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xbox_one_games_chart

Xbox One Backward Compatibility Game List. This list of games playable on Xbox One records all backward-compatible 360 and XBLA games confirmed to function on current-gen hardware. Microsoft announced during its E3 2017 conference original Xbox games will be compatible with the Xbox One as well, however announced only a single game so far.  Most recent addition: Call of Duty: Black Ops II, April 11th, 2017. Confirmed Xbox Games. Crimson Skies: High Road to Revenge. Confirmed Xbox 360 Games. A Kingdom for Keflings A World of Keflings Aegis Wing Age of Booty Alan Wake Alan Wake's American Nightmare Alien Hominid HD Altered Beast Anomaly War Zone Aqua Arkanoid Live Assassin's Creed Assassin’s Creed II Asteroids & Deluxe Babel Rising Banjo Kazooie: Nuts & Bolts Banjo-Kazooie Banjo-Tooie BattleBlock Theater Battlestations: Midway Bayonetta Bejeweled 2 Bejeweled 3 Bellator: MMA Onslaught Beyond Good & Evil HD Bionic Commando Rearmed 2 Bloodforge Blood Knights Blood of the Werewolf BloodRayne: Betrayal Bomberman Battlefest Boom Boom Rocket Borderlands Bound By Flame Braid Brain Challenge Blue Dragon (requires disk) Burnout Paradise Call of Duty 2 Call of Duty 3 Call of Duty: Black Ops Call of Duty: Black Ops 2 Call of Duty: World at War Call of Juarez Gunslinger Capcom Arcade Cabinet Carcassonne Castle Crashers Castle of Illusion Starring Mickey Mouse CastleStorm Castlevania: Symphony of the Night Centipede & Millipede Comic Jumper Comix Zone Condemned: Criminal Origins Counter-Strike: GO Crazy Taxi Crystal Defenders Crystal Quest Dark Souls Dark Void Deadliest Warrior: Legends Dead Space Dead Space Ignition Deathspank TOV De Blob 2 Defense Grid: The Awakening Deus Ex: Human Revolution Deus Ex: Human Revolution – Director’s Cut Dig Dug DiRT 3 DiRT Showdown Discs of Tron Domino Master Doom Doom II Doom 3 BFG Edition (disc version) Doritos Crash Course Double Dragon Neon Dragon's Lair Duck Tales: Remastered Duke Nukem Manhattan Project Dungeons & Dragons: Chronicles of Mystara Dungeon Siege III E4 Earthworm Jim HD Eat Lead EnclevermentExperiment Escape Dead Island Fable II Fable III Faery: Legends of Avalon Fallout 3 Fallout New Vegas Far Cry 3 Blood Dragon Feeding Frenzy Feeding Frenzy 2: Shipwreck Showdown Final Fight: Double Impact Flashback Flock Forza Horizon Foul Play Fret Nice Frogger Frogger 2 FunTown Mahjong Galaga Galaga Legions Galaga Legions DX Garou: Mark of the Wolves Gating Gears Gears of War Gears of War 2 Gears of War 3 Gears of War: Judgment Geometry Wars Evolved Ghostbusters: Sanctum of Slime Golden Axe Go Go Break Steady Grid 2 Gripshift Guardian Heroes Gunstar Heroes Guwange Half-Minute Hero Halo: Reach Halo: Spartan Assault Halo Wars Hardwood Backgammon Hardwood Hearts Hardwood Spades Haunted House Heavy Weapon Hexic HD Hexic 2 Hydro Thunder I Am Alive Ikaruga Injustice: Gods Among Us Interpol Iron Brigade Jeremy McGrath's Offroad Jetpac Refuelled Jet Set Radio Joe Danger Special Edition Joe Danger 2 Jurassic Park: The Game Joust Joy Ride Turbo Just Cause 2 Kameo: Elements of Power Kane & Lynch 2 Killer Is Dead Lazy Raiders Left 4 Dead Left 4 Dead 2 LEGO Batman LEGO Pirates of the Caribbean: The Video Game LEGO Star Wars: The Complete Saga Limbo Lode Runner Lost Odyssey LUMINES LIVE! Magic 2012 Mars: War Logs Mass Effect Mass Effect 2 Mass Effect 3 Metal Slug 3 Metal Slug XX Might & Magic Clash of Heroes Military Madness Mirror’s Edge Missile Command Monaco: What's Yours Is Mine Monday Night Combat Monkey Island 2: Special Edition Monkey Island: Special Edition Monopoly Plus Motocross Madness Mr. Driller Online MS. PAC-MAN Ms. Splosion Man Mutant Blobs Attack. MX vs. ATV Reflex N+ NBA JAM: On Fire Edition NeoGeo Battle Coliseum New Rally X NiGHTS into dreams… Nin2-Jump Of Orcs and Men OFP: Red River (disc only) Omage Five Operation Flashpoint: Dragon Rising Outland Pac-Man Pac-Man: Championship Edition Pac-Man: Championship Edition DX+ Pac-Man Museum Peggle Perfect Dark Perfect Dark Zero Phantasy Star 2 Phantom Breaker: Battle Grounds Pinball FX Plants vs. Zombies Portal 2 Portal: Still Alive Prince of Persia Pure (disc only) Putty Squad Puzzlegeddon Puzzle Quest Puzzle Quest 2 Puzzle Quest Galactrix Qix++ Rage (Disc Only) R-Type Dimensions Rayman 3 HD Rayman Legends Rayman Origins Red Dead Redemption Red Faction Battlegrounds Runner2 Sacred 3 Sacred Citadel Saints Row 4 Sam and Max Beyond Space and Time Sam and Max Save the World Samurai Shodown 2 Scarygirl Sega Bass Fishing Sega Vintage Collection: Alex Kidd & Co. Sega Vintage Collection: Golden Axe Sega Vintage Collection: Monster World Sega Vintage Collection: Streets of Rage Shadow Complex Shadowrun Shank 2 Shred Nebula Shortest Shogi Silent Hill: Downpour Skate 3 Skullgirls Small Arms Sonic CD Sonic & All-stars Racing Transformed Sonic & Knuckles Sonic The Fighters Sonic The Hedgehog Sonic The Hedgehog 2 Sonic The Hedgehog 3 Sonic The Hedgehog 4 Episode 1 Sonic The Hedgehog 4 Episode 2 Soul Calibur SoulCalibur 2 HD South Park: The Stick of Truth Space Ark Space Giraffe Spelunky Splosion Man SSX Star Wars: The Force Unleashed Star Wars: The Force Unleashed 2 Super Meat Boy Supreme Commander 2 Syberia Tekken Tag Tournament 2 Texas Hold'Em The Cave The King of Fighters 98 UM The Maw The Orange Box The Witcher 2: Assassin of Kings Ticket To Ride Tom Clancy’s RainbowSix Vegas Tom Clancy’s RainbowSix Vegas 2 Torchlight Tour de France 2009 Tour de France 2011 Toy Soldiers Toy Soldiers: Cold War Toy Story 3 Trials HD Triggerheart Exelica Tron: Evolution Ugly Americans: Apocalypsegeddon Unbound Saga Virtua Fighter 5 Final Showdown Viva Piñata Viva Piñata: Trouble In Paradise Wolfenstein 3D Word Puzzle XCOM: Enemy Unknown XCOM: Enemy Within Zuma Zuma's Revenge! Microsoft announced Xbox One backward compatibility at E3 2015 and started rolling out the function on November 12, 2015. Xbox 360 discs do not play natively but trigger a download of a compatible file, while downloadable titles tied to the logged-in user account appear automatically. Xbox One Controller Previous. Xbox One Console Design. © 1996-2018 Ziff Davis, LLC. We have updated our PRIVACY POLICY and encourage you to read it by clicking here. IGN uses cookies and other tracking technologies to customize online advertisements, and for other purposes. IGN supports the Digital Advertising Alliance principles. Learn More. PS4 vs. Xbox One vs. Wii U Comparison Chart. The PS4 vs. Xbox One vs. Wii U Comparison Chart provides an easy visual aid to compare hardware, user interface, media compatibility and other features of the three "next-gen" systems. By popular demand, a Wii U column has been added to the chart for reference. More PS4 vs. Xbox One Comparisons. Hardware Feature Comparison. Confirmed to IGN by a Microsoft representative. Online Feature Comparison Chart. *Based on current Xbox Live Gold requirements. Console Bundle Comparison Chart. This chart compares the physical contents of the launch day bundles of the PlayStation 4, Xbox One and Wii U. Other console comparison features are outlined above. A console is not just the sum of its tech specs and features. Games matter too! PS4 vs. Xbox One Native Resolutions and Framerates Previous. Xbox One S vs Xbox One Comparison Chart. © 1996-2018 Ziff Davis, LLC. We have updated our PRIVACY POLICY and encourage you to read it by clicking here. IGN uses cookies and other tracking technologies to customize online advertisements, and for other purposes. IGN supports the Digital Advertising Alliance principles. Learn More. Here's where all the Xbox One games landed in the UK charts. Ten of the 16 physical Xbox One games available made the UK top 40 chart. Last updated by Martin Gaston on November 25, 2013 at 4:01PM. You are now subscribed. Ten of the 16 Xbox One launch titles made the UK top 40 chart this week, chart monitoring group GfK Chart-Track has announced, after the Xbox One launched on Friday. The launch of the Xbox One outsold that of the Xbox 360 two-to-one, with trade site MCV reporting that Microsoft sold 150,000 Xbox One units over the weekend. FIFA 14 took the top spot in the UK charts, with the Xbox One version outselling other platforms due to its inclusion as part of the Xbox One Day One Edition bundle. Here's where all Xbox One titles landed in