In 2022, PlayStation introduced its new PlayStation Plus tier system, offering players access to game trials, cloud gaming, and — finally — a growing catalog of games to play. It’s PlayStation’s version of Xbox’s Game Pass service, and it’s packed with some excellent games from the last decade.
The PlayStation Plus Game Catalog is a perk in both the PlayStation Plus Extra and Premium tiers, which will run players either $14.99 or $17.99 a month, respectively. The Game Catalog works similarly to Game Pass, with games rotating in and out of the service over time.
While the Game Catalog doesn’t offer new, first-party Sony games the day they’re released, its library is in a great place nonetheless. Sony is offering some of the best AAA games out there for players who subscribe to the higher tiers, taking advantage of the PlayStation 4 and 5’s excellent library of single-player titles.
The PlayStation Plus Game Catalog can be overwhelming to scroll through, though. That’s where we can help. We’ve listed the 25 best games on the service to help you figure out where to start (or continue) your Game Catalog journey.
(Ed. note: This list was last updated on Oct 27, 2023. It will be updated as new games come to the service.)
Batman: Arkham Knight
Image: Rocksteady Studios/Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment
Batman: Arkham Knight is the conclusion to Rocksteady’s Batman trilogy, and it goes for broke. Arkham Knight is most well known for its addition of the controversial Batmobile to the nearly every piece of the trilogy’s formula. There are still dungeons to delve into and crimes to solve on the rooftops — but the Batmobile helps players break into new areas, rescue civilians, battle remote-controlled tanks, solve puzzles, and traverse Gotham at high speeds.
But despite its notoriety, the Batmobile is not what makes Arkham Knight so good. The third entry explores the relationship between Batman and Joker in surprising ways, and their connection fuels some of the game’s biggest moments and set-pieces.
It’s a worthy finale to the Rocksteady trilogy and a great Batman game to dive into, even if you’ve never played any of the others. —Ryan Gilliam
Bloodborne
Image: FromSoftware/Sony Interactive Entertainment
Bloodborne is a PlayStation 4 classic. It takes FromSoftware’s beloved but brutal gameplay and transports it to a gothic Lovecraftian setting. As the Hunter, you must haunt the streets of Yharnam, taking on its hostile citizens and grotesque mysteries.
Much of what Bloodborne does best can also be found in From’s other titles, but unlike Dark Souls and Elden Ring, Bloodborne forces you into an aggressive play style. When you take damage, you can strike the enemy back to regain some health. What’s more, the shields and heavy armor found in similar titles are absent here, so it’s more about careful dodges than making a damage-resistant build.
Bloodborne became an instant classic upon its release, and its still one of the best PlayStation exclusives because it marries near-flawless gameplay with immaculate vibes. —RG
Celeste
Image: Maddy Makes Games
Celeste is a hyper-difficult platformer with a smorgasbord of worlds and mechanics to keep players on their toes. It’s a game that gets brutally difficult over time, and offers even more punishing options once players have mastered its moves. But it’s also an incredible story about mental health, acceptance, and one of the only trans protagonists in video games.
What’s beautiful about Celeste is that it caters to so many different players. If you want to challenge your skills, the game will give you that chance. But if you just want to experience the story and follow the character’s journey, there are accessibility tools to help you overcome the game’s difficulties with ease. —RG
Control Ultimate Edition
Image: Remedy Entertainment/505 Games
Control is like a David Lynch film come to life. It follows a woman named Jesse on her journey into the Federal Bureau of Control. This mysterious, dilapidated building has all the stuffy appearances of a federal office. However, it’s filled with the unexplained — guns that transform, cursed objects, and more.
What makes Control so impressive is how Remedy uses its atmosphere to tell a story. The Federal Bureau of Control feels like a living being, and you’re constantly stuck in situations that require nuanced thinking to escape. With its bizarre aesthetic and mind-bending gameplay, Control is one of the most unique games on this list. —RG
Dead Cells
Image: Motion Twin
Dead Cells is an action-packed, Metroidvania-flavored roguelike that might just obliterate your ability to play anything else on this list.
