Where To Buy Xbox One Games
The Xbox One has entered its tenth year on the market alongside the PS4, and it may not be long before Microsoft phases out the old console completely in favor of releasing games only on Xbox Series X/S. The one thing it has in common with its successor, though, is that it has become the first console to be carbon aware thanks to a new firmware update, which defaults it to an energy-saving mode when downloading games and updates, among other functions. Now you can save energy while playing your favorite Xbox games, especially our selection of 25 Xbox One games.
where to buy xbox one games
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No Man's Sky Next is the story that the entire industry points to when looking for a comback tale and it's well deserved. Hello Games managed to continue supporting No Man's Sky with several updates that added quality of life features, like Expeditions that add a new set of challenges you can play with your friends, or the overhauled space stations, new enemies, cross-platform bases, and a ton of other community asks. Hello Games really does deserve credit because what they've created is beloved by players everywhere.
The original Titanfall was great, but the sequel delivered everything the first game failed to: an outstanding single-player campaign and some meat on Titanfall's strong but otherwise skinny multiplayer bones. The multiplayer part was obvious: more Titans, more game modes, more maps, etc. And Titanfall 2 delivered there. But that campaign almost came out of nowhere. It may not have had much of a story, but it's one of the best shooter campaigns of this generation on the back of its smart, variety-is-king design. You'll see when we mean when you get to *that* gameplay twist.
Ori and the Will of the Wisps picks up the torch that Blind Forest lit in 2015 and carries it to new heights. The foundation was already there, but Moon Studios spent the five years between games building out a livelier world, a fully-loaded moveset with a new emphasis on combat, and another helping of bittersweet story. Ori and the Will of the Wisps is one of the best platformers you will find on any platform thanks to its creative puzzles and periods of racing platforming punctuated with soulful moments that give its characters a chance to breathe and shine.
We may be more than two years into the lifespan of the Xbox Series X, but that doesn't render the best Xbox One games moot. That's because many of them have been optimized to run on Microsoft's flagship console and its less-powerful sibling, the Xbox Series S.
Do bear in mind, these are what we'd consider the best games to play on the Xbox One, as well as the newer consoles. While the likes of Halo Infinite and Forza Horizon 5 run on the Xbox One, we feel they are best played on the Series X and Series S so are omitted from this list.
The third entry in the Witcher series takes protagonist Geralt of Rivera throughout the world of The Continent as he searches for his lost love and his adopted daughter. With what we reckon is one of the best open-world role-playing games around, The Witcher 3 is a game players should expect to spend at least 100 hours exploring.
Gears 5 is the biggest and most beautiful entry yet in Microsoft's enduring third-person shooter franchise, and one of the best Xbox One games yet. Focusing this time on Kait Diaz and her quest to understand her Locust heritage, Gears 5's ambitious campaign mixes in vehicular open-world exploration to complement the most satisfying and dynamic cover shooting the series has seen yet.
You'll once again play as both Leon Kennedy and Claire Redfield, both of whom have a unique storyline that remixes elements from the original games complete with the most immersive, cinematic cutscenes the series has seen yet. Resident Evil 2 isn't just a great remake, it's practically a brand new game, and one of the most delightfully dreadful horror experiences you can have on Xbox One.
Drawing inspiration from the Dark Souls games, like a lot of games do these days, Hollow Knight saw us delve deeper into the enigmatic land of Hallownest resting at benches to recover health and energy, which also happens to respawn dispatched enemies.
Bundling all three of the latest Hitman games into one, the World of Assassination trilogy offers one of the best stealth game experiences we've ever played. Rather than sneaking the shadows your player character 47 and his trademark bald bonce hide in plain sight thanks to copious use of disguises.
As it the standard with Souls-like games, the story is obtuse and can be teased out through reading item descriptions and chatting to characters sprinkled across the world. And Elden Ring is, of course, a challenging game. But as we said in our Elden Ring review, thanks to the open world if you get stuck you can always take another route to gain the skills and experience you need to progress. For Dark Souls fans, Elden Ring is not a game to miss.
If you're looking at this list then you pretty much can't go wrong with any one of these Xbox One games. But ultimately, picking the best one for you will all come down to your personal gaming tastes. There is no one best game overall.
