If you follow game news the way some people follow sports, 2026 looks like it could be one of those years that changes conversations at parties and on forums. Developers big and small have teased projects that are still mysterious, while a handful of long-promised sequels could finally arrive or at least show their teeth. Upcoming Video Games in 2026: 12 Highly Anticipated Titles You Should Watch is a mouthful, but it captures the sense of expectation settling across studios and platforms. Below I pick a dozen projects that feel poised to matter next year—some officially announced, others circulating as strong rumors—and explain why each one is worth keeping an eye on.
what to expect from gaming in 2026
Expect a year of transition rather than revolution. Hardware cycles have stabilized and many studios are focused on big, ambitious single-player experiences or service-led live games that ramp up over time. That means 2026 could feel like a blend of carefully crafted narrative releases, large-scale open worlds, and a few experiments in AI-driven or player-directed design.
Another trend I’m watching is how developers balance scope and polish. After some high-profile troubled launches, publishers appear more cautious about when to ship. For players that often means longer waits but also the potential for better-finished titles. If you prefer diving into games that are in a good shape from day one, 2026 might reward patience.
12 titles to watch now
Not every promising project will arrive next year, and some might only reveal themselves through teasers or major marketing pushes. The table below lists a dozen games—ranging from megafranchises to indie follow-ups—that could define parts of the 2026 conversation depending on development timelines and unveiling strategies.
Rather than pretend to know exact release windows, I note status and likely platforms so you can track official news without getting ahead of the facts. If you follow developer streams or State of Play/Direct events, several of these entries are strong candidates for big reveals or playable demos.
| Title | Developer | Genre | Status (as of 2024) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Grand Theft Auto VI | Rockstar Games | Open-world action | Announced/undated |
| The Elder Scrolls VI | Bethesda Game Studios | RPG | Announced/early |
| BioShock (new) | Cloud Chamber | Atmospheric shooter/RPG | In development |
| Metroid Prime 4 | Nintendo | Action-adventure | In development |
| Dragon Age: Dreadwolf | BioWare | RPG | In development |
| Fable (reboot) | Playground Games | Action RPG | In development |
| Perfect Dark | The Initiative | Shooter | Announced/active |
| Hollow Knight: Silksong | Team Cherry | Metroidvania | In development |
| Avowed | Obsidian | First-person RPG | In development |
| Persona (next mainline) | Atlus | JRPG | Speculative / rumored |
| BioWare/Mass Effect-style project | BioWare (other) | RPG | Early/rumored |
| Indie surprise (watch list) | Various studios | Varies | Unannounced / likely |
grand theft auto vi: the scale of expectations
Few games carry the cultural weight of a new Rockstar title. Grand Theft Auto VI is unmatched in terms of speculation: players expect a sprawling, modern city, systems-level NPC behavior, and robust online features. Even if Rockstar spaces out marketing and release dates, any concrete news about GTA VI will dominate headlines and set the tone for open-world design conversations.
From a personal perspective, I’ve followed Rockstar’s long-tail development cycles for years, and the studio tends to show a playable slice that reveals much more than a trailer. Watch for technical showcases or small multiplayer betas that hint at how Rockstar is approaching online persistence and player economy this time around.
the elder scrolls vi: a distant but pivotal promise
The Elder Scrolls VI remains an enigma, but its very existence signals Bethesda’s long-term roadmap for immersive single-player RPGs. If Bethesda brings the series forward with modern systems—improved AI, deeper crafting, and meaningful settlement or faction mechanics—it could redefine expectations for large-scale RPGs on current consoles and PC.
Practically speaking, a full reveal or gameplay demo would be the moment to mark on your calendar. Until then, the game belongs to a watchful category: a title that can shape industry standards once it emerges from development quiet.
bioshock (new): atmosphere over flash
BioShock’s brand is about tone, story, and environment-driven surprises. The new entry from Cloud Chamber carries that legacy and will be judged on worldbuilding as much as combat. If the team leans into moral ambiguity and layered lore, this could be one of the year’s most talked-about narrative experiences.
From my experience with modern narrative shooters, the best ones pair tight mechanics with environmental storytelling that rewards exploration. Keep an eye on how Cloud Chamber teases setting and systems; small reveals could tell you more than a glossy trailer.
metroid prime 4: a Nintendo pivot
Nintendo’s Metroid Prime franchise has a devoted and vocal fan base. Metroid Prime 4 faces the twin challenges of modernizing first-person exploration while honoring the franchise’s isolation and puzzle-driven pacing. A successful entry would show off technical polish on Nintendo hardware and refine the balancing act between combat and atmosphere.
Nintendo often times announcements to coincide with hardware or service plans, so watch official directs for any playable demos or developer interviews. Even incremental updates could change community expectations for what a modern Metroid game can be.
dragon age: dreadwolf and hollow knight: silksong
Dragon Age: Dreadwolf represents a return to BioWare’s narrative ambition: complex political plots, party dynamics, and branching consequences. If BioWare nails pacing and player choice, Dreadwolf can be a core RPG moment for players who value story-driven mechanics over multiplayer bells and whistles. Expect scrutiny on companion writing and combat evolution compared to prior entries.
Hollow Knight: Silksong sits on the opposite end of the spectrum—an intimate indie follow-up whose craftsmanship is the headline. Team Cherry’s pacing, tight platforming, and handcrafted worlds are already celebrated. Silksong arriving in a polished state would be a reminder that smaller teams can still deliver experiences that linger much longer than blockbuster marketing cycles.
Watching 2026 closely will be exciting precisely because certainty is scarce. A mix of clear releases, long-expected reveals, and the occasional indie surprise is the most likely outcome, and that unpredictability is part of the fun. Keep alerts set for developer shows and publisher updates, and be ready to dive in when those first playable moments finally arrive.