the UK charts after their first weekend on sale, alongside the percentage of copies sold on the Xbox One in the case of multiplatform releases: Digital releases are not tracked in the charts, so the likes of Killer Instinct, Zoo Tycoon, LocoCycle, and Powerstar Golf are excluded from the list. The PlayStation 4 will launch in Europe this Friday, November 29. GamesRadar+ The 25 best Xbox One games. What are the best Xbox One games to buy? Take a look at this list and all will become clear. The cream of the crop. In case you missed it, Monster Hunter World is pretty popular right now. It\s sold well, and is good, but it's best Xbox One games good? Well, not quite. There's been some online problems on Xbox One and while it's good, it's not really a hall of fame job. It was a similar story with the recent Vanishing of Ethan Carter, an atmospheric supernatural murder mystery that, like Monster Hunter World, is highly recommended. However, when you've only 25 places to fill they've got to go to the best of the best. That means things like Assassin's Creed Origins and Wolfenstein 2 most recently. They're also two Xbox One X Enhanced games so if you have a 4K TV and an X, then those are great games to show everything off. In terms of upcoming Xbox One games, Coming up soon we'll have Monster Hunter World on Jan 26, and Far Cry 5 on March 27, along with this little selection over the next couple of months. Mar 13 - The Crew 2. Mar 23 - A Way Out. 'Spring' - State of Decay 2. 'Spring - Crackdown 3. Only time will tell if any of those will make it into the 25 best Xbox One games list. For the meantime, though the best Xbox One games is still full of classics like Fallout 4 , Cuphead , Titanfall 2 , Minecraft and Gears of War 4 . If it's an essential Xbox One title it's here, and as there's only 25 places competition only the best get a look in. Every time something new comes alone we review it, appraise it and then, if it's good enough, it might be added here. 25. Final Fantasy 15. 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. 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. 24. Cuphead. After delays that led to maybe just a touch of apathy, Cuphead is here and has instantly become one of the best shooters all time (according to our review). While the presentation is crafted beautifully from 1930 cartoon art - things like Betty Boop shorts and Disney's Silly Symphonies - this takes gameplay cues from sources like Mega Man, Contra, Metal Slug, and Gunstar Heroes. The levels aren’t huge but it’s the challenge, not the size that matters here as you dodge bullets and learn enemy patterns. Everything tests your skills and reactions in a range of interesting ways and, most importantly, are a joy to beat. 23. Halo: Master Chief Collection. *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. Bungie's genius meets 343's love in a package that truly does justice to an industry-shaking legacy. Buffed-up, revarnished 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. Is that mug a Mimic? How about that chair? Or even that corpse. There's nothing quite like exploring Talos-1, just waiting for its terrifying alien predators to appear when you least expect it before splatting them senseless with a wrench. But that's only the beginning of the joys of Prey. Before long, you're expertly juggling Neuromods, experimenting with new abilities and attempting to stay out of sight of horrific Typhons and the frankly intimidating Nightmare. Prey requires to explore every inch of its space station, heading into tunnels when you'd rather go the other way and hunting down corpses of those who came before. Add in the twisting narrative that gradually unravels before you and this is an instant addition to our best Xbox One games list. Just remember your GLOO gun. You'll need it. 21. Rainbow Six Siege. The first few minutes of a Rainbow Six: Siege match feel more like a slasher film than an all-guns-blazing FPS. The pitter-patter of combat booted feet sounds through the roof. Defenders erect Home Alone defences. Was that the whine of a rappel buckle? It's a sense of tension that beats most horror games. And once all hell does break loose, you're suddenly thrown into the midst of deep, strategical, brutally unforgiving warfare. Ripe with tactical options and built for "one more go" appeal, this is by far Xbox One’s smartest multiplayer shooter. 20. Halo 5: Guardians. Halo's always been a balance of campaign with multiplayer, but this entry's a tad lopsided. The story of Locke chasing Chief isn't quite the era-defining moment we were hoping for but, luckily, it's the series-best multiplayer that gets our visors misty. Halo 5: Guardians offers so very much to prospective online warmongers. Arena is a return to the Halo of old, tense cerebral skirmishes that are an oasis of sanity in a sea of crude shooters. If you fancy some madness, then you have Warzone - mega-battles powered by a desperately addictive card-collecting system. And more's being added - 343 just reintroduced Big Team Battles and a new version of classic map, Blood Gulch for free. We're home. 19. Ori and the Blind Forest. Imagine a lavish, beautiful storybook world… that slams shut on your stupid, bleeding fingers for seven brutal hours. This is Ori and the Blind Forest, the result of Microsoft handing a group of retro fanatics enough money (and freedom) to make a worthy successor to the platformers of old. Not only is this a pitch-perfect update to the formula set up by Metroid and Castlevania, combining mechanical satisfaction with tear-jerking narrative sequences, it's also quite probably the best-looking 2D game of all time. So yeah, it's pretty special. 18. Middle-earth: Shadow of War. With a bigger, richer world and more tightly honed mechanics Shadow of War is a great sequel - the combat is more immediate and satisfying, the environments more detailed varied, and everything combines beautifully. It's also one of the best Xbox One X enhanced games if you want to show off all that power. This is a big game though - seriously, seriously huge. 15 hours or so will finish the prologue; another 25 odd will unlock the rest of the map, so don't pick this up for a quick fling - you need to commit. The series' nemesis system that defines the series has had expanded to create a twisting narrative of encounters, defeats and victories as you meet and battle various orcs - yours and their progress defined by who wins the fight. This time it's also been expanded to include castles you can storm, building and training an army up to the task. Even if you don't like Lord of the Rings, it's a massive and exciting open world to explore. 17. FIFA 18. It's another step on for FIFA 18 this year, with some great tweaks to the action: taking a shot from a distance now has more impact, crosses are improved with a genuine whip added to the ball. AI's been improved as well with far more individual character and personality to different star's playing styles and, while lower league team don't feels quite as good, teams do have different feeling tactics when you play them. The continuation of the single player Journey also continues to impress with an exciting and even occasionally touching campaign as you follow his career. It's this mode that gives FIFA 18 the edge over PES this year as it's leagues ahead of any comparable mode you might find in similar games. And, finally, the monster that is FIFA Ultimate Team is improved by Squad Battles which let you progress better without spending real money. A welcome addition if chasing cards and coins is big part of your life. 16. Wolfenstein 2: The New Colossus. Wolfenstein: The New Order is one of the most unique, brutal, brave, hilarious, and intelligent shooters of the generation so far. MachineGames' sequel, The New Colossus, confidently doubles down on all of that. Moving BJ Blazkowicz's very personal war further into the alternative-universe '60s, and transposing it to an America under Nazi rule, The New Colossus is uncompromisingly relevant. It's a smart, sensitive, and emotive discussion of callousness, prejudice, and cruelty, that nevertheless knows how to be fun at all times. A biting portrait of human failures and social horrors, that does its biting with big robot teeth and hatchet blades. It's a game that exemplifies heart and brains throughout, but never with more unremitting flair than when it comes to the noble art of tearing Nazis to shreds with bloody and balletic style. 