimensions. As a player, this means you have the ability to, with a tap of the shoulder button, rotate the world on its axis; when viewed from a different angle, platforms that once seemed out of reach are an easy jump away, and hidden doors are revealed around the back side of a tree trunk. You set off on a quest to explore your new, wider world—and to save it—and you’ll need to use your new abilities to their fullest if you want to figure out how to do it. There are no enemies to defeat, only interlocking levels to navigate and traverse between, and a handful of nigh-impossible puzzles to solve. There’s even an alien language you can learn to decode (or, if you value your sanity, you can just look up hints online). Also, the music totally slaps.

Read the IGN review.

Buy it digitally ($14.99)


Sayonara Wild Hearts

IGN rating: 7.9

The gorgeous rhythm game-slash-interactive music video plays like a dream (because, conceptual spoiler alert, it kinda is one): You play a young woman chasing (or running from) a bunch of stylish baddies across forests and cityscapes, training your reflexes and tapping buttons at just the right moment in time to the synth pop soundtrack, which sounds like a whole album’s worth of Chvrches B-sides. If you just want to race through it, you can finish it in about two hours, but the gameplay and the tunes are so addictive you’ll be coming back again and again, stretching for that high score.

Read the IGN review.

Buy it digitally ($12.99) | Buy a physical copy ($24.99)


The Messenger

IGN rating: 8

Like Shovel Knight, The Messenger takes one of the best games of the ‘80s and betters it by fixing everything that was broken or frustrating about it. This time, the original model being iterated upon is Ninja Gaiden, a classic NES platformer in which you play as a ninja fighting to avenge the death of his father by jumping, flipping, climbing walls, and stabbing a countless number of infinitely generating enemies. It was one of my favorite games as a kid (I was so into the story I even read the novelization), but I was never good enough to beat it, even with the help of a Game Genie, because it’s fiendishly difficult. The Messenger offers basically the same gameplay, but with helpful additions like more frequent save points and the ability to enhance your armor and weapons. Sure, it’s easier, but it’s hardly easy—and the kooky storyline, rife with self-aware humor commenting on the inherent absurdity of gaming in general, only makes it better.

Read the IGN review.

Buy it digitally ($16.99)


Iconoclasts

IGN rating: 8.4

The product of a single developer, Joakim Sandberg, Iconoclasts has all the platforming polish of a game produced with a big team, but the idiosyncratic quirks that suggest a singular vision at work. You play as a young engineer in a techno-dystopian world where mechanical know-how is outlawed and the ruling class controls access to energy-supplying “ivory” with literally religious fervor. OK, so the story is a bit of a head-scratcher (I’ve finished the game and barely understand it), but the gameplay is absolutely fantastic: A Mega Man-influenced Metroidvania in which you use your stun gun and wrench to blast and whack enemies and solve complex environmental puzzles. I loved every minute of it. 

Read the IGN review.

Buy it digitally ($19.99)


Death’s Door

IGN rating: 9

If you love Zelda-likes, Death’s Door is one of my favorites, and was one of the best games of 2021. In this isometric adventure, you play as a soul-collecting crow in the employ of Death himself. When your latest reaping goes wrong, you become an unwitting investigator into a vast conspiracy that spans life and death as you make your way through three dungeons to collect enough soul power to open “death’s door.” The game offers a marvelous mix of exploration and combat—perhaps a bit too much of the latter; unless you’re a lot better than I am, you’ll need to grind your way through scores of regular baddies to upgrade your spells, defenses, and weapons until you are strong enough to take on the big bosses. But the oddball humor, quirky characters, and melancholy atmosphere will make doing so a pleasure.

Read the IGN review.