Players explore an ever-changing castle and battle a vast bestiary of foes with a massive variety of weapons. Dead Cells’ appeal is its ability to blend its various influences (Castlevania: Symphony of the Night, Spelunky, Dark Souls) into its own unique formula: No two runs are the same, and Dead Cells is constantly evolving. Developer Motion Twin has continually updated the game since its 2018 release with free updates. Plus, there’s plenty of add-on DLC for purchase, including the impressive Return to Castlevania content. —Michael McWhertor
Death Stranding Director’s Cut
Image: Kojima Productions/Sony Interactive Entertainment via ProSpelare
Metal Gear creator Hideo Kojima’s Death Stranding explores a post-apocalyptic America in which a lone courier, played by Norman Reedus (The Walking Dead’s Daryl Dixon), tethers disconnected communities back together primarily through delivering them packages. There’s a heaping of sci-fi weirdness in the Kojima style: otherworldly creatures named BTs, unnatural disasters called Void Outs, rain that ages the people it wets, and other curiosities that will have you reaching for a wiki in an attempt to explain it all. There’s also a lot of walking. A lot.
But you can’t discount the originality of Death Stranding, or its bleak beauty. This is a unique adventure worth taking, especially in its improved Director’s Cut form. The game’s storytelling is something of a mess, its performances are outlandish, and the whole thing is basically an extended fetch quest. It’s also meditative and eerily prescient of the COVID-19 pandemic that spread the year after the original game was released.
Death Stranding 2 is in development now, and if you approach the original game in chunks, you’ll get through it. You just have to take the first step. —MM
Disco Elysium
Image: ZA/UM via ProSpelare
For a very different style of role-playing game — one that diverges wildly and weirdly from the Square Enix RPGs on this list, and one that is inspired by the D&D games of yore, including Planescape: Torment — play Disco Elysium. Developer ZA/UM’s 2019 game, available on PS Plus in its Final Cut form, puts you in the role of a detective with an amnesia-inducing hangover, and who now has to solve a murder.
Disco Elysium features incredibly detailed character creation and leveling, giving players control over the progression of their detective’s mind and body. The game focuses less on combat and more on narrative choices and dialogue. As noted in our review of the original game, Disco Elysium’s “core loop is more about understanding who your character is and playing them truthfully, rather than building them to win mathematically.”
If you’re looking for an unusual RPG with immense depth, freedom, strong storytelling mechanics, and no shortage of quirkiness, Disco Elysium is an easy recommendation. —MM
Doom
Image: id Software/Bethesda Softworks
2016’s Doom is built on speed, acrobatics, and an absolutely killer soundtrack. Doomguy moves fast and has a huge arsenal with which to devastate the demonic forces. Guns — both simple and absurd — grenades, fists, chainsaws, and the BFG itself will help you burn your way across Mars and through hell.
The game is bloody, metal as hell, and surprisingly funny. Doom makes you feel like a god, capable of clearing any hurdle the game can throw at you, and it doesn’t offer a single dull level in its lengthy campaign. —RG
Dragon Quest Builders 2
Image: Square Enix/Nintendo via ProSpelare
You don’t need to have played the original Dragon Quest Builders to enjoy or appreciate its sequel. In fact, it’s better if you didn’t. Square Enix’s heavily Minecraft-inspired role-playing game didn’t quite click in its original form, but the sequel is outstanding. It’s an action role-playing sandbox game in which you gather materials, rebuild towns, and battle monsters.
Dragon Quest Builders 2 vastly improves upon the original game with fast travel, an optional first-person view, and cooperative multiplayer for up to four players. If you’re looking for a cute, charming, and kid-friendly game full of smiling Slime monsters, don’t miss it. —MM
Final Fantasy 7 Remake Intergrade
Image: Square Enix
Final Fantasy 7 Remake is a beautiful reimagining of a video game classic, rebuilt for modern audiences. And with the Intergrade expansion’s stand-alone story (starring future FF7 party member Yuffie), Square Enix adds even deeper wrinkles to its fascinating world.
Both Remake and Intergrade take place entirely inside the industrial city of Midgar, which the Shinra corporation rules with an iron fist. The city is so thoughtfully laid out and detailed that it joins Cloud, Tifa, Barret, and Yuffie as a crucial member of the game’s cast. Its scars help tell the stories of its heroes, the wealthy inhabitants above, and the disposable civilians below; its character colors every aspect of Final Fantasy 7 Remake.