15. Battlefield 1. We were worried DICE had set themselves up for a fall with a WW1 shooter, when Battlefield 1 was announced. Taking on one of the most bloody and tragic conflicts in human history isn't typically the best starting point for a fun game. But the anthology format is a masterstroke, using different perspectives to capture the sensational action of conflict, while sensitively showing the human cost of war. The story of the British chauffeur turned tank driver alone is more emotionally nuanced than anything we've seen from Battlefield before. But this isn't some weepy drama – it's a WW1 epic, an overwhelming shooter like nothing else on Xbox One, with 64 player multiplayer mode to keep you coming back. It's a gamble that paid off. Just be careful how you Tweet about it next time, OK EA? 14. Rocket League. Nobody expected this to be quite such an explosive success but then think objectively and put the words ‘cars’ and ‘football’ together and suddenly it all makes beautifully insane sense. Both local and online modes for its petrol fuelled madness makes Rocket League multiplayer gold. Slews of DLC - Back To The Future’s DeLorean anyone - since release and now a new Xbox One/PC multiplayer option means it’s now bigger and better than ever, and there’s no better time to put your hand on your wallet and foot on the gas. Make it one of your life… goals. 13. Rise of the Tomb Raider. Don’t be fooled by its frostbitten landscapes; this is the kind of barn-burning action-adventure that, until recently, only (ahem) other consoles used to get. Pivoting effortlessly from digital sightseeing to cinematic survival, then into stealth before exploding into brutal action, this is truly blockbuster stuff - appropriate for one of gaming's biggest icons. Amidst a gaming landscape packed with open worlds that sap full weeks of your life away, that Rise of the Tomb Raider packs all its thrills into a dizzying ten hours isn't just welcome, it's an accomplishment - this is non-stop fun. Except when Lara's murdered by your fumbling fingers. That's not so nice. 12. Resident Evil 7: Biohazard. Let's face it. Resident Evil had gone a bit like a foot left out of the fridge too long. A bit, well, off . After the glorious heady heights of Resi 4 defining the third person shooter as we know it, it all got a bit mediocre. Well 2017 is the year Resi got its groove back and you should be very afraid. Turning the franchise on its head, Resident Evil 7 is a first person survival terror-fest that sees you sneaking through a decrepit Louisiana mansion hunting for your missing wife. Texas Chainsaw Massacre style fiends? Check. Horrific body horror? Check that too. Add in a story that'll leave you forgetting to breathe for a little too long and Resident Evil 7 manages to be an exhilarating rollercoaster ride that reinvents the franchise. Sure you'll recognise those green herbs but this is a new brand of horror that just demands you creep through its hallways even if it feels like you should run in the opposite direction. 11. Forza Motorsport 7. Improved AI, collisions, handling - what Forza Motorsport 7 gets right reads like a list of everything a racing game should do perfectly. Cars all feel great to control, giving you the confidence you need to push the handling to its limits - drifting on cue, or hugging the rails when you need dig the tires in. In fact, throughout, this a game that tweaks and adjusts everything the previous installment got wrong. It’s all about delivering the best player experience and creating a game that’s both realistic and fun. Some of the progression is a little demanding, with numerous barriers to surmount as you collect cars and win events, but there’s nothing that really take the shine of one the greatest racers currently available. 10. Gears of War 4. It was during Act Four, when the storm was raging, bullets were flying from all sides, blood was gushing all over us as we chainsawed close-up enemies and then tried to aim at those sniping us from afar, when suddenly the music rose at the perfect moment. It was as if God himself was singing 'I'm really sorry for Gears of War: Judgment'. Apology accepted. A bloodbath with real brains, Gears of War 4 adds an army of new monsters, each demanding fresh tactics to dispatch and bringing new ideas to how we approach combat. It means the first sequel since Gears 2 that can surprise newcomers without sacrificing the excellent cover-shooting that made the series famous. Bloody essential. 9. Titanfall 2. Any FPS that lets you run along walls and then double jump into a giant mechanical Titan instantly has our attention. Titanfall 2 does that and so much more. “But where's our single-player?” we moaned, when the first Titanfall came to Xbox in 2014. “Fine!” retorted Respawn. “How about for this sequel, we tell the story of a pilot and his Titan? One where you steadily unlock Titan weapons that look powerful enough to burn the universe in half? How about a stage wherein you can travel through time at the touch of a button? How about several hours of dizzyingly paced, ideas-stuffed action that makes every shooter since we made Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare look lazy?” Well that certainly shut us up. Throw in Bounty Hunt, a capitalist nightmare of an essential multiplayer mode, and we promise never to accuse Respawn of laziness again. 8. Overwatch. Well if Valve aren't going to bother making Team Fortress 3, we'll have Blizzard do it instead. The World of Warcraft studio had never made a shooter before, so it makes no sense at all that Overwatch is one of the best multiplayer FPS' ever. A ridiculously varied cast of colourful heroes, each with powers that should logically break the game (Tracer can travel back through time for crying out loud!) Yet it all checks and balances, letting us fire bows and arrows, sky dragons, walls of ice and whip chains through the air for hours and hours without ever feeling like its cheaty or unfair. Months later, and still the only flaw we can find is Tracer's horrid cockney accent. By this logic, if Blizzard ever offer to make us dinner, expect world hunger to be eradicated within the hour. 7. Destiny 2. After the endless, life absorbing life sink of the original game what could Destiny 2 possibly do to beat it? The answer is actually obvious: more of the same, only richer, more accessible and. just. more Destiny. The sequel takes nearly every element of the space travelling, gun collecting, number raising MMO and polishes it to a fine sheen. You can see almost every area where Bungie learned from the last game, making the areas you explore richer with things to do, adding depth to both the systems that progress your character, and hte activities you take on to do so. Few games mix combat, multiplayer and character progressions so well and it's an addictive draw as a result. 6. Grand Theft Auto 5. Gaming's biggest blockbuster deserves its place at the head of the list. GTA 5 was already an excellent, brutal, beautiful open-world game, and is made even more so on Xbox One with a visual tidy-up, a glut of new content and the addition of first-person pedestrian-beating. With the addition of online Heists to make its online component even more enticing, Rockstar edges closer to making a game world so vast and varied that you could start to do away with anything else. Which, come to think of it, was probably the plan all along. 