Buy it digitally ($19.99) | Buy a physical copy ($19.99)


Celeste

IGN rating: 10

Celeste is a breathless platformer in which you play a young woman facing fears both literal and metaphorical as she climbs to the summit of a mystical mountain. There’s not much more to the story than that, yet this award-winning game has one of the most affecting narratives I’ve ever experienced, probably because making my way to the emotional ending involved powering my way through some of the well-designed, punishingly difficult, yet somehow never frustrating platforming I’ve ever experienced. The game is built on a single, deceivingly simple mechanic—your character’s ability to string together multiple jumps before your stamina drops and forces you to touch solid ground again—that you’ll have to master with precision if you hope to make it to the summit. Best of all, if you ever get stuck, the game allows you to access a deep menu of accessibility options that can help you across a rough patch. (Though I found finally clearing a screen after dozens of deaths or more—my total death count for the entire game was in the thousands—so satisfying, I never turned them on.)

Read the IGN review.

Buy it digitally ($19.99) | Buy a physical copy ($34.99)


Hades

IGN review: 9

This is tops on every list of the best indie games of the past decade, and with good reason. You play as Zagreus, a child of Hades (yes, that one), on a hopeless quest to fight off the endless hordes of hell, escape the underworld, and reunite with your mother on Earth. And when I say hopeless, I mean it: By design, you’re going to die a lot playing this game (repeated failure being a hallmark of the “rogue lite” genre; each time you die, you’ll carry over some of your strength, loot, and experience to the next run). While a game designed to kill you over and over and over and over might sound like a slog, Hades makes it fun as, each time you set out to be slaughtered, you’ll suck a little less, and progress a little farther. And that’s not even taking into account the fantastic story, which develops slowly over time as you talk with (and occasionally slaughter) your fellow citizens of hell; the narrative is unparalleled for the genre, presented with pitch-perfect voice acting and memorable character designs.

Read the IGN review.

Buy it digitally ($24.99) | Buy a physical copy ($29.99)


Cuphead

IGN review: 8.8

If Hades didn’t turn you into a glutton for punishment, Cuphead will finish the job. It’s a “run and gun” shooter in which you play as a guy with a cup for a head. (Just go with it—the game’s old time-y cartoon visuals and humor are half of the fun, and even spawned an animated Netflix series). You’ve accidentally sold your soul to the devil, and you have to work for him as a bounty hunter if you want to get it back. This entails taking on 16 bosses (90% of the game is boss fights), each more frenetic than the last. As you progress, you can upgrade your weapons and gain more health, and you’ll probably need it: Claiming each boss’s soul requires quick reflexes, a good memory for patterns, and a lot of determination—before I hit a wall after a dozen or so victories, I’d died something like 300 times. It’s the hardest game I’ve ever played.

Read the IGN review.

Buy it digitally ($19.99/$26.99 with the Delicious Last Course) | Buy a physical copy ($29.99 with The Delicious Last Course)


A Little to the Left

If you prefer a puzzle game that will put you in a Zen state (or maybe activate your OCD), this recent release is a winner. Each of its many puzzles presents you with a scene of objects in disarray—a messy toolbox, or an overcrowded bookshelf. It’s up to you to decide how to put them back in order. How you go about it will depend on how your brain works, and what says “organized” to you; every puzzle has multiple solutions, and finding one that works is like scratching an itch—entirely satisfying, until it triggers another itch a little to the left.

Check it out on IGN.

Buy it digitally ($14.99)


Neon White

IGN rating: 8

I don’t know how to describe this game, and watching the video above is probably only marginally helpful. But basically, you are an undead demon assassin guy and you have to make your way through hundreds of precariously designed levels as quickly as possible by using the powers granted to you by a mountain of weapons, which you activate by burning through a deck of playing cards, in the hopes of winning a place in heaven. Sacrificing a particular gun/card will grant you a special move, from an extra jump to a burst of smashing speed, to help you traverse the hazardous terrain. The point is to finish as fast as you can. No, I don’t understand it either, and I’ve already played it. But once you’ve oriented yourself, it’s a good time—and the story is fun too.

Read the IGN review.

