The Final Fantasy XIV Online director Naoki ‘Yoshi-P’ Yoshida has spoken about bringing the popular MMORPG to Nintendo platforms on multiple occasions.
During a New Year chat, he has now been asked once again about the possibility of this title coming to Switch systems and has reportedly told fans to “please look forward to it” (thanks, Livedoor).
With all the great titles 2025 has graced us with, there’s barely been time to put down the DualSense wireless controller these past 12 months. No matter what genre you favor chances are you’ve been eating well, whether it’s been big budget blockbusters like Death Stranding 2: On the Beach and Ghost of Yōtei, or instant classics like Hollow Knight: Silksong and Clair Obscur: Expedition 33.
Sure, 2026 has a lot to live up to, but even its first few months have plenty coming to PS5 and PS4. Better get your wishlists ready, things are about to get busy in the best way…
Arknights: Endfield | Jan 22 | PS5
If the tower defense role-playing game original didn’t quite scratch an itch, never fear. This space opera spinoff from the original Arknights keeps its strategic RPG stylings but ramps up the action and exploration in its lavish, yet hostile high-tech world. Gather resources to build and expand factories and bases and unleash flashy combos with a party of up to four in tactical real-time combat. And did I mention that one of the characters is a sunglasses wearing panda called Da Pan? Well, now you know.
The Seven Deadly Sins: Origin | Jan 28 | PS5
Despite its ever-ominous title, the Seven Deadly Sins series has always been a colorful RPG romp, with this latest entry reimagining its bold beginnings to tell an original story. Remaining within the fanatical world of Britannia from its manga/anime source material, you and up to five players via drop-in/out co-op can explore a massive open-world of monsters, dungeons, and a multiversal quest. Yes, that means rifts in space-time, different dimensions, and alternate timelines, to keep you on your toes.
Code Vein II | Jan 30 | PS5
Speaking of traversing timelines, fans of dystopian fantasy will feel right at home with this action RPG which tasks you to save a collapsing world across eras. With your actions as a Revenant Hunter 100 years in the past rewriting the landscape of the present, Code Vein II is a rich adventure with a customizable build system to reflect how you engage in its flashy battles and uniquely equipped partners to fight alongside you. Oh, and Code Vein veterans will be happy to know you can still drain blood from enemies to help activate special abilities.
Dragon Quest VII Reimagined | Feb 5 | PS5
If you’re anything like me, the mere mention of Dragon Quest immediately triggers its signature theme tune in your head – but that’s the perfect preface to a remake which aims to do its early 2000s PlayStation original proud. The classic tale of a fisherman’s son turned time-traveling hero has been updated, along with the addition of a well-crafted diorama visual style which makes Akira Toriyama’s iconic character designs pop off the screen. And the combat system has been improved to give you access to even more abilities and pre-emptive strikes.
Nioh 3 | Feb 6 | PS5
Team Ninja’s dark fantasy action-RPG series lets you blend samurai and ninja skills to take the fight to the powerful calamity only known as the Crucible. As samurai Tokugawa Takechiyo, the fate of Japan rests on your blade, as his jealous brother’s yokai hordes look to bring hell to humanity. You won’t just remain in the Edo period, either, as you’ll have a chance to discover the secrets of the Sengoku, Heian, and Bakumatsu eras, along with their relevant historical figures.
BlazBlue Entropy Effect X | Feb 12 | PS5
Fancy adding a bit more fight to your 2026? 91Act’s flashy roguelite platform adventure packs all the chunky, combo driven combat you expect from a BlazBlue game and slides it into the slick side-scrolling affair. Full of colorful pyrotechnics, potent power-ups, and a detailed progression system, there’s lots here to get stuck into.
Tides of Tomorrow | Feb 24 | PS5
The developers of narratively powerful procedurally-generated adventure Road 96 switches streets for seas. As part of a community of nomads called Tidewalkers, your actions shape the story in the quest to find a cure for the deadly plastification of ocean planet Elynd. But choose your actions carefully – the asynchronous multiplayer gameplay means yours and other players’ choices can affect how the world reacts to you as a Tidewalker.