The Midgar saga is just a portion of the original Final Fantasy 7’s story, which will continue with Crisis Core: Final Fantasy 7 Reunion in 2022 and Final Fantasy 7 Rebirth in 2024. Whether you’re replaying Remake: Intergrade as a refresher for the upcoming releases or you’ve never played a Final Fantasy game before, this is well worth your time and one of the best games in the PS Plus catalog. —RG
God of War
Image: Santa Monica Studio/Sony Interactive Entertainment
God of War is not only the best game on this list, it’s one of the best games ever made. It elegantly mixes the existing God of War universe and characters with a new mythology to build a beautiful tale of childhood, fatherhood, and forgiveness. Its action and puzzle-solving are no slouches, either.
God of War is both intimate and sprawling, with each piece of ambient dialogue pairing perfectly with the vista in front of you. It’s an astounding achievement, and with its range of difficulty and accessibility settings, it’s a must-play for almost anyone. —RG
Hollow Knight Voidheart Edition
Image: Team Cherry
Hollow Knight is a Metroidvania set in a tiny kingdom of bugs. You control the titular character, blasting your way through tunnels and taking on increasingly powerful foes. As you go, you’ll collect new upgrades that help you open doors, solve puzzles, and traverse previously impassable landscapes.
Hollow Knight very openly mimics popular classics like Super Metroid. These kinds of throwbacks are popular and have been for some time, but Hollow Knight nails something many modern homages forget: a sense of mystery.
Finding your way through Hollow Knight is tough, and requires not only patience, but a mind for exploration and discovery. —RG
Inscryption
Image: Daniel Mullins Games/Devolver Digital
The less said about Inscryption, a deck-building roguelike game, the better. It’s a game full of surprises, not just in its mechanics, but in its unraveling story. (By the way, if “deck-building” turns you off, please note Inscryption also includes escape room-style puzzle elements and a heavy dose of atmospheric horror.) If you’re averse to the deck-building genre altogether, Inscryption may not change your mind, but it does a good job of easing the player into strategies and teaching how to play.
Inscryption is designed to throw you off right from the start menu. Its secrets are better kept secret — don’t look up any spoilers. If you need further convincing, read why ProSpelare voted it 2021’s game of the year. —MM
Kingdom Hearts 1.5 + 2.5 ReMIX
Image: Square Enix
Kingdom Hearts 1.5 + 2.5 ReMIX is maybe the most ridiculous video game package out there. Not only is the name complete nonsense, but it’s packed with multiple full-length games and several full-length games that have been bizarrely transformed into full-length movies. It’s essentially the Kingdom Hearts bible, and it’s not to be missed.
If you missed the boat on Kingdom Hearts during its heyday, it’s an action-RPG from Square Enix that’s packed with Final Fantasy characters, Disney protagonists, and worlds based off Aladdin, The Little Mermaid, and more. And if you’ve never heard Goofy or Donald say “Sephiroth,” then you need to play these games.
In all seriousness, despite the rap it gets for being extremely extra (which is completely warranted), the Kingdom Hearts series is packed with heart and some excellent gameplay. It tells a delightful and complex story that feels at home in both the Final Fantasy universe and the Disney universes. It casts familiar characters like Donald and Goofy as knights and mages, but it does so in a way that feels charming rather than forced.
Kingdom Hearts 1.5 + 2.5 ReMIX is built for Kingdom Hearts obsessives, and is filled with all the pre-Kingdom Hearts 3 stuff fans could possibly want. But it’s also an excellent jumping-on point for newcomers. And with so much to do inside, this package alone will keep you entertained for an entire month of your PlayStation Plus subscription. —RG
Marvel’s Spider-Man: Miles Morales
Image: Insomniac Games/Sony Interactive Entertainment
You may already be in the throes of Marvel’s Spider-Man 2, Insomniac’s recent follow-up to Spider-Man: Miles Morales, but for PlayStation fans just dabbling in virtual superheroics, this is a perfectly paced place to start swinging. Players take control of Spider-Man, the Miles Morales version, in a more intimate and self-contained adventure centered in Harlem.
