Best PS4 Games 2024
The PlayStation 4 is a behemoth of a handheld, with an incredible lineup of exclusive franchises as well as a plethora of great third-party games. As we wait for new titles to arrive later this year, we figured we’d take a moment to showcase the best PS4 experiences in 2024.
Keep checking back because we’ll be adding new games to this page in the future!
Okami HD
Okami received acclaim for its distinct visual design and Zelda-inspired gameplay upon its initial release in 2006. As one of the last games published for the PlayStation 2, the game has been given a second chance with an HD remaster that has been updated to newer versions of consoles.
Okami HD cel-shaded landscapes and ink-brush art style have never looked finer, and are now playable on PS4.
The plot of the game blends Japanese mythology legends and relates the story of a land overrun by darkness that can only be saved by the sun goddess Amaterasu, who takes the shape of a white wolf that you handle.
The gameplay consists of fighting, platforming, and puzzle solving using Amaterasu’s heavenly brush, which utilizes motions to execute miracles. Okami HD has withstood the test of time, retaining the charm of the initial game and providing us with another opportunity to wonder at its magnificent setting.
Onrush
Onrush seems to be an arcade racing title at first sight. However, unlike what players anticipate from the genre, none of Onrush’s four game modes include crossing the finish line ahead of your enemies.
Instead, the game centers on vehicular fighting, with you and your squad attempting to destroy enemy cars in order to gain a boost that helps you to speed up.
Overdrive, in which your squad earns points by winning boost; Countdown, in which you sprint through checkpoints while beating a timer; Lockdown, a King of the Hill-style mode in which you battle to remain within a region on the track; and Switch, in which you attempt to take down other players with just three lives.
Onrush’s fast-paced action harkens back to arcade racers like Burnout, and its combat-based take on the format is thrilling to see.
Spyro: Reignited Trilogy
Spyro: Reignited Trilogy is a shining illustration of how to modernize a classic series. Toys for Bob did an excellent job of recreating the Spyro world, upgrading settings to appear as beautiful as we’d imagine on current-gen consoles, and also reimagining certain character concepts to look more refined than their polygonal-shaped forefathers.
It’s classic Spyro in terms of gameplay and plot. Travel through dimensions, saving fellow dragons, collecting collectibles, and defeating bad enemies. Spyro the Dragon, Spyro 2: Ripto’s Anger!, and Many of Spyro’s games are included, including Spyro: Year of the Dragon.
Reignited Trilogy is worth playing for both nostalgic gamers and others who never got to enjoy the original titles, thanks to stunning visuals and good platforming gameplay that still hold up in 2019.
What Remains of Edith Finch
What Remains of Edith Finch is a walking simulator in which you take on the role of the last living member of the Finch family. Edith moves to her old family house, which has been forgotten for years, after her mother’s passing. In this section, you’ll hear more about a rumored family curse in which everyone but one person of each generation dies under extraordinary circumstances.
By visiting their bedrooms and reliving memory sequences from their viewpoints, you discover more about your ancestors and their untimely deaths as the game progresses.
There are some family secrets to discover, as well as several surprises concerning Edith herself, which are uncovered towards the end of the game’s short two-hour plot. Try playing What Remains of Edith Finch if you like games with solid narratives and don’t mind minimal interactivity.
Persona 5
Persona 5 is the most recent installment of Atlus’ long-running JRPG series. You act as Joker, a Japanese adolescent who has just relocated to Tokyo and is about to enter high school.
However, you quickly learn that hidden, magical phenomena are taking place, and that only you can stop these mysterious powers. Aside from training, time is divided into various tasks such as socializing with peers, visiting dungeons, and working at your part-time career.
In true RPG form, the game gives you a lot of leeway in how you spend your days, who you want to befriend, and how you plan to fill out your squad of Personas.
Battling is turn-based, with you and your group engaged in a more sophisticated variant of rock, paper, scissors battle, complete with buffs and status effects. Persona 5 is a vortex of emotions that’s difficult to leave once you’re hooked, thanks to its hundred-hour playtime, catchy music, and over-the-top tale.
Hellblade: Senua’s Sacrifice
Hellblade isn’t your run-of-the-mill AAA action-adventure title. Ninja Theory, a British game company, developed and self-published the game, which follows Senua, a warrior on a mission to save her dead lover’s soul from the underworld.
Simultaneously, Senua faces what she claims to be a curse known as the “Darkness,” but is really a condition of insanity manifested as menacing sounds in her brain.
Senua travels through places and explores Viking-inspired worlds as she solves mysteries and fights enemies.
Although Hellblade has received some criticism for its boring gameplay and unnecessarily simplified puzzles, its realistic portrayal of mental disorder makes it worthwhile to enjoy.
Assassin’s Creed Odyssey
Although Assassin’s Creed games have been outdated in recent years, 2017’s Origins infused new life into the franchise, bringing a refreshingly original plot and approach to gameplay while maintaining the series’ smooth action and traversal.
Odyssey aimed to maintain the momentum that had been established and far surpassed expectations.