5. Minecraft. As simple or as complex as you want it to be, Minecraft is the perfect example of a game that lives up to the hype. Whether you just fancy pottering around in creative mode, or jumping into survival to take on various blocky nasties in your quest for the End, Mojang's masterpiece always feels perfectly yours and unique. This is a world worth just wandering in for eternity. Plus, the constant evolution with new packs, new textures and gameplay tweaks means that Minecraft is always moving forward. If you thought it was just about stacking up green blocks, it's time to catch up. 4. Assassin's Creed Origins. Assassin's Creed Origins is the long awaited reboot the series has needed. And ye gods, is it ever exactly what we hoped for. It's also a flagship Xbox One X Enhanced game so a great way to show off your new console. Remodelling Assassin's Creed into a true open-world RPG, full of creative stabbing, character stats, and malleable gameplay (What is best in life, Conan?), the ancient Egyptian adventure is a vast, sprawling, actual, bona fide country of a game, packing with detail, side-quests, and secrets to tackle your own way, at any time you want. With the overhauled combat now fuelled by a fully customisable gear system (Want twin daggers that put people to sleep, and a poisonous shield? Or a sword that buffs your health, and a bow with controllable arrows? You can have all of these things), any hint of the old series’ weary gameplay is long gone. Packed with wit, warmth, and a staggering scale of options, it's really rather fitting that the game that goes back to the beginning of the story is also the one that gives Assassin's Creed a fresh start. 3. Metal Gear Solid 5: The Phantom Pain. If we didn't know better (or should that be worse?), we'd say Konami took the Hideo Kojima brand off of his last stab at MGS 5: The Phantom Pain because it feels quite so different to his previous efforts. Yes, it's packed with the off-kilter jokes, mechanical ingenuity and conspiracy theories so wild they're seemingly drawn from the darkest of the internet's depths - but at it's core, this is a very different kind of Hideo Kojima game. 2. Fallout 4. 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. 1. Witcher 3: Wild Hunt. One of the most immersive RPGs ever made - a standout, mutable storyline, endlessly satisfying detective-cum-hitman Contracts, and side quests deeper than many games' main campaigns. The Witcher 3's world is one of the few game spaces to deserve that title - full of political intrigue, folklore and gross beasts to slice into ribbons. And all of that's failing to mention CD Projekt RED's raft of free DLC, and a couple of expansion packs - the first of which, Hearts of Stone, is responsible for this shooting up to the highest reaches of this list. Beautiful, rewarding and essential, this is a game we'll remember for years and years to come. Some online stores give us a small cut if you buy something through one of our links. Read our affiliate policy for more info. Recommended. 8 things to watch out for this week. Who are the GamesRadar+ team? Shadow of the Colossus review: "Still feels as thought provoking and artful as it did all those years ago on PS2" Monster Hunter World review: "An incredible achievement" UFC 3 review: "Half-brilliant, half going-through-the-motions" Dragon Ball FighterZ review: "Flashy and a bit dumb. but god is it fun to watch" The Inpatient review: "It's all utterly brilliant; terrifyingly so" Journey's End review: "A harrowing, powerful WW1 drama well worth enduring" Phantom Thread review: "Anderson crafts another classic of obsession and strange love" Early Man review: "A primitive concept generates unsophisticated laughs" Last Flag Flying review: "A salty road trip tinged with sadness" Downsizing review: "Alexander Payne re-confirms his position as one of US cinema's premier filmmakers" Star Trek Discovery S1.13 review: "It's incredible how much is packed into this one episode" Star Trek Discovery S1.12 review: "Proves that the series is even cleverer than we originally thought" Star Trek Discovery S1.11 review: "Swaps action for character revelations, but is no less thrilling" Star Trek Discovery S1.10 review: "So shocking and emotional that you'll need a second watch" The Walking Dead S8.08 review: "Is this really the best The Walking Dead has to give?" 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Calculate the total value of. multiple games at the same time. eBay Lot Bot. Automatically value all games in. video game lots on eBay. eBay Game Sniper. See game deals on eBay within. seconds of being listed for sale. Buy & Sell in Our Free Video Game Marketplace. No fees to sell games Money back guarantee on all purchases Free Marketplace. Categories Video Game Prices Buy Video Games Sell Video Games Tools Video Game Price Guide Collection Tracker Lot Value Calculator eBay Lot Bot eBay Game Sniper Navigation Home About Us Contact Us Request Features Other Links FAQ/Help Blog & Changelog API Documentation Policies Terms of Service Privacy Policy Return Policy. PriceCharting © 2007-2018 | All prices are USD. Prizes await anyone who solves the 'no more secrets' puzzles. Xbox One Backward Compatibility Game List. This list of games playable on Xbox One records all backward-compatible 360 and XBLA games confirmed to function on current-gen hardware. Microsoft announced during its E3 2017 conference original Xbox games will be compatible with the Xbox One as well, however announced only a single game so far.  Most recent addition: Call of Duty: Black Ops II, April 11th, 2017. Confirmed Xbox Games. Crimson Skies: High Road to Revenge. Confirmed Xbox 360 Games. A Kingdom for Keflings A World of Keflings Aegis Wing Age of Booty Alan Wake Alan Wake's American Nightmare Alien Hominid HD Altered Beast Anomaly War Zone Aqua Arkanoid Live Assassin's Creed Assassin’s Creed II Asteroids & Deluxe Babel Rising Banjo Kazooie: Nuts & Bolts Banjo-Kazooie Banjo-Tooie BattleBlock Theater Battlestations: Midway Bayonetta Bejeweled 2 Bejeweled 3 Bellator: MMA Onslaught Beyond Good & Evil HD Bionic Commando Rearmed 2 Bloodforge Blood Knights Blood of the Werewolf BloodRayne: Betrayal Bomberman Battlefest Boom Boom Rocket Borderlands Bound By Flame Braid Brain Challenge Blue Dragon (requires disk) Burnout Paradise Call of Duty 2 Call of Duty 3 Call of Duty: Black Ops Call of Duty: Black Ops 2 Call of Duty: World at War Call of Juarez Gunslinger Capcom Arcade Cabinet Carcassonne Castle Crashers Castle of Illusion Starring Mickey Mouse CastleStorm Castlevania: Symphony of the Night Centipede & Millipede Comic Jumper Comix Zone Condemned: Criminal Origins Counter-Strike: GO Crazy Taxi Crystal Defenders Crystal Quest Dark Souls Dark Void Deadliest Warrior: Legends Dead Space Dead Space Ignition Deathspank TOV De Blob 2 Defense Grid: The Awakening Deus Ex: Human Revolution Deus Ex: Human Revolution – Director’s Cut Dig Dug DiRT 3 DiRT Showdown Discs of Tron Domino Master Doom Doom II Doom 3 BFG Edition (disc version) Doritos Crash Course Double Dragon Neon Dragon's Lair Duck Tales: Remastered Duke Nukem Manhattan Project Dungeons & Dragons: Chronicles of Mystara Dungeon Siege III E4 Earthworm Jim HD Eat Lead EnclevermentExperiment Escape Dead Island Fable II Fable III Faery: Legends of Avalon Fallout 3 Fallout New Vegas Far Cry 3 Blood Dragon Feeding Frenzy Feeding Frenzy 2: Shipwreck Showdown Final Fight: Double Impact Flashback Flock Forza Horizon Foul Play Fret Nice Frogger Frogger 2 FunTown Mahjong Galaga Galaga Legions Galaga Legions DX Garou: Mark of the Wolves Gating Gears Gears of War Gears of War 2 Gears of War 3 Gears of War: Judgment Geometry Wars Evolved Ghostbusters: Sanctum of Slime Golden Axe Go Go Break Steady Grid 2 Gripshift Guardian Heroes Gunstar Heroes Guwange Half-Minute Hero Halo: Reach Halo: Spartan Assault Halo Wars Hardwood Backgammon Hardwood Hearts Hardwood Spades Haunted House Heavy Weapon Hexic HD Hexic 2 Hydro Thunder I Am Alive Ikaruga Injustice: Gods Among Us Interpol Iron Brigade Jeremy McGrath's Offroad Jetpac Refuelled Jet Set Radio Joe Danger Special Edition Joe Danger 2 Jurassic Park: The Game Joust Joy Ride Turbo Just Cause 2 Kameo: Elements of Power Kane & Lynch 2 Killer Is Dead Lazy Raiders Left 4 Dead Left 4 Dead 2 LEGO Batman LEGO Pirates of the Caribbean: The Video Game LEGO Star Wars: The Complete Saga Limbo Lode Runner Lost Odyssey LUMINES LIVE! Magic 2012 Mars: War Logs Mass Effect Mass Effect 2 Mass Effect 3 Metal Slug 3 Metal Slug XX Might & Magic Clash of Heroes Military Madness Mirror’s Edge Missile Command Monaco: What's Yours Is Mine Monday Night Combat Monkey Island 2: Special Edition Monkey Island: Special Edition Monopoly Plus Motocross Madness Mr. Driller Online MS. PAC-MAN Ms. Splosion Man Mutant Blobs Attack. MX vs. ATV Reflex N+ NBA JAM: On Fire Edition NeoGeo Battle Coliseum New Rally X NiGHTS into dreams… Nin2-Jump Of Orcs and Men OFP: Red River (disc only) Omage Five Operation Flashpoint: Dragon Rising Outland Pac-Man Pac-Man: Championship