No Sleep for Kaname Date – From AI: The Somnium Files | Feb 26 | PS4, PS5
Wake up, detective, it’s time to take on a new case. Internet idol Iris Sagan has apparently been abducted by aliens, and as sleuth Kaname Date only you can help her. Set between the two previous titles in the AI: The Somnium Files series, this spin-off blends a visual novel narrative with escape room puzzles and third-person exploration sequences where you enter the dreams of potential suspects for clues.
Resident Evil Requiem | Feb 27 | PS5
We’ve all been eagerly waiting to return to Racoon City. So when Resident Evil Requiem was announced you could almost taste the collective mixture of excitement and dread. The iconic survival horror series is back for another bite, this time putting curious but wholly unprepared intelligence agent Grace Ashcroft in the middle of its blood-soaked investigation. You’ll also be slipping back into the shoes of returning RE icon Leon S. Kennedy. With the freedom to choose between first and third-person viewpoints as you play, Capcom is promising classic chills that will get right up in your face, and more than likely inside some zombie guts, too.
Marathon | March | PS5
Marathon runs will get brutal fast. Bungie’s new PvPvE extraction shooter takes place in the dark sci-fi world of Tau Ceti, where rival Runners and hostile UESC security will get between you and your high-stakes heist attempts. Tense survival FPS gameplay awaits as you scavenge abandoned colony outposts stuffed with loot, stalking solo or forging fragile, on-the-fly alliances with rival crews through proximity chat in the race to extract alive.
Never Grave: The Witch and the Curse | March 5 | PS4, PS5
Let’s get straight into it – the ‘Curse’ part of the title is actually a cursed hat that you control which has the power to possess enemies and use their abilities in this colorful 2D Metroidvania roguelike. And after you’ve used their skills for combat, puzzles, and traversal, you can wind down by rebuilding your ruined village to prepare for your next run. Why not bring three other friends along for the journey via the multiplayer mode, as well?
Coffee Talk Tokyo | March 5 | PS5
If you’ve never experienced the cozy visual novel joys of Coffee Talk, then this is the ideal opportunity to grab a cup of joe and take a seat at the strangest café on the block. Spinning off from the main series, Coffee Talk Tokyo lets you hear the stories of not only people seeking meaning, but also supernatural creatures including vampires, mermaids, and ghosts looking for a little (and mostly not literal) heart-to-heart. You can also craft beautiful latte art that will really make you feel you’re in the middle of summertime Tokyo.
Overhauling this creepy PlayStation 2 cult classic with enhancements across its visuals and audio was just the start for Koei Tecmo. This memorable survival horror’s use of the Camera Obscura to photograph objects and battle evil spirits has also been given new features, including filter switching to perform feats such as increasing your ‘shooting’ distance in combat.
Crimson Desert | March 19 | PS5
This open-world adventure has been on the lips of many since its reveal back in 2019, so those craving to test their skill and strength in the fantasy continent of Pywel haven’t long left to wait. Combat, crafting and cooking, join a variety of other activities such as fishing and mining, which means there’s plenty to give you a break from the fight against savage rival tribes, brutish monsters, and even a mechanical dragon.
The Musoi majesty of Koei Tecmo’s tactical action series gets a glow-up in 2026, as the PlayStation 2 original returns with a modernized look, refined gameplay and UI, and content from its Dynasty Warriors 3: Xtreme Legends expansion. So you’re not just getting the finely honed and ever entertaining 1 vs 1,000 gameplay, there’s also new weapons, storylines and challenge modes to clash swords with.
007 First Light | May 27 | PS5
Hitman developer IO Interactive making a James Bond game? It’s a match made in 00-heaven. Set before the MI6 super spy gained his 007 status, this reimagined origin story aims to deliver fast cars, smooth (and at the perfect times, slow-motion) gunplay, innovative gadgets, and the ability to complete Bond’s missions in a variety of ways. Steal and sneak your way into compounds, bluff and bluster past guards, eavesdrop for intelligence, take down enemies with stealth, or maybe just let your fists fly.
Pragmata | April 24 | PS5
If you’ve had that image of an astronaut and a mysterious young girl lodged in your brain since Pragmata’s first reveal trailer, 2026 is finally your payoff. Capcom’s new sci-fi IP strands spacefarer Hugh and his android companion Diana on a cold lunar research station ruled by rogue AI, pairing Hugh’s weighty third-person shooting with Diana’s reality-bending hacks to hijack enemies and crack environmental puzzles.
