2025 Gaming Wrapped: Top PC & Console Games That Defined the Year

If 2024 was the calm, 2025 was the storm we didn’t know we needed. We thought we were just waiting for Grand Theft Auto VI, but instead, we got a hardware revolution with the Nintendo Switch 2, a complete renaissance of the turn-based RPG, and a battle for the soul of the First-Person Shooter.

From the technical marvels pushing PC rigs to their melting points to the console exclusives that defined living room conversations, this year was packed. Whether you were grinding for loot, crying over narrative masterpieces, or screaming at your friends in co-op, 2025 had something for you.

Here is the definitive breakdown of the games that conquered the charts and our hearts this year.

The Genre Wars: What We Played in 2025

But before we crown the individual kings of 2025, we need to look at the battlefield itself. The trends this year weren’t just about single titles; they were about entire genres evolving, fighting for dominance, and redefining what we expect from our hardware. From the revival of turn-based combat to the democratization of grand strategy, here is the state of play.

While 2025 was a diverse year for gaming, four specific genres aggressively commanded the market, driven by high-profile sequels and daring mechanical innovations.

1. The RPG Renaissance

If 2025 belonged to any single genre, it was the Role-Playing Game. This year marked a massive resurgence, characterized by a diverse spread of sub-genres that swept both critical awards and sales charts.

  • The Turn-Based Revival: Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 shocked the industry by winning Game of the Year. It proved that traditional turn-based mechanics—when paired with a reactive modern twist—can still outperform real-time action blockbusters.

  • Simulation Depth: Kingdom Come: Deliverance II found massive success by rejecting the industry trend of streamlining. Instead, it doubled down on “hardcore” simulation elements like hunger and hygiene management, finding a dedicated audience hungry for realism.

  • Action-RPG Dominance: On the faster side of the spectrum, Monster Hunter Wilds dominated early-year sales, while Hades II (the highest-rated game of the year) perfected the roguelike loop, showcasing the genre’s action-heavy potential.

2. The Shooter Redemption Arc (FPS & Looter-Shooters)

After a few years of mixed reception for major franchises, 2025 saw the “Big Three” shooters return to form, dominating the sales charts in Q3 and Q4.

  • Battlefield is Back: Battlefield 6 successfully revitalized the franchise. pivoting back to its “all-out warfare” roots. It broke series launch records with 7 million sales in three days and secured the award for Best Audio Design.

  • Loot & Shoot: Despite some technical bugs at launch, Borderlands 4 generated the highest launch-month dollar sales in the franchise’s history, proving the “looter-shooter” loop remains addictively profitable.

  • A Tactical Shift: Doom: The Dark Ages slowed down the frantic “boomer shooter” pace. By introducing shield-based parrying mechanics, it forced players to stand their ground rather than speed-run through levels, adding a new layer of tactical depth.

3. Cinematic Action-Adventure

This genre remained the stronghold of console exclusives, particularly for Sony and Nintendo, delivering the year’s most visually stunning experiences.

  • Narrative Powerhouses: Death Stranding 2: On The Beach and Ghost of YĹŤtei drove massive PlayStation 5 engagement, emphasizing high-fidelity storytelling and world-class actor performances.

  • Metroidvania Mastery: Hollow Knight: Silksong finally launched, instantly setting the gold standard for 2D action-adventure and selling over 7 million copies by year’s end.

  • Southern Gothic Artistry: South of Midnight stood out visually with its unique stop-motion animation style, rightfully earning the “Games for Impact” award.

4. Strategy & 4X (The Console Expansion)

2025 was a pivotal year for bringing complex strategy games to a mass audience beyond the traditional PC ecosystem.

  • The Great Unification: Civilization VII launched simultaneously on consoles and PC with full cross-play. This move significantly expanded the player base for the 4X (Explore, Expand, Exploit, Exterminate) genre, finally breaking down the barrier that strategy games are “PC only” experiences.

  • Tactical Niche: Final Fantasy Tactics: The Ivalice Chronicles also appeared in top sales charts, signaling a strong, nostalgia-driven market for tactical grid-based gameplay.

5. Open-World Racing

While often a singular category, the evolution of racing in 2025 deserves a spotlight due to one game that changed the rules.

  • Genre Blending: By moving from closed tracks to a “Free Roam” open-world structure, Mario Kart World blurred the lines between a traditional racer and an adventure game, creating a new sub-genre standard for arcade racers.

🏆The Class of ’25: New Releases That Dominated

The market was clearly divided this year. PC gamers feasted on high-fidelity performance and simulation depth, while console players were treated to cinematic blockbusters and the explosive arrival of Nintendo’s next generation.

🖥️ Top PC Games of 2025

These titles either dominated Steam charts, originated on PC, or performed best on high-end hardware.