Edition Pac-Man: Championship Edition DX+ Pac-Man Museum Peggle Perfect Dark Perfect Dark Zero Phantasy Star 2 Phantom Breaker: Battle Grounds Pinball FX Plants vs. Zombies Portal 2 Portal: Still Alive Prince of Persia Pure (disc only) Putty Squad Puzzlegeddon Puzzle Quest Puzzle Quest 2 Puzzle Quest Galactrix Qix++ Rage (Disc Only) R-Type Dimensions Rayman 3 HD Rayman Legends Rayman Origins Red Dead Redemption Red Faction Battlegrounds Runner2 Sacred 3 Sacred Citadel Saints Row 4 Sam and Max Beyond Space and Time Sam and Max Save the World Samurai Shodown 2 Scarygirl Sega Bass Fishing Sega Vintage Collection: Alex Kidd & Co. Sega Vintage Collection: Golden Axe Sega Vintage Collection: Monster World Sega Vintage Collection: Streets of Rage Shadow Complex Shadowrun Shank 2 Shred Nebula Shortest Shogi Silent Hill: Downpour Skate 3 Skullgirls Small Arms Sonic CD Sonic & All-stars Racing Transformed Sonic & Knuckles Sonic The Fighters Sonic The Hedgehog Sonic The Hedgehog 2 Sonic The Hedgehog 3 Sonic The Hedgehog 4 Episode 1 Sonic The Hedgehog 4 Episode 2 Soul Calibur SoulCalibur 2 HD South Park: The Stick of Truth Space Ark Space Giraffe Spelunky Splosion Man SSX Star Wars: The Force Unleashed Star Wars: The Force Unleashed 2 Super Meat Boy Supreme Commander 2 Syberia Tekken Tag Tournament 2 Texas Hold'Em The Cave The King of Fighters 98 UM The Maw The Orange Box The Witcher 2: Assassin of Kings Ticket To Ride Tom Clancy’s RainbowSix Vegas Tom Clancy’s RainbowSix Vegas 2 Torchlight Tour de France 2009 Tour de France 2011 Toy Soldiers Toy Soldiers: Cold War Toy Story 3 Trials HD Triggerheart Exelica Tron: Evolution Ugly Americans: Apocalypsegeddon Unbound Saga Virtua Fighter 5 Final Showdown Viva Piñata Viva Piñata: Trouble In Paradise Wolfenstein 3D Word Puzzle XCOM: Enemy Unknown XCOM: Enemy Within Zuma Zuma's Revenge! Microsoft announced Xbox One backward compatibility at E3 2015 and started rolling out the function on November 12, 2015. Xbox 360 discs do not play natively but trigger a download of a compatible file, while downloadable titles tied to the logged-in user account appear automatically. Xbox One Controller Previous. Xbox One Console Design. © 1996-2018 Ziff Davis, LLC. We have updated our PRIVACY POLICY and encourage you to read it by clicking here. IGN uses cookies and other tracking technologies to customize online advertisements, and for other purposes. IGN supports the Digital Advertising Alliance principles. Learn More. GamesRadar+ The 25 best Xbox One games. What are the best Xbox One games to buy? Take a look at this list and all will become clear. The cream of the crop. In case you missed it, Monster Hunter World is pretty popular right now. It\s sold well, and is good, but it's best Xbox One games good? Well, not quite. There's been some online problems on Xbox One and while it's good, it's not really a hall of fame job. It was a similar story with the recent Vanishing of Ethan Carter, an atmospheric supernatural murder mystery that, like Monster Hunter World, is highly recommended. However, when you've only 25 places to fill they've got to go to the best of the best. That means things like Assassin's Creed Origins and Wolfenstein 2 most recently. They're also two Xbox One X Enhanced games so if you have a 4K TV and an X, then those are great games to show everything off. In terms of upcoming Xbox One games, Coming up soon we'll have Monster Hunter World on Jan 26, and Far Cry 5 on March 27, along with this little selection over the next couple of months. Mar 13 - The Crew 2. Mar 23 - A Way Out. 'Spring' - State of Decay 2. 'Spring - Crackdown 3. Only time will tell if any of those will make it into the 25 best Xbox One games list. For the meantime, though the best Xbox One games is still full of classics like Fallout 4 , Cuphead , Titanfall 2 , Minecraft and Gears of War 4 . If it's an essential Xbox One title it's here, and as there's only 25 places competition only the best get a look in. Every time something new comes alone we review it, appraise it and then, if it's good enough, it might be added here. 25. Final Fantasy 15. 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. 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. 24. Cuphead. After delays that led to maybe just a touch of apathy, Cuphead is here and has instantly become one of the best shooters all time (according to our review). While the presentation is crafted beautifully from 1930 cartoon art - things like Betty Boop shorts and Disney's Silly Symphonies - this takes gameplay cues from sources like Mega Man, Contra, Metal Slug, and Gunstar Heroes. The levels aren’t huge but it’s the challenge, not the size that matters here as you dodge bullets and learn enemy patterns. Everything tests your skills and reactions in a range of interesting ways and, most importantly, are a joy to beat. 23. Halo: Master Chief Collection. *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. Bungie's genius meets 343's love in a package that truly does justice to an industry-shaking legacy. Buffed-up, revarnished 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. Is that mug a Mimic? How about that chair? Or even that corpse. There's nothing quite like exploring Talos-1, just waiting for its terrifying alien predators to appear when you least expect it before splatting them senseless with a wrench. But that's only the beginning of the joys of Prey. Before long, you're expertly juggling Neuromods, experimenting with new abilities and attempting to stay out of sight of horrific Typhons and the frankly intimidating Nightmare. Prey requires to explore every inch of its space station, heading into tunnels when you'd rather go the other way and hunting down corpses of those who came before. Add in the twisting narrative that gradually unravels before you and this is an instant addition to our best Xbox One games list. Just remember your GLOO gun. You'll need it. 21. Rainbow Six Siege. The first few minutes of a Rainbow Six: Siege match feel more like a slasher film than an all-guns-blazing FPS. The pitter-patter of combat booted feet sounds through the roof. Defenders erect Home Alone defences. Was that the whine of a rappel buckle? It's a sense of tension that beats most horror games. And once all hell does break loose, you're suddenly thrown into the midst of deep, strategical, brutally unforgiving warfare. Ripe with tactical options and built for "one more go" appeal, this is by far Xbox One’s smartest multiplayer shooter. 20. Halo 5: Guardians. Halo's always been a balance of campaign with multiplayer, but this entry's a tad lopsided. The story of Locke chasing Chief isn't quite the era-defining moment we were hoping for but, luckily, it's the series-best multiplayer that gets our visors misty. Halo 5: Guardians offers so very much to prospective online warmongers. Arena is a return to the Halo of old, tense cerebral skirmishes that are an oasis of sanity in a sea of crude shooters. If you fancy some madness, then you have Warzone - mega-battles powered by a desperately addictive card-collecting system. And more's being added - 343 just reintroduced Big Team Battles and a new version of classic map, Blood Gulch for free. We're home. 19. Ori and the Blind Forest. Imagine a lavish, beautiful storybook world… that slams shut on your stupid, bleeding fingers for seven brutal hours. This is Ori and the Blind Forest, the result of Microsoft handing a group of retro fanatics enough money (and freedom) to make a worthy successor to the platformers of old. Not only is this a pitch-perfect update to the formula set up by Metroid and Castlevania, combining mechanical satisfaction with tear-jerking narrative sequences, it's also quite probably the best-looking 2D game of all time. So yeah, it's pretty special. 18. Middle-earth: Shadow of War. With a bigger, richer world and more tightly honed mechanics Shadow of War is a great sequel - the combat is more immediate and satisfying, the environments more detailed varied, and everything combines beautifully. It's also one of the best Xbox One X enhanced games if you want to show off all that power. This is a big game though - seriously, seriously huge. 15 hours or so will finish the prologue; another 25 odd will unlock the rest of the map, so don't pick this up for a quick fling - you need to commit. The series' nemesis system that defines the series has had expanded to create a twisting narrative of encounters, defeats and victories as you meet and battle various orcs - yours and their progress defined by who wins the fight. This time it's also been expanded to include castles you can storm, building and training an army up to the task. Even if you don't like Lord of the Rings, it's a massive and exciting open world to explore. 