Saros | April 30 | PS5
Housemarque’s been hard at work after delivering the excellent Returnal, and Saros is bringing all the qualities that have made the developer one to watch. Mysterious, otherworldly setting? Check. Fast-paced sci-fi shooting? No doubt. Although unlike Returnal, each death in Saros lets you choose and permanently upgrade your weapon and suit loadout. And there’s even more secrets about the game to be revealed…
This is just a small selection of what’s coming down the line – which early 2026 titles are you looking forward to playing?
Update: Some fresh titles have been added for 2026.
Update: As of 31st December 2025, a bunch of games previously included in this guide have now returned to their usual price. To compensate for this, newly-discounted games have been added and will remain on sale until 11th January. The full list has decreased from 100 to 65, but there’s still plenty to check out here.
Nintendo has launched its latest eShop sale in the UK, discounting a bunch of titles for the Christmas season. (The US has a similar sale going, too, though that one finishes on 4th January.)
2025 was somewhat of a quiet year for PlayStation. Yes, we got the Game of the Year-nominated Death Stranding 2: On the Beach, and Sucker Punch’s exciting sequel to Ghost of Tsushima, Ghost of Yotei. But aside from that, there wasn’t really a lot of activity from Sony’s first-party studios. Instead, you had to look to developers outside of Sony’s stables, who thankfully kept the PS5 ticking over with an array of interesting games. Right at the back end of 2024, Infold launched the console-exclusive Infinity Nikki and has been delighting stylists around the globe over the past 12 months, and smaller projects such as Sword of the Sea, Dispatch, and Baby Steps have all been enjoyed on PlayStation 5.
Of course, the fact that there were not many console exclusives didn’t mean there weren’t a whole host of great games to play on our PS5s last year. Quite the opposite, in fact. Awards-sweeper Clair Obscur: Expedition 33, the long-awaited Hollow Knight: Silksong, and acclaimed RPG Kingdom Come: Deliverance 2 led the third-party offerings. Plus, 2025 really was the year of Xbox going fully multiplatform with its library, as Forza Horizon 5, Gears of War Reloaded, and The Outer Worlds 2, to name just a few, all made their way to PlayStation. And that’s showing no signs of slowing down in the coming year, either, with a certain Master Chief set to grace a Sony console for the first time.
The truth is, Sony has just been pretty quiet when it comes to exclusives of its own, with little new to shout about from a hardware perspective, either. And that’s before we even get into the problems Bungie (now a PlayStation Studio, remember) has faced with Marathon. So, are things looking more exciting in 2026? Well, Marathon will certainly be hoping so as it aims to combat PlayStation’s recent live-service travails. Let’s dig into it, as well as everything else to expect from Sony this year.
First-Party and Exclusives
Heading into 2026, all eyes are on Logan, as Insomniac aims to bolster its long winning streak of Ratchet and Clank and Spider-Man games by taking on another comic book hero. Marvel’s Wolverine is currently pencilled in for a “late 2026” launch, although we’ll see if those plans change at all due to a certain Rockstar game moving to a similar timeframe. Whenever it does release, though, we look to be in for a treat if our first look at gameplay during September’s State of Play is any indication.
While much is still yet to be revealed about its story, we’re eager to learn more and see just who else from the X-Men and the wider Marvel Universe will be popping into Logan’s world. Mystique and Omega Red have already been confirmed, but surely Sabretooth is a must, as well as a cameo at the very least from either of Insomniac’s Spideys, Peter Parker or Miles Morales. Which of the X-Men do you want to see most?
As for PS5 exclusives that actually have release dates confirmed, there’s only Saros, Nioh 3, and Phantom Blade Zero. The former is Housemarque’s follow-up to the acclaimed Returnal, and looks to be sitting in a similar mould of colourful, particle-filled, challenging shooter within an alien planet shell. Now arriving on April 30 after a slight delay, it will take players on an expedition to a lost colony as we step into the shoes of Rahul Kohli’s Arjun Devraj and kill and die our way to uncovering its mysteries through its repeating, roguelike structure.