Buy it digitally ($24.99) | Buy a physical copy ($39.99)


Golf Story

IGN rating: 7.5

A chill RPG built around golf was not exactly on my list of must-haves when I got my Switch, and yet here we are. You play a determined golfer who has one last shot at living out their dreams of glory on the greens—but doing so will mean exploring, traversing, and conquering eight unique courses that mimic the sort of lands you’d venture through on a traditional fantasy adventure. It’s just that this time, instead of battle monsters and summoning demons to fight battles for you, you’re teeing off and perfecting your putt—in between side quests you can take on to help out the weird characters you meet along the way. Because while you might not expect much in the way of plot from an ostensible sports game, this one isn’t kidding about the word “Story” in the title. This one is packed with funky humor and otherworldly vibes that will appeal to Earthbound fans. Stardew who?

Read the IGN review.

Buy it digitally ($14.99)


Stardew Valley

IGN rating: 9.5

OK, fine. I’ll mention this one too; Stardew Valley is ostensibly a farming sim, but it’s so much deeper than that. It’s a game you can basically play forever. As Brendan Hesse put it on this site:

Players sew and grow crops, mine for ore, fish, and even battle monsters in the surrounding wilderness, then sell their harvests to upgrade their homes and tools. Along with the farming sim and light action-RPG gameplay, you also venture into town to mingle with the townsfolk, taking on errands and side-quests for them. You can even date and marry several of the characters.

Developed by just one guy, who goes by the moniker ConcernedApe, this game has made its creator something like $30 million, and he deserves every penny of it.

Read the IGN review.

Buy it digitally ($14.99) | Buy a physical copy ($36.80)


Cave Story

IGN rating: 8.5

Don’t let Cave Story’s super simple graphics fool you—this game is no relic of the 8-bit era, but a loving tribute to (and arguable improvement upon) old school adventure platformers like Metroid and Castlevania—and, like Stardew Valley and Iconoclasts, it was developed and programmed over five years by a single game designer, Daisuke Amaya. You play as a robot that has lost his memory, and you must travel through an underground landscape seeking an escape, and to solve the mystery of your origins along the way. Controls that seem stiff at first eventually reveal themselves to be perfectly calibrated as you upgrade your weapons and obtain new equipment that will soon have you zipping your way back through areas that kicked your ass the first time through.

Read the IGN review.

Buy it digitally ($29.99)


Overboard

A “choose your own path” interactive narrative in which you play as a 1930s actress whose star is fading—a passenger on a cruise ship a few hours out of port in New York City whose husband has gone missing...because you pushed him overboard during the night. It’s up to you to navigate the ship, and your conversations with your fellow passengers, such that your crime remains undetected until you disembark. With an arch sense of humor and a branching narrative that allows multiple paths to victory, it’s the cozy interactive mystery you didn’t know you were missing.

Check it out on IGN.

Buy it digitally ($14.99) | Buy a physical copy ($26.99, also includes 80 Days)


Untitled Goose Game

IGN rating: 8

In this game, you play as a curious goose with a penchant for creating havoc in and around a formerly idyllic village community. As you waddle around from place to place, you are given checklists of random tasks to complete, from collecting an entire place setting from an outdoor restaurant to locking a hapless gardener out of his yard. Figuring out how to complete them requires creativity and a grasp of cause-and-effect logic bordering on the absurd. And when that gets too frustrating, you can take a breather and run around honking at children and stealing a shopkeeper’s wares. It’s pure chaos with feathers.

Read the IGN review.

Buy it digitally ($19.99) | Buy a physical copy ($22.49)


What Remains of Edith Finch

IGN rating: 8.8

A somber, rewarding psychological journey, What Remains of Edith Finch is a interactive narrative in which you explore the broken history of a family across generations, the story unfolding in episodic chapters as you explore the family home. It might be a stretch to call it a game, as you mostly progress through it in a straightforward manner, without getting caught up on any obstacles along the way, but meandering around the estate under your own steam gives the haunted story—possibly involving a family curse that has claimed one generation after another—a truly immersive quality.