17. FIFA 18. It's another step on for FIFA 18 this year, with some great tweaks to the action: taking a shot from a distance now has more impact, crosses are improved with a genuine whip added to the ball. AI's been improved as well with far more individual character and personality to different star's playing styles and, while lower league team don't feels quite as good, teams do have different feeling tactics when you play them. The continuation of the single player Journey also continues to impress with an exciting and even occasionally touching campaign as you follow his career. It's this mode that gives FIFA 18 the edge over PES this year as it's leagues ahead of any comparable mode you might find in similar games. And, finally, the monster that is FIFA Ultimate Team is improved by Squad Battles which let you progress better without spending real money. A welcome addition if chasing cards and coins is big part of your life. 16. Wolfenstein 2: The New Colossus. Wolfenstein: The New Order is one of the most unique, brutal, brave, hilarious, and intelligent shooters of the generation so far. MachineGames' sequel, The New Colossus, confidently doubles down on all of that. Moving BJ Blazkowicz's very personal war further into the alternative-universe '60s, and transposing it to an America under Nazi rule, The New Colossus is uncompromisingly relevant. It's a smart, sensitive, and emotive discussion of callousness, prejudice, and cruelty, that nevertheless knows how to be fun at all times. A biting portrait of human failures and social horrors, that does its biting with big robot teeth and hatchet blades. It's a game that exemplifies heart and brains throughout, but never with more unremitting flair than when it comes to the noble art of tearing Nazis to shreds with bloody and balletic style. 15. Battlefield 1. We were worried DICE had set themselves up for a fall with a WW1 shooter, when Battlefield 1 was announced. Taking on one of the most bloody and tragic conflicts in human history isn't typically the best starting point for a fun game. But the anthology format is a masterstroke, using different perspectives to capture the sensational action of conflict, while sensitively showing the human cost of war. The story of the British chauffeur turned tank driver alone is more emotionally nuanced than anything we've seen from Battlefield before. But this isn't some weepy drama – it's a WW1 epic, an overwhelming shooter like nothing else on Xbox One, with 64 player multiplayer mode to keep you coming back. It's a gamble that paid off. Just be careful how you Tweet about it next time, OK EA? 14. Rocket League. Nobody expected this to be quite such an explosive success but then think objectively and put the words ‘cars’ and ‘football’ together and suddenly it all makes beautifully insane sense. Both local and online modes for its petrol fuelled madness makes Rocket League multiplayer gold. Slews of DLC - Back To The Future’s DeLorean anyone - since release and now a new Xbox One/PC multiplayer option means it’s now bigger and better than ever, and there’s no better time to put your hand on your wallet and foot on the gas. Make it one of your life… goals. 13. Rise of the Tomb Raider. Don’t be fooled by its frostbitten landscapes; this is the kind of barn-burning action-adventure that, until recently, only (ahem) other consoles used to get. Pivoting effortlessly from digital sightseeing to cinematic survival, then into stealth before exploding into brutal action, this is truly blockbuster stuff - appropriate for one of gaming's biggest icons. Amidst a gaming landscape packed with open worlds that sap full weeks of your life away, that Rise of the Tomb Raider packs all its thrills into a dizzying ten hours isn't just welcome, it's an accomplishment - this is non-stop fun. Except when Lara's murdered by your fumbling fingers. That's not so nice. 12. Resident Evil 7: Biohazard. Let's face it. Resident Evil had gone a bit like a foot left out of the fridge too long. A bit, well, off . After the glorious heady heights of Resi 4 defining the third person shooter as we know it, it all got a bit mediocre. Well 2017 is the year Resi got its groove back and you should be very afraid. Turning the franchise on its head, Resident Evil 7 is a first person survival terror-fest that sees you sneaking through a decrepit Louisiana mansion hunting for your missing wife. Texas Chainsaw Massacre style fiends? Check. Horrific body horror? Check that too. Add in a story that'll leave you forgetting to breathe for a little too long and Resident Evil 7 manages to be an exhilarating rollercoaster ride that reinvents the franchise. Sure you'll recognise those green herbs but this is a new brand of horror that just demands you creep through its hallways even if it feels like you should run in the opposite direction. 11. Forza Motorsport 7. Improved AI, collisions, handling - what Forza Motorsport 7 gets right reads like a list of everything a racing game should do perfectly. Cars all feel great to control, giving you the confidence you need to push the handling to its limits - drifting on cue, or hugging the rails when you need dig the tires in. In fact, throughout, this a game that tweaks and adjusts everything the previous installment got wrong. It’s all about delivering the best player experience and creating a game that’s both realistic and fun. Some of the progression is a little demanding, with numerous barriers to surmount as you collect cars and win events, but there’s nothing that really take the shine of one the greatest racers currently available. 10. Gears of War 4. It was during Act Four, when the storm was raging, bullets were flying from all sides, blood was gushing all over us as we chainsawed close-up enemies and then tried to aim at those sniping us from afar, when suddenly the music rose at the perfect moment. It was as if God himself was singing 'I'm really sorry for Gears of War: Judgment'. Apology accepted. A bloodbath with real brains, Gears of War 4 adds an army of new monsters, each demanding fresh tactics to dispatch and bringing new ideas to how we approach combat. It means the first sequel since Gears 2 that can surprise newcomers without sacrificing the excellent cover-shooting that made the series famous. Bloody essential. 9. Titanfall 2. Any FPS that lets you run along walls and then double jump into a giant mechanical Titan instantly has our attention. Titanfall 2 does that and so much more. “But where's our single-player?” we moaned, when the first Titanfall came to Xbox in 2014. “Fine!” retorted Respawn. “How about for this sequel, we tell the story of a pilot and his Titan? One where you steadily unlock Titan weapons that look powerful enough to burn the universe in half? How about a stage wherein you can travel through time at the touch of a button? How about several hours of dizzyingly paced, ideas-stuffed action that makes every shooter since we made Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare look lazy?” Well that certainly shut us up. Throw in Bounty Hunt, a capitalist nightmare of an essential multiplayer mode, and we promise never to accuse Respawn of laziness again. 