While the story may be smaller in scope, Miles’ adventure is in many ways better than Peter Parker’s outing as Insomniac’s Spider-Man. Part of that is thanks to less open-world bloat. Miles, like Peter, is a gifted web-slinger, but has a unique set of powers of his own. And for Spider-Man fans who are now in a long wait for the third entry in Miles’ Spider-Verse trilogy, it’s a chance to spend some time getting to know the webhead building a new legion of fans. —MM
Prey
Image: Arkane Studios/Bethesda Softworks
Prey is a tense crawl through a recently collapsed advanced society, built with the creativity of Arkane’s other titles. It starts with one of the best fake-outs in modern games, and continues to push into the bizarre and creepy throughout its run time. With deep progression and crafting systems, as well as fascinating characters, it’s the modern BioShock.
Part of what makes Prey stand out is the constant tension it places you under. Because the primary enemies can blend into the environment, every cup or random item could be a Mimic ready to attack you and take up your precious resources. (Imagine if every cheese wheel in Skyrim could suddenly end your life.) This all creates a feeling of constant paranoia, and it’s almost guaranteed that you’ll get a jump scare every time you start to feel safe. —RG
Returnal
Image: Housemarque/Sony Interactive Entertainment via ProSpelare
After years creating arcade-y games, Returnal is Housemarque’s first attempt at a “AAA” title. After crash-landing on a mysterious planet, you’ll control Selene, a spacefarer with a mysterious past. As you go on your adventure, you’ll discover that Selene is canonically returned to her ship each time she dies. By battling through various environments, you’ll discover new tools and uncover the game’s abundant interlocking mysteries.
Despite the resources poured into it, Returnal still holds on to Housemarque’s arcade roots. It’s a roguelite that mixes in bullet hell elements to create a cacophony of lights and sound. But as you improve and find better and better weapons and tools, you’ll learn to navigate between the bullets and dodge your way to victory.
It’s Housemarque’s best and most interesting game to date, and it feels great to play with the haptics in the PS5’s DualSense controller. —RG
Shadow of the Colossus
Image: Team Ico, Bluepoint Games/Sony Interactive Entertainment
One of the best games ever made was remade in 2018 for a new generation of hardware. Shadow of the Colossus sends the hero Wander on a mission to slay 16 colossi in order to bring a young woman back to life. His only ally is the horse Agro, who dutifully escorts him across a barren land in search of the great beasts that hold the power of resurrection. Using nothing but a sword, bow and arrow, and sheer, misguided will, Wander fells giants that are both fearsome and pitiable.
Part action-platforming game, part climbing puzzle, Shadow of the Colossus is a groundbreaking work of art. It is romantic and heartbreaking, thrilling and inventive, haunting and beautiful. Developer Bluepoint Games’ remake of Shadow of the Colossus has lost some of the visual charm of its rougher-looking source material, but it is still worth playing nonetheless, regardless of whether you’ve experienced the original. —MM
Spiritfarer
Image: Thunder Lotus Games
Spiritfarer is almost too full of life to be a game about death. The side-scrolling management sim, developed by Thunder Lotus Games, casts you as Stella, a child who’s assumed the duties of Charon (yes, that Charon, the boatman of the damned). Stella and her cat, Daffodil, must find dying spirits, sate their final desires, and ferry them into the afterlife.
The result is a game that mechanically falls somewhere between Animal Crossing and Fallout Shelter. You’re constantly building new structures on your boat, and various facilities to support those shelters, which also means a whole lot of “We’re gonna need a bigger boat”-ing. But the main draw of Spiritfarer isn’t about managing a bunch of anthropomorphic creatures and their mercurial needs (not to mention personalities). Most of these spirits aren’t exactly ready to pass. So between the building and the resource-hounding, Spiritfarer ultimately becomes a meditation about grappling with the fraught reality that life is finite — and it fittingly culminates in one of gaming’s all-time gut-punch endings.
Also: You can tag a friend in as Daffodil in couch co-op. —Ari Notis
Tetris Effect: Connected
Image: Monstars Inc., Resonair/Enhance Games
Tetris Effect is a pretty straightforward recommendation. It’s the Tetris you know and love, albeit with ever-changing backgrounds, music, and visual designs. There’s an intense hypnotic quality to the stages, allowing you to focus on the colorful environments while your brain automatically places your Tetrominoes.