However, if you have a wide range of gaming tastes then we'd suggest you give as many of the games above a go, especially as plenty of them are available on Xbox Game Pass. So really, other than a bit of downloading and storage space, you can't really lose when it comes to picking the best Xbox One game.
You can also send add-ons and subscriptions as gifts, such as Xbox Game Pass Ultimate! With the Ultimate membership, you get all the benefits of Xbox Live Gold, over 100 high-quality games you can play on console, PC, and Android devices with cloud gaming (Beta, where available), and access to EA Play at no extra cost. All together as one gift.
Let's celebrate Microsoft's last generation console by running down the best Xbox One games of all time. These games live on, of course, through the Xbox Series X and on PC too, and via Xbox Game Pass too, so there's plenty of time to catchup and dive in. While we're here to celebrate the best Xbox One games, we still have so many upcoming Xbox One games to look forward to as well.
With a helping of Xbox exclusives and memorable third-party games, this selection covers a broad range of genres. So if you're looking to tuck into your backlog or perhaps explore some games you might have missed, you're sure to find something here for you. And if you're jumping over to the next-gen, we've also rounded up the most exciting upcoming Xbox Series X games along with the best Xbox Series X games to get stuck into right now.
The Final Fantasy name isn't exactly synonymous with Microsoft's console, but we're happy just the same as Final Fantasy 15 is easily one of the best RPGs of the year, and one of the best Xbox One games. It blends the vast open-worlds of Western RPGs with Final Fantasy's hallmark over-the-top anime absurdity to great effect, crafting a world based on the highways and byways of Middle America while filling that world with ferocious monsters, massive crystals, and powerful magic. There are times when Final Fantasy 15 feels like an idiosyncratic mishmash of ideas, but when you throw everything together - the strange world, the thrilling, real-time combat, the lovable characters who stick with you for your entire journey - it becomes something much greater than the sum of its parts. It becomes one of the best Final Fantasy games in ages; a game well worth the wait.
*braces for complaints* Yes, we are well aware of the problems that plagued this particular entry, but now that it works, there's no doubting the craftsmanship here and its place in our best Xbox One games list. Bungie's genius meets 343's love in a package that truly does justice to an industry-shaking legacy. Buffed-up, re-varnished and back in the shop window, The Master Chief Collection leaves us to wonder if Halo always looked so lovely. And you know what? It more or less did.
It's a little late to the Xbox One party but a wait that's been worthwhile as Nier: Automata - Become as Gods Edition, brings a 4K edition of Platinum's esoteric action adventure complete with DLC and extra costumes. It's a strange and unusual game about androids questioning the nature of existence via beating up robots and cleverly crafted homages to other games - when you're not mastering the acrobatic gunplay, the camera plays with angles that turn this into things like a topdown shooter, or aside scrolling brawler. Other interesting ideas see things like a chip system that lets you automate parts of the game you might struggle with. For example, if you're not great at dodging, an auto-evade chip can take care of that for you, while leaving every other facet of combat under your control. It's odd, inventive and fascinating game hitting Xbox in its most definitive edition.
Most co-op games revolve around boosting a friend over a wall and doors that can only be opened by two people at once. A Way Out has some of that, but overall makes so much more of it's two character ideas. Both players are routinely given divergent but related objectives that keep you working together without feeling like you're joined at the hip. From jail breaks to fixing cars it uses both players' time beautifully while still fitting in great set pieces, emotional character moments, lighter moments, and a truly memorable ending.
We sort of knew what we were getting. It's big, it's buggy, it's Bethesda. Fallout 4 is a natural evolution, bringing with it the often aimless exploration, gentle humour and moral greyitude of the last two instalments, while propping it all up with a new-gen veneer. They might not be enormous shifts, but main character voice acting, better gunplay and (shock) not having to look inside crates to loot them all make this a streamlined version of a now-classic formula. Frame rate dips and occasionally horrifying glitches rear their heads as usual, but it's difficult to feel too bad when there's simply so much going on. Once again, Bethesda has crammed several games' worth of joyously inconsequential stuff in here, resulting in one of the most compulsive, moreish games of this generation. Get stuck in, and you won't emerge for weeks. 041b061a72