It’s getting harder and harder to delineate between the busy spring and the busy fall. The game release lull that used to last from May through September is now more like “late June to early August,” and even July saw its fair share of new game releases. There are just so many upcoming PC games nowadays. You’ll never catch up on that backlog!
So it’s worth being selective. We’ve looked ahead at the upcoming months and plucked out 15 new games, sorted by release date, that we’re looking forward to as 2017 enters its final stretch. This is far from an exhaustive list, and there are a few conspicuous absences since indie titles don’t usually announce a launch date months in advance. But still, we’ve covered the major tentpole releases plus a few smaller titles that are near and dear to us.
If you tend to organize the calendar based on game releases rather than astrological signs, it turns out autumn is closer than you might think.
Lawbreakers – August 8
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LawBreakers
Price When Reviewed:$29.99
Yes, if we’re going to draw the line in 2017 to indicate when “the big fall game releases start,” it would fall on August 8—the day Cliff Bleszinski and the team at Boss Key released sci-fi shooter LawBreakers ($30 on Amazon).
Featuring high-speed movement in the vein of classic ‘90s shooters, Lawbreakers focuses on verticality. Maps are dotted with low-gravity areas where you’ll go flying through the air, ambushing people from above, on maps inspired by Santa Monica, CA, and other real-world locales. I can’t say I’m a fan of the “edgy” voice acting, but the recent beta played great and a well-coordinated team can pull off some great stunts.
We’ll see if it can pull people’s attention from Overwatch though. The two games aren’t that similar but…well, tell that to Battleborn.
StarCraft Remastered – August 14
It’s not often I look forward to a remaster, but it’s hard not to get excited about StarCraft: Remastered ($14.99 on Battle.net). Blizzard has overhauled all the units, maps, audio, and more just in time for StarCraft’s 20th anniversary. Oh, it also runs in native 4K. What’s not to love?
And it goes beyond aesthetics, too. New “Story Interludes” will apparently illustrate parts of the story that used to be confined to text, and Blizzard has added some quality-of-life features like cloud saves, matchmaking, and leaderboards. From what I can tell, this looks like a remaster done right.
Absolver – August 29
Absolver ($15 on Steam) is one of those “near and dear” projects I mentioned in the intro. An indie game published by Devolver, it’s a fighting game like no other fighting game I’ve ever played—by which I mean it’s way more complicated. Almost every aspect of your character is under your control, from your stance to the specific moves you put into each combo. Moves are governed by a deck system, and you chain cards together to build out combos to match your preferred fighting style. It’s incredibly intimidating.
It’s incredibly powerful too. Once you get the hang of it you realize there’s a world of potential, as you experiment with what combos work for you and what don’t. It’s an evolving process—one you’ll undertake as you uncover the game’s world and story, occasionally running into other players in its seamless Journey-style multiplayer. Will they fight you? Help you out? That’s half the fun.
XCOM 2: War of the Chosen – August 29
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XCOM 2: War of the Chosen
Price When Reviewed:$39.99
Things were so quiet after XCOM 2’s launch that I’d started to think Firaxis had moved on to other projects. Not so! Like XCOM: Enemy Within, XCOM 2 ($60 on Amazon) is getting a meaty expansion that overhauls basically the entire game, with new factions, new unit types, new boss enemies, more persistent campaign elements, and the ability to finally use alien soldiers in your army. It’s an ambitious undertaking for one of the 10 best PC games of 2016.
Personally, I’m looking forward to it as an excuse to return to XCOM 2, since the game’s launch issues meant I never really sank my teeth into it the way I did with its predecessor. So far, War of the Chosen ($40 on Amazon) sounds like a pretty great excuse—and it better be, because at $40 this is priced less like an expansion and more like an entirely new game.
Divinity: Original Sin II – September 14
I’m loathe to designate one of this fall’s releases as my “Most Anticipated,” but Divinity: Original Sin II ($45 on Steam) would be right up there. The original was incredible—not a throwback like so many other modern isometric CRPGs (see: Pillars of Eternity), but instead a glimpse of where CRPGs could go in the future. Systems-driven, open-ended, co-op, and full of emergent chaos.
The second turns up the dial on all those factors. With a more flexible spell-crafting system, character backgrounds that are factored into dialogue, split-screen multiplayer, and an entire Dungeons & Dragons style tabletop mode, Divinity: Original Sin II is a sprawling and ambitious project that could set the bar for CRPGs to come. It’s currently in early access ahead of launch.