Tetris Effect beats out some other incredible games on this list not because of its gameplay — again, it’s just Tetris — but because of its vibes. A simple shift in the music or the visual language can drastically affect how you play, and when you marry that to one of the best and most classic puzzle games of all time, it’s an incredible win. —RG
Uncharted 4
Uncharted 4: A Thief’s End
Image: Naughty Dog/Sony Interactive Entertainment
Naughty Dog’s final adventure with Nathan Drake is its best. Uncharted 4 finishes the tale of the famed treasure hunter and scoundrel by giving him one last swashbuckling adventure to go on with his friends and family.
Notably, Uncharted 4 includes the first open-world-ish area in the franchise. This allows Drake and Co. to really spread out and take things at a more leisurely pace before getting back to the series’ more typical set pieces. But Uncharted 4 is about more than just exciting additions to gameplay, and also has the best story in the series, telling a tale about companionship — be it with friends, family, enemies, or a combination of the three. Naughty Dog takes a series known for its blockbuster action quality and inject a lot more heart and thoughtfulness than the previous titles.
Uncharted 4 is the perfect finale for one of the video games’ biggest series, and Nathan Drake is somehow even more charming as a middle-aged, blundering adventurer than he ever has been before. —RG
Undertale
Image: Toby Fox via ProSpelare
Toby Fox’s Undertale has had an outsized influence on internet culture, and for good reason. This subversive, fourth-wall-breaking, retro-style role-playing game is full of memorable characters and gameplay moments. You can date a skeleton. You don’t have to kill anything. And as we said in ProSpelare’s 2015 game of the year debates, “(Undertale) is constantly endearing itself to you. It possesses a density of humor that absolutely shouldn’t work, with nearly every signpost, every tooltip and every bit of dialogue containing something funny.” Undertale is one of the best games ever made, sports a spectacular soundtrack, and pays off narratively in emotionally profound way. You should play it, at least once. —MM
Until Dawn
Image: Supermassive Games/Sony Computer Entertainment
Until Dawn understands exactly what it needs to be. It’s a narrative- and decision-based teen slasher game set on a Canadian mountain. There’s drama, revenge, Saw-like contraptions, and an endless web of character relationships. It’s a game that initially makes you want to find the quickest demise possible for these horrible teens, but gives each of them a reason for redemption by the end.
Without spoiling too much, the thing Until Dawn does best is straddle the line between paranormal and grounded. Until the story’s climax, it’s not clear who or what forces are at play, and that mystery ensures that both the first and subsequent playthroughs are equally enjoyable. —RG
Wolfenstein: The New Order
Image: MachineGames/Bethesda Softworks
Wolfenstein: The New Order is a reimagining of the classic Nazi-hunting PC games from decades ago. You take on the role of B.J. Blazkowicz after the Nazis have won World War 2 with devastating new technology. It’s a different America altogether, and B.J. joins the resistance to fight back
Wolfenstein: The New Order approaches its subject with surprising tact. It turns famed meathead B.J. Blazkowicz into a real and lovable character, and it works hard to help players understand the crucial role rebellion plays in fighting tyranny. But it also knows when to be silly, and when to let things slow down for a moment, as two characters catch their breath and express their affection for each other shortly before the bullets begin flying again.
In our chaotic modern environment, Wolfenstein strikes a perfect tone. —RG
Yakuza: Like a Dragon
Image: Ryu ga Gotoku Studio/Sega
There are two great entry points to get into Sega’s Yakuza/Like a Dragon series: Yakuza 0 and Yakuza: Like a Dragon. The latter serves as a new start for the franchise, which has transitioned from action-brawler adventure to turn-based role-playing game (with plenty of street-level violence and gangsters, though). Yakuza: Like a Dragon stars Ichiban Kasuga, a low-level criminal who returns to civilian life after 18 years in prison. His mission is part redemption, part revenge, as he tries to uncover why his former yakuza boss betrayed him.
Ichiban doesn’t go it alone; in fact, he builds a party of teammates who aid him in turn-based battles against street toughs and mobsters in the game’s version of Yokohama. Ichiban’s allies come in a variety of character classes, called jobs, that serve as a fun spin on JRPG tradition. These are literal jobs: chefs, bodyguards, dominatrixes, card dealers, detectives, and more. Yakuza: Like a Dragon not only flipped the Yakuza series on its head, it also satirizes the role-playing genre and its many tropes. —MM
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