Read the IGN review.

Buy it digitally ($19.99)


Return of the Obra Dinn

IGN rating: 9.2

A decidedly lo-fi puzzler that wears its grainy aesthetic like a badge of honor, The Return of the Obra Dinn is an atmospheric first-person detective game that takes you aboard the titular vessel, which has returned from a journey minus all of its passengers. It’s up to you to explore the ship and find out everything you can about who was aboard it and what happened to them. In defiance of video game cliche, there are no light up arrows or glowing objects to guide your investigation, meaning you’ll have to be both creative and thorough in your search to solve the mystery of what befell the ship.

Read the IGN review.

Buy it digitally ($19.99)


Tunic

IGN rating: 9

This game was a lifesaver after I finished Death’s Door and was desperate for another, similar experience. Like that earlier game of the year contender, Tunic is a Zelda-esque adventure starring a small, adorable animal who sets off on a magical quest that’s pure vibes (when it isn’t maddeningly tough combat and complex puzzle-solving). The quirky twist here is that all of the in-game signs and speech are printed in an incomprehensible non-language, which means you have to work extra hard to figure out how to navigate the land and clear the many roadblocks standing in your way. It can be frustrating at first, but once you get the hang of it, the game cracks open and becomes a truly satisfying action-adventure experience—familiar, but wholly different.

Read the IGN review.

Buy it digitally ($29.99) | Buy a physical copy ($44.99)


Hollow Knight

IGN review: 9.4

Left off of the original version of this list and its absence pointed out in the comments (as expected), Hollow Knight is one of the most successful and fanatically worshipped indie games of recent years, and deservedly so. It’s a sprawling Metroidvania adventure in which you play a cute little bone knight exploring a post-apocalyptic world in search of his past, facing impossibly complex environmental puzzles and fiendishly difficult combat. With an artful aesthetic that seems like a cross between Tim Burton and classic Disney animation, it’s truly worth getting lost in (which is good, because finishing it will take you dozens of hours).

Read the IGN review.

Buy it digitally ($14.99) | Buy a physical copy ($34.99)

This article was originally published in December 2022 and updated in May 2024 to add new context, additional titles, as well as score ratings and links to IGN reviews.

How to Get Past a Paywall to Read an Article for Free

21 May 2024 at 14:00

Over the past several years, countless websites have added paywalls. If you want to read their articles, you have to sign up and pay a monthly subscription cost. Some sites have a “metered” paywall—meaning you can read a certain number of articles for free before they ask for money—and others have a hard paywall, where you’ll have to pay to read even one article.

Paywalls are mostly an thing with news websites, largely because relying on advertising income alone isn’t a viable strategy anymore, and news companies are pursuing more direct revenue sources, like monthly subscriptions. Of course, paywalls aren’t entirely a bad thing—it’s worth it to support journalism you find valuable, so by all means, if you can afford to pay to read articles, you absolutely should. But whether you lost your password, haven’t saved it on your phone, are in a rush, or are just strapped for cash and promise yourself that you’ll subscribe later, there are several ways to bypass paywalls on the internet.

You may be able to use some of these methods successfully today, but that could change in the future as websites clamp down on bypass methods. If nothing else, I hope you support the websites that you do read—especially your friendly local news outlet. But if you can’t right now, here are some of the best ways to bypass paywalls online.

Paste the headline into Google

The simplest ways are often the best. There are plenty of paywalled websites that have an arrangement that lets people arriving from Google search access their articles for free. Your first port of call should be to copy the headline and paste it into the search bar on Google. The article should appear as the first result, so just click that to read it for free.

Try a Facebook redirect

Some paywalled websites let readers arriving from Facebook read articles for free, and the method works even if you don’t have a Facebook account. To do it, open the article you want to read and go to the address bar of your web browser. Now paste https://facebook.com/l.php?u= before the URL of the paywalled article and open the page. This’ll show you a Facebook redirect page, and you can click Follow Link to open the website. The paywalled article should now be free to read.