Dishonored: Death of the Outsider – September 14
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Dishonored: Death of the Outsider [Online Game Code]
Price When Reviewed:$29.99
It’s hard for me to be too excited about a Dishonored 2 spin-off given how disastrous Dishonored 2’s PC port was at launch. I’m willing to give Arkane the benefit of the doubt though, especially since standalone expansion Death of the Outsider’s story seems quite a bit more interesting than Dishonored 2 proper. Playing as Billie Lurk, you’ll team up with Dishonored antagonist Daud to…well, it’s pretty self-explanatory: Kill the Outsider.
Hard to feel bad for the guy, considering the Outsider is the most annoying character in the whole series. I won’t miss his whiny voice, provided I do actually get the chance to put a knife to him. Fingers crossed Dishonored: Death of the Outsider ($30 on Amazon) actually runs halfway decent.
Total War: Warhammer II – September 28
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Total War: Warhammer II
Price When Reviewed:$59.99
I was surprised by Total War: Warhammer. I’ve been a fan of the historical Total Wars for a long time now, but Warhammer seemed like a pretty strange tangent, and not necessarily one that would appeal to me.
Spoiler: It’s one of the best Total War games in years—certainly since Shogun 2. The freedom of divorcing from history gave Creative Assembly the leeway to experiment with all kinds of crazy units, new army compositions, unique faction restrictions, a loose campaign structure, and imaginative win conditions that just don’t fit into the historical Total War mold.
The upcoming “sequel,” Total War: Warhammer II ($60 on Amazon) is more of a standalone expansion, adding four new races (Lizardmen, High Elves, Dark Elves, and a fourth yet to be announced) and a new map. And if you own both the original and the sequel, you can combine them into one enormous cross-game campaign. Pretty wild—and there’s still one more game to come in this planned trilogy.
Cuphead – September 29
Hopefully this is the last “Coming Soon” list I ever put Cuphead on. The Max Fleischer-inspired cartoon-platformer has been making appearances on these lists of mine for at least two years now, perpetually six months from release. But this time—this time—it’s hopefully releasing for real.
I can’t really fault the developers. It sounds like Cuphead went through a huge overhaul halfway through development, moving from a boss-rush type game to a full-fledged platformer. Hopefully it survived the pivot intact and plays as good as it looks.
Next page: Upcoming PC games in October and beyond
Middle Earth: Shadow of War – October 10
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Middle-Earth: Shadow Of War
Price When Reviewed:$59.99
I keep using this dumb Middle Earth: Shadow of More-dor joke to describe upcoming sequel Shadow of War ($60 on Amazon), but it’s not without merit—this is definitely a case of “Don’t mess with a winning formula.” Monolith has taken the Nemesis System and the open-world Mordor of the first game and expanded it in a million directions, but moment-to-moment it’s still…pretty much the same game as before. Which is to say, Lord of the Rings crossed with Assassin’s Creed.
The Nemesis System is still great though, giving you army after army of unique orcs to fight against, as well as customized strongholds that reflect their personalities. And for the lore buffs? It seems like Monolith’s taking many more liberties with the Lord of the Rings universe this time around—namely, Shelob can shed her spider skin and turn into a pale-skinned woman. Whether those changes are a good thing or not? Well, we’ll have to wait until October to find out.
South Park: The Fractured But Whole – October 17
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South Park: The Fractured but Whole [Online Game Code]
Price When Reviewed:$59.99
South Park: The Fractured But Whole ($60 on Amazon) joins the same ignominious club as Cuphead, victim to delay after delay. Get this: We were originally supposed to see The Fractured But Whole last December. Now, nearly a year later, we’re closing in on its latest release date.
Hopefully the delay was worth the wait. It’s been a while (almost a year) since I put in any hands-on time with The Fractured But Whole, but what past-me played was excellent—a more varied, more complex version of its already-solid predecessor Stick of Truth, but with superheroes instead of swords and sorcery.
Best case scenario: Ubisoft delayed almost a year to pump out Nosulus Rifts for everyone. We can only hope.
