Installing Amazon Games interactively is fine when you're sitting at the machine. When you're deploying to 50 machines or building a CI image, you want a one-line silent install. Here's how winget does it.
Quick answer
Open Terminal as Administrator and run:
winget install --id Amazon.Games -e --silent --accept-package-agreements --accept-source-agreements
Amazon Games: Amazon Games app is a Windows PC game launcher that allows you to claim, download, and play new and classic Windows PC games every month from Prime Gaming.
Typical install time: 10–60 seconds depending on installer size.
What gets installed
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Package ID | Amazon.Games |
| Publisher | Amazon.com Services, Inc. |
| Installer type | EXE |
| License | Proprietary |
| Latest version | 3.0.9700.3 |
| Last release | 7/22/2025 |
| Minimum OS | Windows 10+ |
| Homepage | gaming.amazon.com |
Generic EXE installers vary — winget install --silent makes a best-effort to pass the right flag.
Per-user install (no admin)
If you don't have admin rights, try per-user scope:
winget install --id Amazon.Games -e --scope user --silent
If the manifest doesn't have a user-scope installer, winget falls back with an error — in that case you genuinely need admin or use the Access denied fix.
Specify a version
To pin a known-good version (useful for reproducible CI / team standardisation):
winget install --id Amazon.Games -e --version 3.0.9700.3 --silent
List available versions:
winget show --id Amazon.Games --versions
Override silent flags
If winget's --silent doesn't fully suppress the installer's UI, pass native flags via --override:
winget install --id Amazon.Games -e --override "varies by vendor"
These are the EXE-native silent switches the installer recognises.
Verify after install
winget list --id Amazon.Games
If the version is shown, the install succeeded.
Upgrade silently
winget upgrade --id Amazon.Games -e --silent --accept-package-agreements --accept-source-agreements
Or upgrade as part of a bulk weekly cron — see How to update all Windows apps.
Uninstall silently
winget uninstall --id Amazon.Games --silent --disable-interactivity
Detailed guide: How to uninstall Windows apps with winget.
In a provisioning script
PowerShell snippet for unattended Windows setup:
$apps = @(
"Amazon.Games"
# add more packages here
)
foreach ($id in $apps) {
winget install --id $id -e --silent `
--accept-package-agreements --accept-source-agreements
}
Wrap in Task Scheduler for one-shot machine provisioning. See Fresh Windows 11 setup.
Common errors
"Amazon Games is already installed" — winget detected the existing install. To force-reinstall over the existing copy:
winget install --id Amazon.Games -e --silent --force
"Installer hash does not match" — Amazon.com Services, Inc. published a new version before the winget manifest updated. Wait ~24 hours or pass --force. See hash mismatch fix.
"Access denied" / 0x80070005 — run Terminal as Administrator. See Access denied fix.
0x80073D02 — package in use — Amazon Games is currently running. Close it then retry. See package in use fix.
See also
- Amazon Games on winget.tech → — full package details
- How to install Windows apps with winget → — beginner guide
- Winget commands cheatsheet → — complete reference
- Fresh Windows 11 setup → — full machine workflow