Open the link in an incognito window

Another quick way is to open the paywalled articles in an incognito window in your web browser. Just note that this method works with metered paywalls only. If you’ve used up your free article quota for the month on any website, opening its articles in an incognito window could let you keep reading without paying yet.

Disable JavaScript in your browser

Some websites use JavaScript to hide content behind paywalls, and you can circumvent those blocks by disabling JavaScript in your browser. Note that disabling JavaScript can (and will) break most websites—some may not let you view comments, while others may not load at all. But it’s worth trying if you just need to read the content of the post.

Ideally, you’d use a separate browser for this so that you don’t have to keep enabling and disabling JavaScript. Once you’ve chosen your secondary browser, check out our guide to disabling JavaScript in various ones.

Enable "reader mode"

Most modern browsers now have a "reader mode" that strips extraneous elements from the page (like ads, formatting, and empty space). As a bonus, reader mode will sometimes also allow you to bypass paywalls. This article will tell you how to use reader mode in Safari, Firefox, Edge, and Chrome.

Use a VPN

Some paywalled sites, like The Washington Post, will let you read a limited number of articles for free each month, then throw up the wall once you've hit the limit. You can use a VPN to change up your IP address and trick the site into giving you more freebies. This method won't help you on sites that don't offer any free access, but it's worth trying, and will work with both paid and free VPNs.

Use Bypass Paywalls from GitHub

If you're using a Chromium-based browser (Chrome, Edge) or Firefox, you can install the Bypass Paywalls extension from GitHub. It's slightly intimidating if you've never installed an extension outside of the Chrome Web Store, but it's pretty simple—just click this link and follow the instructions for your browser of choice. For Chrome, for example, that involved downloading the extension, turning on "Developer Mode" in the browser's settings, and dragging the extension file into the browser window. Once completed successfully, this extension grants seamless, paywall-free access to more than 160 sites, including Vulture, The New York Times, and The Wall Street Journal—there's a complete list on the GitHub resource page. (Hat tip to reader dsww in the comments for pointing this one out.)

Try another browser add-on

There are lots of browser extensions that allow you to bypass paywalls on many websites. For academic articles, Unpaywall (Firefox, Chrome) is a good choice. For Chrome or Edge, you can also try Postlight Reader, which can also do you the favor of cleaning away the clutter of ads and generally making online content easier to read.

Edit a couple of elements on the webpage

If you understand a bit of HTML and CSS, you can edit elements using your browser to go past some paywalls. Essentially, you’re editing the page to remove the banners that lock content behind a subscription. It’s a lot like opening the curtains to reveal the nice view outside your window.

It works with some websites, but others have added a hard block that reveals the article only if you’ve signed in with a paid account. Still, it’s worth trying once to see if it works:

On any website, right-click the banner just below the last visible sentence of the article and select Inspect Element. This will open up a console where you can search for the offending elements and hide or change them. The exact element varies from site to site, but it’s often labeled display, paywall, or subscribe. Here’s a neat GIF on Reddit that shows you how to get it done.

Use 12ft.io

12ft.io is a simple website created with the sole purpose of breaking through paywalls—and it's so simple to use, it appears to have become an easy target for those who'd like to keep you from easily bypassing a paywall. A few months ago, the site was taken offline (the link returned an error message reading ”This Deployment has been disabled. Your connection is working correctly. Vercel is working correctly,” whatever that means). It's now back, but who knows for how long. (Previously, there was an alternative, 1ft.io, that worked in much the same way, but the developer recently shut it down permanently, as evidenced by an announcement posted to that URL.)

To use 12ft.io, simply paste the paywalled link in the text field and hit “Submit.” (Alternately, you can type “https://12ft.io/” before the URL in your browser bar.) The site will then show you the cached, “unpaywalled version” of the page. The only problem is that the site doesn't always work on all websites (The Wall Street Journal being a notable example). If you get the “access denied” message, try this next tool.