The game blurs the distinction between reality and power fiction far more than Origins, with you playing as either a male or female mercenary battling for both Athens and Sparta while attempting to unite your family and discover a supernatural force.
It’s highly ambitious in terms of scale and RPG elements, including a stunning depiction of ancient Greece as well as an exciting adventure with enough quests to hold you occupied for up to 70 hours.
God Eater 3
God Eater 3 is an action-RPG with a hack-and-slash battle system. Players in the game are charged with tracking down “Aragami,” who are huge, otherworldly beings.
The character you control is a God Eater, capable of consuming energy from defeated monsters in order to unleash “blast moves,” which are special actions that do crazy levels of harm to opponents.
The mode is comparable to Monster Hunter, but faster-paced, and has you searching for oversized monsters with a squad of up to four other teams. You’ll be fighting with a range of God Arc arms that turn into firearms and are suited to various playstyles. God Eater 3 has unique monster designs as well as a complex battle structure that is rewarding to learn.
Soulcalibur VI
When contrasted to Soulcalibur 5, Soulcalibur 6 is a return to form for the franchise, delivering a significant amount of plot material. The game features two new characters as well as two new move styles, Reversal Edge and Lethal Hit. Time slows down as warriors launch flashy, drastically animated assaults on-screen.
There are two-story modes included: Libra of Soul, which helps you to build a custom character and embark on an RPG adventure, and Soul Chronicle, which retells tales from previous games in a succinct and accommodating manner for newcomers.
Soulcalibur 6 acts as an outstanding entry point for new players while maintaining the quality that seasoned players have come to anticipate in its attempts to refocus on the core basics of what makes a Soulcalibur game.
Hitman 2
Hitman 2 improves on the 2016 Hitman remake in several ways. Levels have a significantly wider scope with many new approaches to complete tasks, such as assassinating individual goals. Agent 47 is back and bigger than ever, capable of donning more disguises and fitting in with almost every crowd.
The game abandons the episodic distribution of the first game’s missions in favor of delivering the entirety of its material all at once. While this contradicts the essence of Hitman, which promotes replaying levels to discover all possible ways to removing your goal, having the whole game at your hands is much preferable.
Seeing all of the various tactics for completing a task can become addictive, and post-game material in the form of elusive-target tasks contributes to Hitman 2’s replayability.
Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain
Phantom Pain makes up for the lack of storytelling with strong stealth mechanisms and engaging action. The game is the ninth installment of the Metal Gear franchise, and it is also the series’ final project.
Kojima Productions created the game.
The game takes place after the events of Metal Gear Solid V: Ground Zeroes, and you play as Big Boss, who, after waking up from a coma, enlists the assistance of a group of mercenaries to exact vengeance on those who placed him in that state.
Although the cutscenes may be ridiculously lengthy, and the protagonists aren’t convincing enough to make you care for them, the true star of Phantom Pain is its open-ended approach to tasks. Players provide a variety of leeway on how they approach tasks like infiltrating enemy bases and freeing hostages. The game rewards you with taking non-lethal measures, but it can also be enjoyed with guns blazing.
Resident Evil 7: Biohazard
Resident Evil 7 is a nod to the horror survival origins of the franchise. Though Resident Evil games have been more action-oriented, Capcom has changed the focus to adventure and survival mechanics.
Furthermore, this is the first title in the series to use a first-person POV, which improves the atmosphere of the game and results in a more interactive environment.
You play as Ethan Winters, a man searching for his girlfriend Mia on a Louisiana plantation ruled by a family of sadistic cannibals. The game has you visiting the family house, uncovering secrets regarding Mia’s whereabouts, and encountering deadly interactions with the inhabitants of the plantation.
Resident Evil 7 takes some big chances with a series that has largely followed the same pattern for too long, and it pays off in the end.
Nioh
Although the Souls games may have strongly influenced Nioh, it continues to add some fascinating new elements that set it apart from the typical action RPG. Although the action is as quick and punishing as in Bloodborne, the opportunity to regain strength by Ki Pulses and change the weapon’s maneuverability by various weapon stances has a significant impact on the flow of fights.
The new components expand the tactical possibilities for battling enemies and blend in with Nioh’s fictionalized Sengoku Japan world. The plot is loosely modeled on the historical Western samurai William Adams, and you must navigate through villages and castles while fighting humans and mythical beings known as yokai. Nioh does an excellent job of combining historical events with its grim, fantasy storytelling and equips you with the resources you need to master its intricate battle mechanics.
Bloodborne
Bloodborne exemplifies FromSoftware’s consistent aim of developing each new release. It retains the high degree of complexity that the studio is notorious for infusing into their titles, but makes fighting easier and more fluid than in the Souls games.
Deteriorated, Victorian-era-inspired settings complement your character’s bloody assaults, which send enemies’ blood flying as you hack away with a variety of blades and axes.
Bloodborne, like the Souls game, has some well-designed bosses and brutal boss fights that will have you sighing in satisfaction until you’ve gotten through them.
The game does an excellent job of immersing you in a tense environment where risk lurks around every corner. In this planet, the best way to avoid a hazard is to eliminate it until it eliminates you.
Originally posted 2021-11-11 12:56:41.