8. Overwatch. Well if Valve aren't going to bother making Team Fortress 3, we'll have Blizzard do it instead. The World of Warcraft studio had never made a shooter before, so it makes no sense at all that Overwatch is one of the best multiplayer FPS' ever. A ridiculously varied cast of colourful heroes, each with powers that should logically break the game (Tracer can travel back through time for crying out loud!) Yet it all checks and balances, letting us fire bows and arrows, sky dragons, walls of ice and whip chains through the air for hours and hours without ever feeling like its cheaty or unfair. Months later, and still the only flaw we can find is Tracer's horrid cockney accent. By this logic, if Blizzard ever offer to make us dinner, expect world hunger to be eradicated within the hour. 7. Destiny 2. After the endless, life absorbing life sink of the original game what could Destiny 2 possibly do to beat it? The answer is actually obvious: more of the same, only richer, more accessible and. just. more Destiny. The sequel takes nearly every element of the space travelling, gun collecting, number raising MMO and polishes it to a fine sheen. You can see almost every area where Bungie learned from the last game, making the areas you explore richer with things to do, adding depth to both the systems that progress your character, and hte activities you take on to do so. Few games mix combat, multiplayer and character progressions so well and it's an addictive draw as a result. 6. Grand Theft Auto 5. Gaming's biggest blockbuster deserves its place at the head of the list. GTA 5 was already an excellent, brutal, beautiful open-world game, and is made even more so on Xbox One with a visual tidy-up, a glut of new content and the addition of first-person pedestrian-beating. With the addition of online Heists to make its online component even more enticing, Rockstar edges closer to making a game world so vast and varied that you could start to do away with anything else. Which, come to think of it, was probably the plan all along. 5. Minecraft. As simple or as complex as you want it to be, Minecraft is the perfect example of a game that lives up to the hype. Whether you just fancy pottering around in creative mode, or jumping into survival to take on various blocky nasties in your quest for the End, Mojang's masterpiece always feels perfectly yours and unique. This is a world worth just wandering in for eternity. Plus, the constant evolution with new packs, new textures and gameplay tweaks means that Minecraft is always moving forward. If you thought it was just about stacking up green blocks, it's time to catch up. 4. Assassin's Creed Origins. Assassin's Creed Origins is the long awaited reboot the series has needed. And ye gods, is it ever exactly what we hoped for. It's also a flagship Xbox One X Enhanced game so a great way to show off your new console. Remodelling Assassin's Creed into a true open-world RPG, full of creative stabbing, character stats, and malleable gameplay (What is best in life, Conan?), the ancient Egyptian adventure is a vast, sprawling, actual, bona fide country of a game, packing with detail, side-quests, and secrets to tackle your own way, at any time you want. With the overhauled combat now fuelled by a fully customisable gear system (Want twin daggers that put people to sleep, and a poisonous shield? Or a sword that buffs your health, and a bow with controllable arrows? You can have all of these things), any hint of the old series’ weary gameplay is long gone. Packed with wit, warmth, and a staggering scale of options, it's really rather fitting that the game that goes back to the beginning of the story is also the one that gives Assassin's Creed a fresh start. 3. Metal Gear Solid 5: The Phantom Pain. If we didn't know better (or should that be worse?), we'd say Konami took the Hideo Kojima brand off of his last stab at MGS 5: The Phantom Pain because it feels quite so different to his previous efforts. Yes, it's packed with the off-kilter jokes, mechanical ingenuity and conspiracy theories so wild they're seemingly drawn from the darkest of the internet's depths - but at it's core, this is a very different kind of Hideo Kojima game. 2. Fallout 4. 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. 1. Witcher 3: Wild Hunt. One of the most immersive RPGs ever made - a standout, mutable storyline, endlessly satisfying detective-cum-hitman Contracts, and side quests deeper than many games' main campaigns. The Witcher 3's world is one of the few game spaces to deserve that title - full of political intrigue, folklore and gross beasts to slice into ribbons. And all of that's failing to mention CD Projekt RED's raft of free DLC, and a couple of expansion packs - the first of which, Hearts of Stone, is responsible for this shooting up to the highest reaches of this list. Beautiful, rewarding and essential, this is a game we'll remember for years and years to come. Some online stores give us a small cut if you buy something through one of our links. Read our affiliate policy for more info. Recommended. 8 things to watch out for this week. Who are the GamesRadar+ team? Shadow of the Colossus review: "Still feels as thought provoking and artful as it did all those years ago on PS2" Monster Hunter World review: "An incredible achievement" UFC 3 review: "Half-brilliant, half going-through-the-motions" Dragon Ball FighterZ review: "Flashy and a bit dumb. but god is it fun to watch" The Inpatient review: "It's all utterly brilliant; terrifyingly so" Journey's End review: "A harrowing, powerful WW1 drama well worth enduring" Phantom Thread review: "Anderson crafts another classic of obsession and strange love" Early Man review: "A primitive concept generates unsophisticated laughs" Last Flag Flying review: "A salty road trip tinged with sadness" Downsizing review: "Alexander Payne re-confirms his position as one of US cinema's premier filmmakers" Star Trek Discovery S1.13 review: "It's incredible how much is packed into this one episode" Star Trek Discovery S1.12 review: "Proves that the series is even cleverer than we originally thought" Star Trek Discovery S1.11 review: "Swaps action for character revelations, but is no less thrilling" Star Trek Discovery S1.10 review: "So shocking and emotional that you'll need a second watch" The Walking Dead S8.08 review: "Is this really the best The Walking Dead has to give?" 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Перевести на русский. You are shopping Microsoft Store in: United States - English. Are you looking for Microsoft Store in: Россия - Русский? Troubleshoot slow game or app downloads on Xbox One. You may have a slow download speed if you're experiencing one of the following symptoms: Your installation is taking a long time to complete. The progress bar for your download or update hasn't advanced for a while. If you're having problems connecting to your network or you're getting errors related to network connectivity, try the Xbox One Network Connection Error Solution. The following steps will help identify whether there's a problem with your network when downloading a game or app on your Xbox One console and show you how to improve network speed. Solution 1: Check the download speed. Follow these steps: Scroll Installing… < the game title you're downloading >. In the "Queue" section of My games & apps , note the download speed shown on the game or app that is being installed. This indicates the current download speed. If you're seeing slow speeds (for example, less than 1 megabit per second), it may take a long time for the download to complete. The table below represents estimated download times based on current download speed. Note This information is intended as a guide only, not an actual representation of download time. Bandwidth will be constrained and download time will increase during activities such as streaming content, playing games, or game streaming from your Xbox One to a Windows 10 PC. Current download speed. If you're installing a 40-GB file and it's 25 percent downloaded (30 GB remaining) and your connection speed is 10 Mb/s, it should take about 4.4 hours for the download to complete. (This assumes that the download speed stays the same.) While connect to Xbox Live, your connection speed should be at least 1.5 Mb/s for the best experience. For more information about bandwidth usage or to troubleshoot your network connection, see the Xbox One Network Connection Error Solution. Solution 2: Close any running games. To provide the best gaming experience, background downloads are constrained while a game is running. To remove download constraints from games or apps being installed, you can either wait for the Xbox One to suspend the running game, or you can force games to close by doing the following: On the Home screen, navigate to your most recently run game. With the game selected, press the Menu button and select Quit . Once you've closed the most recently run game: Check