Use Archive.today to archive the page

Archive.today is a website that archives any website you paste the link on their bar. Think of it like taking a screenshot of any website with a time stamp (a self-described “time capsule,” if you will). It “saves a text and a graphical copy of the page for better accuracy” and gives you a short link to an unalterable record of any web page. As a bonus, you can often use this functionality to bypass a paywall and read the entire article. Pate your link into the black “I want to search the archive for saved snapshots” bar. If the article you’re trying to bypass isn’t already archived, then put the URL into the red “My URL is alive and I want to archive its content” bar. This tool is a good bet if 12ft.io has already failed you.

Spaywall promises to "legally bypass paywalls"

Another site that works similarly to 12ft.io and Archive.today, Spaywall states that the site "legally [bypasses] paywalls by redirecting you to archived news and research papers." In testing links, it appears it takes the site a big longer to archive pages than some of your other options, so it's probably best for reading older articles.

Use a paywall bypass shortcut on Android

If you are trying to read a paywalled article on an Android phone, you can get around it with the Bypass Paywalls Clean browser extension. This extension used to be available for Firefox but has been removed from the Mozilla store. However, you can add it to a different browser; Reddit users recommend trying the Kiwi browser.

Use a paywall bypass shortcut on iPhone

The last method on our list works only on iPhones: Apple’s free Shortcuts app lets you run automation routines on your iPhone, and its tools have been used to bypass paywalls on various websites. There are plenty of these shortcuts, and they may all not work with all websites. Get started by trying AntiPaywall, Bypass Paywall, Paywall and Cookie Bypass, or Unpaywall.

Check if your local library provides access

Many libraries offer access to paid magazine and newspaper subscriptions online. Typically you'll have to go to your library's website, log in with your card number or account details, and then access different publications indirectly, via the library's portal (for example, if you live in Marin County, California, you can easily read The Washington Post for free). There are too many library systems out there to count, so you may or may not be lucky enough to be in one that allows this perk, but it's worth a shot; since the library is paying the publication for the service, you don't even need to feel guilty. (Not sure if your system has a news portal? Ask your local librarian!)

Ask a subscriber for a "gift article"

This one isn't likely to be feasible often, but it's worth a shot for when you're trying to read that one paywalled article that's going viral: Many publications allow paid subscribers to "gift" a copy of a certain number of articles every month (The Washington Post and The New York Times each allows gifting 10 articles per month, for example). If you know your aunt subscribes to The New York Times, it can't hurt to ask if she's willing to gift you the occasional read.

Buy a single article with Blendle

If you can't pay for a subscription but don't mind paying for a single article, you can try the Blendle app. This news aggregator partners with publications and will sell you a single article for a nominal fee—according to the App Store page, most articles cost a quarter. The downside: The selection of publishers is limited in the U.S. (the company is based in Europe), but includes The New York Times, Vanity Fair, The New Yorker, and more.

Where to Find (Legal) Weed in the U.S. in 2024

17 May 2024 at 12:00

During his 2024 State of the Union address, President Joe Biden affirmed his position that the U.S. needs to change the way it polices cannabis, stating "‘No one should be jailed for using or possessing marijuana." This past week, he reiterated those beliefs in a video released to social media, while announcing that the federal government had reclassified cannabis from a Schedule I drug to Schedule III.

What does that mean, exactly? Reclassifying cannabis as a Schedule III drug is a major change in federal policy, but it is not the same as federal legalization. Instead, it means cannabis is no longer classed with more serious Schedule I (drugs considered to have "no medical use" and a high potential for abuse; examples include heroin and ecstasy). Schedule III drugs are considered to have a mild to low risk of physical or psychological dependance.

While the reclassification won't federally legalize the drug, nor change its legal status at the local level in states that have legalized medical or recreational use, it could make it easier for scientists to research its benefits for medical use, as well as allow business to claim more credits and deductions on their federal taxes.