1. Hades II

  • The Lowdown: MelinoĂ«, the Princess of the Underworld, takes center stage in this roguelike sequel that somehow improved upon perfection. With a focus on witchcraft and “dark sorcery,” the combat feels distinct from Zagreus’s brute force.

  • Awards: Winner Best Action Game at The Game Awards 2025.

  • Why It’s Top: It holds the highest aggregate Metascore of the year (95). It successfully exited Early Access in September to deliver a narrative depth rarely seen in procedurally generated games.

  • Platforms: PC, Nintendo Switch, Nintendo Switch 2.

2. Civilization VII

  • The Lowdown: The granddaddy of 4X strategy returned with a massive overhaul to its “Ages” system, allowing players to mix and match civilizations as history progresses.

  • Awards: Winner Best Sim/Strategy Game at The Game Awards 2025.

  • Why It’s Top: While it launched with full cross-play on consoles, the PC remains its spiritual home. The sheer depth of the simulation and the refined UI made “one more turn” more dangerous than ever to sleep schedules.

  • Platforms: PC, PS4/5, Xbox One/Series, Switch, Switch 2.

3. Monster Hunter Wilds

  • The Lowdown: Capcom’s latest entry introduced a seamless open world with dynamic weather systems that actively change monster behavior mid-hunt.

  • Awards: Nominated for Best RPG at The Game Awards 2025.

  • Why It’s Top: It was the top-selling game on Steam leading up to its February launch. While console versions were great, the PC version was the only place to experience the “Focus Mode” precision and weather particle effects at high framerates.

  • Platforms: PC, PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X/S.

4. Kingdom Come: Deliverance II

  • The Lowdown: A hardcore medieval RPG simulator set in 15th-century Bohemia. It doubled down on realism—you have to manage hygiene, hunger, and reputation in a world twice the size of the original.

  • Awards: Nominated for Game of the Year at The Game Awards 2025.

  • Why It’s Top: In an era of hand-holding, KCD2 trusted the player’s intelligence. It sold over 2 million copies in two weeks, finding a massive audience on PC where the modding scene is already flourishing.

  • Platforms: PC, PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X/S.

5. Borderlands 4

  • The Lowdown: The looter-shooter king returned with new vault hunters and an interconnected open world, ditching the separated zones of previous games.

  • Awards: Record-breaking launch month sales for the franchise.

  • Why It’s Top: Despite a buggy launch that drew criticism, the core loop of “shoot and loot” remained addictive enough to make it the #1 best-selling game on PC in September.

  • Platforms: PC, PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X/S.

6. Split Fiction

  • The Lowdown: The creators of It Takes Two delivered another mandatory co-op masterpiece. Players control two authors trapped in their own stories, constantly swapping genres (e.g., one plays a shooter, the other a platformer).

  • Awards: Nominated for Best Game Direction at The Game Awards 2025.

  • Why It’s Top: It revitalized the co-op genre on Steam, proving that narrative-driven multiplayer games can still be massive commercial hits without being live services.

  • Platforms: PC, PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X/S, Switch 2.

🎮 Top Console Games of 2025

These titles were platform exclusives or saw their highest sales volume on console hardware.

PlayStation 5 Leaders

1. Death Stranding 2: On The Beach

  • The Lowdown: Hideo Kojima’s visionary sequel brings Sam Porter Bridges back to expand the Chiral Network beyond the UCA. Powered by the Decima engine, it leans harder into combat and surreal horror while retaining the “strand” connection mechanics that made the first game unique. The narrative dives deep into the mystery of the “Beach” and the extinction entity.

  • Awards: Winner of Game of the Year from VGC and nominated for Best Game Direction at The Game Awards 2025.

  • Why It’s Top: It is the technical benchmark for the PS5 console generation. The photorealistic performances (starring Norman Reedus and Elle Fanning) and the expanded, more aggressive gameplay loop silenced critics of the “walking simulator” original.

  • Platforms: PlayStation 5 (Exclusive).

2. Ghost of YĹŤtei

  • The Lowdown: Sucker Punch Productions moves the timeline forward to 1603, introducing a new protagonist, Atsu, in the lands surrounding Mount YĹŤtei. This standalone sequel retains the lethal samurai combat of Tsushima but introduces firearms and a “wanted” system that changes how the world reacts to you.

  • Awards: Winner of Console Game of the Year and Best Audio Design at the Golden Joystick Awards 2025.

  • Why It’s Top: It successfully followed up one of the PS4’s best games by offering a fresh setting without baggage. The “Ezo” region offers a stark, snowy beauty that contrasts perfectly with the lush forests of Tsushima.

  • Platforms: PlayStation 5 (Exclusive).

3. Battlefield 6

  • The Lowdown: EA and DICE went “back to basics” with a modern-day setting, the return of the four-class system, and 128-player maps designed for destruction. The “RedSec” battle royale mode and a dedicated focus on squad play helped it shed the baggage of 2042.

