
Promotional offers may not be valid for all members and are only available for a limited time. I’m leaving out Game Preview stuff like Valheim (March 14), leftovers like Ghostwire: Tokyo (which should hit Xbox Game Pass on or shortly after March 25, when its year-long exclusivity deal with PlayStation should expire), and enjoyable single-A fare like Cities Skylines Remastered and Shadow Warrior 3 Definitive Edition (both of which hit Game Pass last week).*Sign in for your available offers.
These are merely the top-shelf highlights.
Meanwhile, May will be only a day old when Redfall, the next major game from the decorated developers at Arkane Austin (makers of Dishonored 1 and 2 along with Prey) hits Xbox Game Pass on May 2. We move to April (specifically April 18), when Minecraft Legends will see the light of day on all major platforms – but only Xbox gamers can just download it from Game Pass without swiping their credit card for an additional charge. Game Pass subscribers don’t have to worry about that.
This is extra cool for an annual sports game, where many players don’t purchase it every year.
Still in March (on the 28th), Sony’s own first-party baseball sim, MLB The Show 23, won’t cost Game Pass subscribers another dime for the third consecutive year. Those two have started the year strong for the service, but fast-forward a mere 10 days (March 3) and Game Pass keeps another potential $70 in your pocket when Team Ninja’s promising new Soulslike, Wo Long: Fallen Dynasty, marks another big third-party game doing the day-one thing for subscribers. It’s a third-party game available on PlayStation, sure, but it’ll cost you $70 over there. This highly anticipated first-person shooter has captivated gamers for a few years now, and its release did not disappoint. Just four weeks later, Atomic Heart (February 21) hit Game Pass as it earned an 8 out of 10 from IGN.