Nioh 3 is a console exclusive for PlayStation, as it’s also arriving on PC when it launches on February 6. A chronological sequel to the events of the series’ first game, Team Ninja is back with a fresh dose of its own brand of punishing soulslike action in feudal Japan. Things are being shaken up this time, though, thanks to the introduction of a “ninja playstyle” which promises to control completely differently from the traditional samurai option. Trust a studio called Team Ninja, which is also responsible for the Ninja Gaiden series, to want to add ninjas to Nioh. That’s enough ninjas for one sentence, I think.
Phantom Blade Zero is a hotly anticipated wuxia action RPG coming from Chinese developer S-Game. The lead character is called Soul, so you can probably guess what genre this project also borrows heavily from, too. I can confirm this myself – after briefly going hands-on with it at gamescom 2025, I found that there is indeed a punishing combat system with a complex skillset to master. But there are other action game influences, too, so the combat tempo is much higher than in your typical Soulslike. Up for some punishment? Well, you’ll have to hold on a little longer yet, as Phantom Blade Zero will be released on September 9.
Now onto the stuff we’re led to believe will be coming in 2026, we just don’t know when yet. First up is Marvel Tokon: Fighting Souls, the new superhero fighting game from Guilty Gear developer Arc System Works. A uniquely stylised interpretation of the Marvel universe, it looks set to be a real contender in the fighting game community if its recent closed betas are anything to go by.
Freshly revealed at The Game Awards, 4:Loop is a new co-op shooter from Left 4 Dead creator Mike Booth and Bad Robot Games, the video game wing of film director J.J. Abrams’ production company. A PS5 and PC exclusive, it seems to infuse some roguelike elements with a sprinkling of Helldivers and Left 4 Dead. No release date has been given yet, but playtesting will start soon.
Then we have Marathon, the new extraction shooter from Destiny developer Bungie, which was initially meant to arrive in 2025, but had a rough year to say the least. Delayed into this year and now coming out in March, the studio will be hoping for a big comeback story this year and buck the trend of recently failed Sony live-service shooter offerings such as Concord. Instead, it’ll be looking to the likes of the wildly successful Arc Raiders and PlayStation’s very own Helldivers 2 for a template to follow. Shooter pedigree doesn’t come much stronger than Bungie, so fingers crossed that it can turn around those initial impressions.
Speaking of live-service shooters, Fairgames is reportedly still in development at Haven Studios despite the departure of its founder, Jade Raymond, in May of 2025, and even more recently, the game’s creative director, Daniel Drapeau, leaving in September. With still no gameplay to be seen and no sign of a release date for this “competitive heist shooter”, serious questions now have to be raised about whether it will ever see the light of day.
Laser swords more your cup of tea? Well, Intergalactic: The Heretic Prophet might be the one for you. We’re very much dreaming if we think this is coming any earlier than 2027, but hopefully, we get a good look at gameplay for Naughty Dog’s new sci-fi game over the next 12 months. Expectations are high from one of Sony’s most beloved developers, though, with creator Neil Druckmann calling it the “most ambitious game” they’ve ever made.
But what about all of those other PlayStation studios cooking up exclusives? Well, Guerrilla may not be developing the recently revealed mobile MMORPG Horizon: Steel Frontiers itself, but has been recruiting for its own multiplayer entry into Aloy’s universe. Could we see that in 2026? What about Santa Monica’s next project? Is it finally time to see what Cory Barlog’s mystery game is, if a new God of War isn’t imminent? All good questions. None of which I have the answers for.
I could run through each of the remaining Sony studios here, but, truthfully, I did that back in August, and very little has changed since. So, you can read that here.
Third-Party and Multiplatform
Another look forward to the year ahead in games, and another opportunity for me to say how excited I am for GTA 6. Surely, after its most recent delay to November, 2026 is the year we finally get our hands on the latest Grand Theft Auto. Please, Rockstar, don’t do it to us again.
Our loss is a bunch of games’ gain, though, with Spring opening up wide for a fair few to fill that GTA-shaped void. These include Capcom’s latest entry into its legendary horror series, Resident Evil Requiem and IO Interactive’s first non-Hitman project in a long time, James Bond adventure, 007 First Light. Plus, Pearl Abyss’ expansive open-world action of Crimson Desert will be soaring onto consoles and PC in March as well. Lego Batman: Legacy of the Dark Knight is looking to pick up where Rocksteady’s Arkham trilogy left off and infuse its satisfying melee combat with that indelible minifig charm when it launches on May 29.
