The Best Sony PlayStation 5 Games for 2024

The Best Sony PlayStation 5 Games for 2024

It seems like yesterday that Sony slapped an exciting new number onto the PlayStation. However, the PlayStation 5 has been around for so long that we’ve received a mid-gen refresh in the form of the PlayStation 5 Pro. This console generation faced the unprecedented challenge of the COVID-19 pandemic, which delayed several highly anticipated games. But fret not, PS5 owners. Your oblong, white obelisk has many spectacular games you can play right now. They may not all be exclusives, but with 4K visuals and lightning-fast SSD load times, our list of the best PS5 games will make you happy that you invested in the current console generation. 


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Assassin’s Creed Valhalla

Like Origins and Odyssey before it, Assassin’s Creed Valhalla continues the franchise’s transformation into an epic, open-world, role-playing game. As Viking warrior Eivor, you sail through 9th century England and stomp everything in your path. Beyond raiding and pillaging, you’ll also build and nurture a settlement, as well as get wrapped up in the larger Assassin’s Creed mythology shenanigans.

With Astro Bot, you guide an adorable robot across galactic worlds full of beautiful, creative, and dense platforming challenges. Ingenious power-ups turn level design on its head. You’ll also walk through a delightful living museum of PlayStation history, from Ape Escape to Horizon. Astro Bot brings back old-school gaming magic that modern Sony desperately needed.

Astro Bot Review

Astro’s Playroom may be a free PlayStation 5 pack-in title, but it’s still one of the best games on the system. Building upon Team Asobi’s great work on past Astro Bot games, this 3D platformer takes you through PlayStation’s rich history, from a museum dedicated to the PS1 to a demonstration of all the innovative, immersive haptic features you’ll enjoy with the PS5 DualSense controller.

Role-playing games predate video games, and Baldur’s Gate 3 represents a new peak for tabletop descendants. The game’s extensive flexibility and limitless player choices make it the most accurate Dungeons & Dragons adaptation ever. The gorgeous presentation brings this beloved fantasy world to life. Even the game’s treatment of sexuality is refreshingly sophisticated. It’s the kind of game you can put 60 hours into, beat, and then play again with a new character for a completely different experience. After years of anticipation and fine-tuning, Baldur’s Gate 3 is a worthy successor to its classic namesake.

Baldur’s Gate 3 Review

Virtual reality may still be a somewhat niche category, but PlayStation 5 owners have access to pretty phenomenal VR experiences thanks to the PlayStation VR 2 headset. If you’re looking for a PS VR2 game to really stimulate your senses, check out C-Smash VRS. This reimagining of a niche Japanese Dreamcast game turns the simple game of squash into a mind-bending journey through space and time, thanks to hypnotic visuals and music. So dive in and get your racket ready.

C-Smash VRS Review

Back in 2009, the PS3-exclusive Demon’s Souls birthed an entirely new genre of inscrutable, brutally difficult action-RPGs. Without it, we wouldn’t have Dark Souls, Bloodborne, or the recently released Elden Ring. Now, Bluepoint Games has remade FromSoftware’s original nightmare. Enjoy the same great punishment with a shiny, new coat of PS5 paint.

Death Stranding: Director’s Cut

After severing ties with Konami, Metal Gear mastermind Hideo Kojima let his freak flag truly fly with Death Stranding. This is a game where Norman Reedus carries a baby in a jar to rebuild America by delivering packages and defeating time ghosts. The PS5 Director’s Cut spruces up the graphics, tweaks a few mechanics, and adds new story missions. But we’re really just here for more Mads Mikkelsen.

Death Stranding: Director’s Cut (for PlayStation 5) Review

You know what you’re getting into when you play an Arkane game. Titles like Dishonored and Prey give you fascinating powers that let you creatively approach and disrupt their intricately designed clockwork worlds. Deathloop takes this to the next level. Trapped on an island caught in a time loop, you play as an assassin who must figure out how to murder all your targets in one day. Through repeated runs, you gain the skills and knowledge necessary to make time itself bend to your will.

Deathloop (for PlayStation 5) Review

Devil May Cry 5: Special Edition

Devil May Cry invented the “stylish action” genre by letting you slash and shoot your way through hordes of monsters, while looking as cool as possible. This next-gen Devil May Cry 5 upgrade shows why no franchise (except for maybe Bayonetta) does the genre better. Swap between different characters (Dante, Nero, and V), each with their own unique demon-slaying powers. The underworld doesn’t stand a chance.

Final Fantasy VII Rebirth

Square Enix’s ambitious remake trilogy continues with Final Fantasy VII Rebirth. Building off the success of FFVII Remake, Rebirth refines the action-packed combat and sophisticated storytelling that adds extra depth and surprises to the beloved classic. The sequel also includes an expanded open world, and new role-playing options for Cloud when interacting with other characters.

Final Fantasy VII Rebirth Review

Square Enix’s beloved role-playing franchise radically reinvents itself once again with Final Fantasy XVI. With its dark medieval story and action-packed combat, this game takes more inspiration from Game of Thrones and Devil May Cry than past entries. But there’s nothing wrong with change, and FF16’s tremendous sense of scale makes it worth checking out, no matter your prior Final Fantasy history.

Final Fantasy XVI Review

Ghost of Tsushima: Director’s Cut

Sony returns to its Japanese roots with Ghost of Tsushima, a majestic open-world action-adventure set during the Mongol invasions of the 13th century. Travel through windswept fields pulled straight out of Kurosawa movies. Engage in precise sword duels and stealthy takedowns. This PS5 upgrade even adds an entirely new region, Iki Island, to explore.