  • Awards: Winner of Best Audio Design at The Game Awards 2025.

  • Why It’s Top: It broke franchise records with 7 million copies sold in its launch week. On PlayStation 5, it was the definitive shooter experience of the fall, utilizing the DualSense controller’s haptics to make every caliber of weapon feel distinct.

  • Platforms: PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X/S, PC.

4. Clair Obscur: Expedition 33

  • The Lowdown: A turn-based RPG with a “reactive” twist—players must dodge, parry, and jump over enemy attacks in real-time during the enemy’s turn. Set in a Belle Époque fantasy France, you lead a squad on a suicide mission to destroy the Paintress before she erases everyone aged 33.

  • Awards: Winner of Game of the Year, Best Narrative, Best RPG, and Best Art Direction at The Game Awards 2025.

  • Why It’s Top: It swept the awards season, proving that a traditional genre could still dominate modern gaming if executed with style. The visual flair and “active turn-based” combat made it a massive hit on consoles.

  • Platforms: PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X/S, PC.


Nintendo Switch 2 Leaders

1. Mario Kart World

  • The Lowdown: The Switch 2 launch title that reinvented the wheel. It introduces a “Free Roam” open-world hub where you drive between tracks, and a 24-player “Knockout Tour” mode where the last-place racers are eliminated at checkpoints.

  • Awards: Winner of Best Sports/Racing Game at The Game Awards 2025.

  • Why It’s Top: It is the best-selling game on the Switch 2. The chaos of 24-player races and the seamless open-world transitions showcased the new console’s processing power immediately.

  • Platforms: Nintendo Switch 2 (Exclusive).

2. Donkey Kong Bananza

  • The Lowdown: A 3D platformer that focuses on “creative destruction.” DK can smash through walls, floors, and ceilings to create new paths and find hidden “Banandium Gems.” It features gorgeous, fully destructible environments that persist throughout the level.

  • Awards: Winner of Best Family Game at The Game Awards 2025.

  • Why It’s Top: It brought the ape back to 3D for the first time since Donkey Kong 64 but with modern physics. It holds a Metascore of 91, praised for its playful use of the Switch 2’s hardware.

  • Platforms: Nintendo Switch 2 (Exclusive).

3. Pokémon Legends: Z-A

  • The Lowdown: Set entirely within the urban redevelopment of Lumiose City, this action-RPG brings back Mega Evolutions. Players work to build the city while catching PokĂ©mon in parks and underground zones, utilizing a new, faster combat system.

  • Awards: Top-selling handheld game of Q4 2025.

  • Why It’s Top: It delivered on the “Kalos” nostalgia while refining the catching mechanics introduced in Legends: Arceus. The single-city setting provided a dense, vertical playground unlike any previous PokĂ©mon game.

  • Platforms: Nintendo Switch, Nintendo Switch 2.

4. Metroid Prime 4: Beyond

  • The Lowdown: Released in December, this first-person adventure sees Samus Aran facing the time-traveling threat of Sylux. It features massive, non-linear alien worlds and returns to the scan-heavy, atmospheric storytelling of the original trilogy.

  • Awards: Widely considered the “Visual Showcase” of the Switch 2 launch year (Released too late for TGA 2025 eligibility).

  • Why It’s Top: After an 8-year wait and development reboot, it actually lived up to the hype. It runs at a locked 60fps on Switch 2 with visuals that rival other current-gen consoles.

  • Platforms: Nintendo Switch, Nintendo Switch 2.


Xbox Series Leaders

1. South of Midnight

  • The Lowdown: A third-person action-adventure set in a magical realist version of the American Deep South. The game features a striking stop-motion animation style for its characters (similar to Spider-Verse) and focuses on weaving magic to repair a broken world.

  • Awards: Winner of Games for Impact at The Game Awards 2025.

  • Why It’s Top: The art direction is unmatched. While combat reviews were mixed, the “vibe” and narrative were universally praised, making it a standout Game Pass Day One release.

  • Platforms: Xbox Series X/S (Console Exclusive), PC.

2. Call of Duty: Black Ops 7

  • The Lowdown: A direct sequel to BO6, set in 2035 following David Mason. It features the return of round-based Zombies and “Omnimovement” (sprinting/diving in any direction). The multiplayer launched with 16 original maps.

  • Awards: Chart-topping sales for November/December 2025.

  • Why It’s Top: Despite “franchise fatigue” complaints, it dominated the Xbox charts due to Game Pass integration. It became the default shooter for the holiday season.

  • Platforms: Xbox Series X/S, Xbox One, PS5, PS4, PC.

3. Doom: The Dark Ages

  • The Lowdown: A prequel that trades the speed of Doom Eternal for weight and power. The “Shield Saw” encourages a “stand your ground” playstyle, allowing you to parry projectiles and saw through demons. It also features mech and dragon-riding combat sections.