But so much of 2026 remains uncertain — likely largely due to GTA shifting around more than James Brown did on stage in the ‘70s. Let’s start with some multiplatform games we are pretty confident are coming this year, before moving on to ones that will likely remain rooted in our dreams.
Yes, Master Chief will soon be controlled by a DualSense. Halo: Campaign Evolved is heading to the PS5 in 2026 as Microsoft continues to unleash its library onto other platforms. This Unreal Engine 5 remake of the 2001 Xbox classic could prove the spectre at the feast for Bungie, the original developers of Halo: Combat Evolved, if its own Marathon launch doesn’t go as planned. At least it won’t be competing in the multiplayer market, as this new edition of Halo only includes the story campaign.
Marvel 1943: Rise of Hydra recently shifted out of its original window of early 2026 to “beyond early 2026”, so your guess is as good as mine as to when we’ll be playing Amy Hennig’s Captain America and Black Panther in World War 2 story. Legendary PlayStation hero Lara Croft will be returning in a “reimagining” of her original game, titled Tomb Raider: Legacy of Atlantis, and Finnish developer Remedy is back with another entry in its connected universe, Control: Resonant. Also announced at The Game Awards was the pleasantly surprising Star Wars: Galactic Racer from the makers of Burnout and Need For Speed that is scheduled to drop in 2026.
Capcom is also set for a big year outside of Resident Evil, with Onimusha: Way of the Sword and Pragmata both set to hit. As was the way in 2025, 2026 also looks set to keep you happy if you’re a fan of katanas and unnerving robots. As it will for vampire fans too, with The Blood of Dawnwalker looking really promising thanks to a non-linear narrative and sandbox-like structure, crafted by a team led by former Witcher 3 devs. Then there’s Mixtape, a game I’ve added to this list as one of my personally most anticipated of 2026. The sophomore project from The Artful Escape studio Beethoven & Dinosaur, this 80s-inspired coming-of-age adventure is definitely one to keep on your radar.
Is 2026 finally the year we get to play a new Ken Levine game? The Bioshock creator hasn’t given us one since 2013’s Infinite, and Judas has been in development for a long time now. Let’s hope this is the year, because it’s something I need in my life. As is The Witcher 4, but even I’m not foolish enough to believe that CD Projekt Red’s Ciri-led RPG is coming anytime soon. But feel free to surprise me. I’d love that.
Hardware and Tech
We’re not necessarily expecting any big hardware splashes this year, with the next console generations theoretically not due until late 2027 at the earliest. Sony tech wizard — and most importantly, creator of Knack — Mark Cerny did recently discuss new graphics capabilities in a conversation with AMD, which sparked PlayStation 6 speculation into overdrive, but it’s still likely a couple of years away at least.
Rumours are also abound of a new PlayStation handheld, after suggestions were made over the past summer that Sony could even be following Nintendo’s blueprint for the Switch, and turning the PS6 into a hybrid home and portable console. Of course, this is all just wild speculation, but with powerful hardware only reducing in size and cloud capabilities ever-growing, it doesn’t feel like too much of a stretch to imagine. As I said, though, we’re still quite a way off hearing anything concrete in regards to the future of PlayStation hardware.
And that’s everything we know, along with a few guesses thrown in, about what to expect from PlayStation in 2026. What games are you most excited for this year? Let us know in the comments below.
Simon Cardy is a Senior Editor at IGN who can mainly be found skulking around open world games, indulging in Korean cinema, or despairing at the state of Tottenham Hotspur and the New York Jets. Follow him on Bluesky at @cardy.bsky.social.
It’s a bad idea to predict a year’s worth of Videogame Happenings while you are delirious with cold, but one of the advantages of being delirious with cold is that you become incapable of noticing that ideas are bad. In the brief interval before I eat a bowl of cakemix and fall asleep, here are some quick opinions about the Trends and Tribulations of 2026, mostly based on our reporting from 2025. The evergreen short version: it’s never too late to get back into amateur dentistry.
The Pokémon franchise has begun its 30th anniversary celebrations with the reveal of a special new logo, an animation featuring Fat Pikachu, and the promise of more to share in less than two months’ time.