Ghost of Tsushima: Director’s Cut (for PlayStation 5) Review

Kratos may be an iconic game hero, but the 2018 God of War reboot miraculously turned the wrathful god into an actual character instead of just an avatar of divine destruction. God of War Ragnarok delivers more of the same as Kratos and his son Atreus face fend off more Norse gods as the end of days approaches. The already stellar combat system gains new depth and creativity, while the vast levels look even more stunning as they’re presented as a single take.

God of War Ragnarok (for PlayStation 5) Review

Microsoft’s Forza series is a great driving franchise, but the original king of “racing sim you’d swear is real” remains Sony’s Gran Turismo. After Gran Turismo Sport disappointed on PS4, Gran Turismo 7 brings us back to Polyphony Digital’s traditional racing roots with the GT Simulation Mode campaign. Vehicles, tracks, and weather effects look more gorgeous than ever on next-gen hardware. Just start practicing before the AI drivers beat us to the finish line.

Helldivers 2 turns the original top-down shooter into a third-person, multiplayer squad romp. Team up with friends to exterminate giant bugs, and explore thrilling new tactical possibilities through the Stratagem system. A cheeky sense of humor adds wonderful Starship Troopers-like flair to the happenings.

Helldivers 2 Review

With Horizon Zero Dawn, developer Guerilla Games proved it could do more than just pump out boring Killzone sequels. Horizon Forbidden West, the next-gen sequel, takes us back to this fascinating sci-fi world where human tribes live alongside robot dinosaurs. Explore the lush environment with revamped movement mechanics, and take out foes with a variety of combat options. If you wanted more Horizon, but with a bigger scope and better gameplay, this is it.

Horizon Forbidden West (for PlayStation 5) Review

Despite its beautiful, next-gen visuals, Kena: Bridge of Spirits harkens back to action-adventure games of an earlier era. Journey across the world as Kena, a spirit guide who partners with magical critters called Rot to cleanse a corrupted land. A healthy mix of combat, platforming, puzzle-solving, and Pixar-quality graphics make this an adventure anyone can get into.

We could argue about whether or not The Last of Us needed another full-priced release, but if you haven’t played Naughty Dog’s seminal survival-shooter, you might as well start with this PS5 remake. Ellie and Joel’s trek through the post-apocalypse remains a somber meditation on loss and brutal human nature. Plus, it’ll get you up to speed before the HBO show drops.

The Last of Us Part I (for PlayStation 5) Review

Lego Horizon Adventures is an inexplicable mashup between the famous building blocks and Sony’s widely popular open-world epic. Relive the events of the first game through a comedic Lego lens. You won’t do much exploration, but you and a friend can hunt robot dinosaurs online using snappy combat and arcade power-ups. It’s the best-looking Lego game yet and arguably has a better aesthetic than the “real” Horizon games.

Lego Horizon Adventures Review

Marvel’s Spider-Man: Miles Morales

Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse showed the world that Miles Morales is the future when it comes to web-slinging. Now you can play as Miles in this standalone follow-up to Insomniac’s acclaimed PS4 Spider-Man game. Swing through Harlem, fight bad guys with your electricity and invisibility powers, and just look dope. 

Marvel’s Spider-Man: Miles Morales (for PlayStation 5) Review

Marvel’s Spider-Man 2 lets you play as either Peter Parker or Miles Morales, arachnid-powered heroes who swing across a lovingly recreated New York City to bust bad guys with webs and wit. The story takes some dramatic twists and the Venom symbiote amplifies the game’s overall aggression. In addition, the action includes top-tier spider combat and awesome web-slinging and web-gliding traversal abilities.

Marvel’s Spider-Man 2 Review

The Pathless is the perfect palette cleanser for the huge AAA games that increasingly dominate gaming with each passing generation. In this artsy indie game, use fluid movement mechanics to propel yourself through the abstract environments. Hunt bosses with your bow and arrow, and solve puzzles to lift the curse on the land. 

The Pathless (for PlayStation 5) Review

Ratchet and Clank: Rift Apart

After years of working closely with Insomniac, Sony recently bought the developer. The latest Ratchet and Clank game shows why this was a smart investment. Like previous entries, you’ll still zip around sci-fi worlds shooting wacky weapons. But thanks to the PS5’s SSD, you can warp between entire dimensions in a matter of milliseconds. The living cartoon is an absolute visual feast.

Ratchet & Clank: Rift Apart (for PlayStation 5) Review

Returnal combines indie, roguelike sensibilities with gorgeous, AAA production quality. This unforgiving third-person shooter almost turns into a bullet hell as you bob and weave to survive alien onslaughts. Tight controls mean that every death is your fault, but each failure also brings you closer to sweet victory. 

Returnal (for PlayStation 5) Review

Mankind is on its last legs. An alien invasion has forced humanity off Earth and into space colonies. It falls on Eve, an elite super-soldier, to defeat the threat and reclaim the planet. Although Stellar Blade draws much of its inspiration from action games like Bayonetta, God of War, and Sekiro, it expertly interweaves these disparate gameplay mechanics to produce a refreshing title with a unique identity. Parry enemies, weave under attacks, and attack foes with powerful skills and super moves. The combo system is rich and rewarding, but aggressive and powerful enemies offer enough challenge to keep you on your toes throughout this lengthy 30-hour action-RPG.

Stellar Blade Review

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