Federal policy is following public sentiment

Biden's recent announcement mirrors changing public opinion on the drug, and follows a surge in state-level legalization efforts. In the wake of the November 2023 election, when voters in the conservative state of Ohio overwhelmingly voted to legalize the recreational use of cannabis, nearly half of U.S. states have now legalized the recreational use of cannabis.

Ohio was the third state, following Delaware and Minnesota, to pass legalization measures in 2023, bringing the number of states where recreational use is permitted to 24; cannabis (as opposed to THC-free CBD) is still (more or less) wholly illegal in 12 states, while the remainder allow for legal medical use, with varying restrictions.

Here’s a rundown of where weed is legal for recreational and medical use (and where it isn’t) as of May 2024.

States that legalized weed in 2023

In addition to Ohio, which legalized recreational cannabis via a ballot measure, Delaware and Minnesota changed their laws via legislation earlier this year.

States that have legalized recreational marijuana

In 24 states, including 2023's new additions, weed is treated like alcohol—it’s legal for adults (21 and over) to purchase and is regulated and taxed by the government. The specifics of what you can purchase and possess (and where) vary a bit by state. These states also have medical marijuana.

  • Alaska

  • Arizona

  • California

  • Colorado

  • Connecticut

  • Delaware

  • Illinois

  • Maine

  • Maryland

  • Massachusetts

  • Michigan

  • Minnesota

  • Missouri

  • Montana

  • Nevada

  • New Jersey

  • New Mexico

  • New York

  • Ohio

  • Oregon

  • Rhode Island

  • Vermont

  • Virginia

  • Washington

Recreational weed is also legal in Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands.

Areas that have legal weed but no sales

In the District of Columbia, it’s legal to possess and grow limited amounts of weed, but there are no commercial sales outside of medical marijuana from a limited number of licensed dispensaries.

States that have medical cannabis laws

A number of states have legalized medical marijuana but do not allow broader recreational use.

  • Alabama

  • Arkansas

  • Delaware*

  • Florida

  • Hawaii*

  • Kentucky

  • Louisiana

  • Minnesota*

  • New Hampshire*

  • New Mexico*

  • North Dakota*

  • South Dakota

  • Ohio*

  • Oklahoma

  • Pennsylvania

  • Puerto Rico

  • South Dakota

  • Utah

  • Virginia*

  • West Virginia

*According to the Marijuana Policy Project, these states have also decriminalized marijuana, reducing or removing jail time for possession of limited amounts of weed.

States that have decriminalized weed

Nebraska and North Carolina have laws that decriminalize marijuana to a degree, meaning penalties for first-time possession of small amounts of weed are reduced. Both have a suspended sentence for a first offense—Nebraska imposes a fine and a possible drug education course. Medical marijuana legislation has failed in both states.

States that have (almost) nothing

The remaining states do not permit broad medical or recreational marijuana—nor is weed decriminalized—though all except for Idaho allow access to low-THC products containing CBD for medical use (which, while technically “legal medical cannabis,” isn’t quite the same thing as a robust legal medical market).

  • Georgia

  • Idaho

  • Indiana

  • Iowa

  • Kansas

  • Nebraska

  • North Carolina

  • South Carolina

  • Tennessee

  • Texas

  • Wisconsin

  • Wyoming

The legal status of hemp-derived cannabis

All of the above references cannabis containing delta 9 THC, the intoxicating substance in the cannabis plant. However, new extraction techniques have allowed manufacturers to create synthetic forms of cannabis derived from hemp plants, including delta 8 THC and, more recently, THCa.

These substances are federally "legal" due to a loophole in the 2018 Farm Bill that allowed for the cultivation of hemp. While some states have tried to rein in these products with local legislation, they continue to proliferate, providing a (more or less) legal alternative to tried-and-true cannabis—though the lack of regulations governing their manufacture has raised questions about their safety.

Originally published in 2020, this article has been updated periodically to reflect changing laws around the country. It was most recently updated in May 2024.

❌
❌