the speed at which your game or app is downloading. To avoid slowing your download, don't launch any games or apps until your download has completed. Solution 3: Restart your console. Press the Xbox button to open the guide. Select System > Restart console . Select Yes to confirm. This will automatically pause any existing downloads, which will resume once the console is restarted. Note If you're unable to access the Guide or if the console appears to be frozen, press and hold the Xbox button on the console for about 10 seconds, until the console turns off. After the console shuts down, touch the Xbox button on the console again to restart. When you restart your console, all open apps and games are closed. Once your console has restarted, verify that your downloads have resumed by doing the following: On the Home screen, open My games & apps . Select Queue and highlight the game or app you're trying to download. The game or app should show as Installing . If the status shows as Queued or Paused , select the game or app, press the Menu button , and then select Resume installation . Once you've checked that your downloads have resumed: Check the speed at which your game or app is downloading. To avoid slowing your download, don't launch any games or apps until your download has completed. Solution 4: Cancel the game or app installation and then reinstall. If the steps above didn't resolve the problem, you should cancel the game installation. Here's how: On the Home screen, open My games & apps . Select Queue and highlight the game or app you're trying to download. Press the Menu button on your controller, and then select Cancel . You can then reinstall the game by inserting the disc or downloading again from Microsoft Store. To download the game again, search for and select the game in Microsoft Store, and then select Install . Once you've restarted your download, check the download speed of your game or app again. Solution 5: Check your console’s network connection. If the previous solutions didn't resolve the problem, check to see what your console’s download speed is in comparison with your subscription plan from your Internet service provider (ISP). First, pause any running or queued downloads: On the Home screen, open My games & apps . Select Queue and highlight any games or apps that are downloading or are queued to download. Press the Menu button on your controller, and then select Pause installation for each game or app that's downloading or queued. Next, close any games that are running on your system: On the Home screen, navigate to your most recently run game. With the game selected, press the Menu button and select Quit . Now, run a network speed test: Press the Xbox button to open the guide. Select System > Settings . Select Network > Network settings > Detailed network statistics . Your console will run a connection test and display the detected download speed, which you can compare against your Internet service provider’s subscription plan. If you’re seeing a substantially lower download speed than expected on the Detailed network statistics page, there are several possible causes: Network contention on your home network - Network-enabled devices can compete on your home network for the same download bandwidth as your Xbox One console. Try pausing any download activity from other devices on your home network to see if that improves your console’s download speed. Also, check to see if your home router has support for Quality of Service (QoS) for its Internet connection. Enabling a QoS feature on your home router can help prioritize the network connection for your Xbox One to improve download speeds. Wireless network contention - If your console is connected to your home network via a wireless connection, the console may be competing with other wireless devices or other wireless networks. If possible, try connecting your Xbox One console to your home router through a wired connection. If you can't connect your console with a wired connection, check to see if your home router supports dual-band connections (both 2.4-GHz and 5-GHz Wi-Fi connections). If your home router is dual band, try moving your Xbox One console to the 5-GHz router connection and move other wireless devices to the 2.4-GHz router connection. While 5-GHz Wi-Fi has shorter range than 2.4-GHz Wi-Fi, it can also have less overlap with other wireless networks and therefore perform better. Internet service provider network contention - Your download speed can also vary depending on the time of day and day of the week. This is often caused by ISP network contention during peak usage windows. If download speeds on your Xbox One are substantially slower during weekday evenings or weekends compared to weekday mornings/afternoons, this may be caused by ISP network contention. To work around this constraint, try starting game or app downloads late in the evening to let them run overnight, during off-peak hours. If you're still seeing a slow download speed, try the Xbox One Network Connection Error Solution, which can help identify problems between your home network and your Internet service provider. Complete List of Xbox One Install Sizes – over 350 Titles. Struggling to juggle the hard drive space on your Xbox One console? Wondering how much space you will need for the next game on your wish list? Well look no further; here is the install space requirements of every game you can get on the Xbox One. In its infinite wisdom, both Microsoft and Sony released their latest generation of consoles with puny 500GB hard drives, despite a mandate that all games must be installed to be played. When the downloadable indie game LocoCycle launched alongside the console with a whopping 13GB install, it quickly became clear that the Xbox One era would be one requiring expert space management skills to be fully enjoyed. Soon enough blockbusters were launching one after the other with 40GB+ installs and people were rushing to shops to buy external hard drives so they could keep up. This is not an issue specific to the Xbox One, and indeed Sony’s PlayStation 4 suffers the same size constraints. ALSO READ: Will splitscreen multiplayer eventually return to Halo 5? ALSO READ: The Complete List of PS4 Install Sizes ALSO READ: The Complete List of Backwards Compatible Games on Xbox One ALSO READ: 62 games were shown in marketing material for backwards compatibility but weren’t available at launch ALSO READ: PS4 has 229 Exclusives and Xbox One has 122 Exclusives. Luckily any external hard drive with USB 3.0 support can plug into the back of your Xbox One and function as an install space – it’s more-or-less essential for most gamers. As well as the list of install sizes, you will also find a number of hard drive options on this page that you can purchase now online to offer some space respite and to keep the good times rolling. And with 137 Xbox 360 games already known to be backwards compatible on Xbox One come November – see the full list here – you know you’re going to need a lot of space very soon. Latest Xbox One deals. Deal expires 30 Dec 2018. Last verified 20 Dec 2017. Deal expires 30 Dec 2019. Last verified 7 Nov 2017. NOTE: After release, games are often patched, and those patches can weigh into the gigabytes. In addition, DLC and expansions are often frequently released. Because we cannot be sure if your console is connected to the Net, and what extended content you will own, this list is based around the raw install size of the game, prior to your engagement with it. Ask an Expert. 4 Responses. Battlefield Bad Company 2 is not for xbox 1… there is alot of games here that aren’t for this console. Hello Mike, this is Joel! Thank you for leaving a feedback on finder. As a friendly reminder, while we do not represent any company we feature on our pages, we can offer you general advice. Xbox One has backwards compatibility so Battlefield Bad Company 2 will surely run on an Xbox One. Should you have further questions, please do not hesitate sending us a message anytime. In this list I am reading it says doom and doom 2 for xbox one yet it’s only for xbox 360? Am I missing something? Thanks for your inquiry. Yes, as I have checked, Doom and Doom II is available for Xbox One since last year, 2016. 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