2026 is the 30th anniversary of Pokémon, which began its path to world domination with the Japanese launch of Pokémon Red and Pokémon Green back on the Game Boy three decades ago. (The series then arrived in the USA two years’ later, launching with Pokémon Red and Pokémon Blue.)
As the clock ticked over to January 1, 2026 in Pokémon’s home region of Japan, the brand began its celebrations with the reveal of a new 30th Anniversary Pokémon logo featuring Pikachu, introduced by none other than Fat Pikachu — the mascot’s far plumper original design that’s now rarely glimpsed in official Pokémon media. Here he is in action:
“Pokémon 30th Anniversary, Here We Go!” the brand wrote in a post on social media. “30 years since the release of Pokémon Red and Green. On February 27, 2026 (Friday), Pokémon turns 30. We have a feeling this year is going to be the best one yet! Look forward to it!”
2026 will also see the launch of promising-looking Pokémon life simulation spin-off Pokémon Pokopia, which arrives exclusively for Nintendo Switch 2 on March 5. A blend of Pokémon characters with gameplay more similar to Animal Crossing, the game seems likely to find success.
More details on all of that are expected to arrive on the brand’s big 30th anniversary, now less than two months’ away on February 27. While not formally confirmed just yet, this date has now become the annual date fans expect to sit down and watch a new Pokémon Presents, the company’s Nintendo Direct-style announcements showcase. There’s not long to go now.
Tom Phillips is IGN’s News Editor. You can reach Tom at tom_phillips@ign.com or find him on Bluesky @tomphillipseg.bsky.social
Back in December, Nintendo announced that the 2025 edition of its annual ‘Year in Review’ — where your play stats for the year are collected and displayed in a fun little round-up — wouldn’t be arriving until January this time. We’re still waiting for further word, although at this stage we’d imagine it’ll be coming next week.
One thing worth noting beforehand, however, is that you’ll need to have the appropriate settings turned on for your Nintendo Account in order to receive the round-up. This writer missed out on last year’s review, but a New Year’s email from Nintendo highlighted a couple of opt-ins that needed tweaking.
Oodles of games are coming out in 2026, and many look impressive. There’s the new Resident Evil, yet another reimagining of Tomb Raider 1, and a 007 game that reminds me of the often-forgotten cartoon series James Bond Jr. All will probably be decent, and some might even dictate my guide writing duties.
Eight hours and more than 10,000 parries later, a Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 superfan is being praised for beating one of the game’s toughest bosses in frankly ridiculous conditions.
Underpowered but undeterred, Reddit user Recordbreaks has posted a screenshot showing that they beat the super strong Duollistes boss after managing 10,545 successful parries — which feels like more than I’ve completed in the entire game.
The encounter took eight hours, two minutes and 36 seconds, during which time Recordbreaks says they “took one break maybe for about 5-10 minutes” in order to go get snacks, then “went back to it.”
Added to Clair Obscur last month as part of the game’s highly-anticipated farewell update, Duollistes is housed within the new Endless Tower location. This area hosts a series of bosses that are designed to provide some of the toughest challenges in the hit role-playing game, though they still shouldn’t take the average endgame player anywhere near eight hours.
“Only reason it took me this long is because I haven’t properly built Verso for damage in the millions yet,” Recordbreaks admitted, saying his squad was still around level 80. “He was doing maybe 200,000 damage per hit and that’s if Roulette was working in my favor which it wasn’t most of the time.”
While some fans have said Recordbreaks could simply have quit the battle, sorted their build then restarted, the vast majority of fans are praising the player for putting in an actual work shift’s worth of time to beat the boss anyway.
Most surreal of all, however? Throughout the whole battle, Recordbreaks avoided dodging to the point where not a single successful dodge is recorded, opting instead for the tougher option to parry attacks every time.
“22 parries a minute, pretty much one parry every three seconds,” one fan noted, after doing the math.
“Bro that’s a full-time job spent for that boss and 10k parries damn,” admired xXxZeroTwoxXx. “Congrats bud.”
“Why? Cuz I felt like it,” Recordbreaks replied, when asked the reason for their perseverance. “How? With sheer will and determination. What’s wrong with me? Haven’t gone to a therapist to work that out yet.”