Destiny 2 – October 24
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Destiny 2
Price When Reviewed:$59.99Best Prices Today:$7.50 at Amazon
After playing a bit of Destiny 2 ($60 on Amazon) during E3, I called it “one of the prettiest PC games ever.” I know—I was surprised too. After all, this is Bungie, a studio that hasn’t actually released a game on PC since Halo 2.
It’s brilliant looking though, especially running at 4K. And it plays surprisingly well. I wasn’t sure what to expect, given how console-oriented the original Destiny was, but guns feel powerful, kills feel snappy, and there’s a momentum to its action that I really enjoyed. This is how you blend a shooter and an RPG— not The Division.
Unfortunately the PC version of Destiny 2 releases about a month after the consoles, so you’ll have to be a bit more patient if you want to hold out for the prettiest version. You’ll get to test it out first though—there’s a beta scheduled for August 29. Keep an eye out.
Assassin’s Creed Origins – October 27
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Assassin’s Creed Origins – PC [Online Game Code]
Price When Reviewed:$59.99
Okay, I’ll say it: I expected Assassin’s Creed Origins ($60 on Amazon) to be a lot more imaginative for 2017. After taking a year off from the grind and reworking Assassin’s Creed from the ground up, I expected…well, something. Instead, what I played at E3 feels quite a lot like old Assassin’s Creed, but in a different era and with a larger map.
Maybe that’s enough, though. Ptolemaic Egypt is at least an interesting setting, and a reworked combat system at least promises to be interesting for people who prefer to fight their way through Assassin’s Creed games instead of proceeding stealthily. And hey—maybe there are more surprises we haven’t heard about yet. Here’s hoping.
Wolfenstein II: The New Colossus – October 27
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Wolfenstein II: The New Colossus
Price When Reviewed:$59.99
If Divinity II isn’t my most anticipated (or, heaven forbid, it turns out to be terrible) then Wolfenstein II: The New Colossus ($60 on Amazon) takes the award. Its 2014 predecessor, Wolfenstein: The New Order ($20 on Amazon), is one of my favorite shooters of the past decade and pretty high on the list of my favorite games, period—a near-perfect blend of dumb ‘90s-style shooting with Escape From Butcher Bay-esque stealth sequences. And that blend makes perfect sense once you find out that a lot of Butcher Bay alums worked on this new-era Wolfenstein.
Wolfenstein II seems like it might recapture the same magic, bringing the Nazi threat to a conquered America, continuing with its alt-history into the 1970s, and with an opening level that features longtime protagonist B.J. Blazkowicz slaughtering Nazis in a wheelchair. Get this: Every time you fire your weapon, the recoil pushes your wheelchair back.
Those small details and creative scenarios are what I love about Wolfenstein, and while I generally try to avoid hype I’m finding it difficult to be blasé about The New Colossus.
Call of Duty: WWII – November 3
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Call of Duty: WWII
Price When Reviewed:$59.99
Back to World War II. After running the modern warfare setting into the ground, then churning out a few years of bad-to-decent science fiction stories, Call of Duty is finally returning to the setting that started it all in Call of Duty: WWII ($60 on Amazon).
And you know what? I can’t wait. I’m unabashedly excited. Yes, it’s still Call of Duty. Yes, we’re probably in for a theme park version of World War II, hitting the same old Normandy-centric sights we’ve seen in World War II games since the Medal of Honor days.
But it’s been almost a decade since we had a big-budget World War II game. Played any 2007 games lately? Technology’s changed a lot in the ensuing years, and I can’t wait to see the D-Day landings done up with all the bells and whistles of a modern engine and hardware. Call of Duty is pure popcorn entertainment at this point, but that’s fine with me.
Star Wars Battlefront II – November 17
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Star Wars Battlefront II
Price When Reviewed:$59.99Best Prices Today:$20 at Amazon
Will Star Wars Battlefront II ($60 on Amazon) be any good? Hard to say, but what I saw of it at E3 indicates at least one truth: This is the game DICE should’ve made two years ago. Forget the last half-finished Star Wars Battlefront. This is the true Battlefront II successor.
Space battles? Check. An actual single-player campaign? Check. Class system? Check. Maps spanning the entirety of the Star Wars canon? Check, check, check. With a script penned by Spec Ops: The Line writer Walt Williams and a vastly expanded scope, Battlefront II looks like it could finally win over fans of the 2005 Battlefront II (still confusing) and give EA a much-needed win for the year.