  • Awards: Winner of Innovation in Accessibility at The Game Awards 2025.

  • Why It’s Top: id Software reinvented their own loop again. The slower, heavier combat felt distinct and satisfying, and the id Tech engine performed flawlessly on Xbox Series X.

  • Platforms: Xbox Series X/S, PS5, PC.

The Immortals: Trending Games NOT Released in 2025

A “Game of the Year” doesn’t have to be from this year. In 2025, pop culture events and massive updates brought these older titans roaring back into the spotlight.

1. Minecraft

  • Why it’s Trending: Minecraft experienced a massive resurgence in April 2025 following the theatrical release of “A Minecraft Movie” starring Jack Black and Jason Momoa. Industry data reported a 25% spike in daily active users and game sales immediately surrounding the film’s premiere, pushing its monthly active user count to approximately 170 million.

  • Platforms: PC, PlayStation 4/5, Xbox One/Series, Nintendo Switch, Switch 2, Mobile.

2. The Last of Us Part I & Part II

  • Why it’s Trending: The franchise saw a dramatic sales surge during the airing of HBO’s The Last of Us Season 2 (April–May 2025). The Last of Us Part II Remastered specifically sold an estimated 2 million units during the show’s seven-episode run, with the first game also re-entering sales charts as the “best video game adaptation” discourse reignited interest.

  • Platforms: PlayStation 5, PC (Part I), PlayStation 4 (Part II original).

3. Grand Theft Auto V (GTA V)

  • Why it’s Trending: GTA V trended heavily in late 2025 as the community’s primary “waiting room” after Rockstar Games announced the delay of Grand Theft Auto VI to November 19, 2026. The 12-year-old title maintained hundreds of thousands of concurrent players on Steam and consoles as fans analyzed new GTA Online updates for “backported” features hinted to appear in the sequel.

  • Platforms: PC, PlayStation 4/5, Xbox One/Series.

4. Fortnite

  • Why it’s Trending: Fortnite remained an unstoppable force in 2025 with a peak of over 44 million players. Its trending status was sustained by its “Metaverse” strategy, continuously reinventing itself with massive IP collaborations and live events that kept it relevant against newer shooters like Battlefield 6.

  • Platforms: PC, PlayStation 4/5, Xbox One/Series, Switch, Mobile.

5. Roblox

  • Why it’s Trending: With over 111 million daily active users in 2025, Roblox effectively operates as its own social network for younger gamers. It trends not because of a single event, but due to the sheer volume of user-generated content that provides infinite gameplay loops, making it the most active game globally by player count.

  • Platforms: PC, Mobile, PlayStation 4/5, Xbox One/Series.

6. Call of Duty: Black Ops 6

  • Why it’s Trending: Released in late 2024, Black Ops 6 was the dominant First-Person Shooter for the majority of 2025. It trended heavily throughout the year as players debated whether its successor, Black Ops 7 (released Nov 2025), was released “too early” (just 13 months later), with many fans sticking to BO6 for its established meta and seasonal content.

  • Platforms: PC, PlayStation 4/5, Xbox One/Series.

7. Counter-Strike 2 (CS2)

  • Why it’s Trending: CS2 remained the #1 most-played game on Steam throughout 2025, consistently hitting peaks of over 1.8 million concurrent players. Its dominance in the esports sector (with Team Vitality winning major events) kept it at the forefront of the competitive gaming conversation.

  • Platforms: PC (Exclusive).

8. League of Legends

  • Why it’s Trending: Riot’s MOBA continued to command a massive audience of 130 million monthly players. It trended due to its global esports dominance and the continued cultural impact of its universe, serving as a perennial staple in the PC gaming landscape.

  • Platforms: PC (Exclusive).

9. Valorant

  • Why it’s Trending: Riot’s tactical shooter evolved from a PC exclusive into a multi-platform juggernaut in 2025. The year was defined by the explosive launch of Valorant Mobile in China (August 2025), which became one of the region’s highest-grossing mobile launches. Simultaneously, the console versions on PS5 and Xbox solidified their player bases, while Valorant Champions 2025 in Paris drew over 1.4 million peak viewers as NRG Esports claimed the world title.

  • Platforms: PC, PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X/S, Mobile (China/Select Regions).

10. Fallout 4

  • Why it’s Trending: The franchise experienced a second wave of popularity in December 2025 with the premiere of Fallout Season 2 on Amazon Prime. Similar to the 600% player spike seen in 2024, the new season drove players back to the wasteland to relive the RPG experience while watching the show.

  • Platforms: PC, PlayStation 4/5, Xbox One/Series.

Final Save: Why 2025 Was the Plot Twist We Didn’t See Coming

If you had told me in January that the most talked-about game of the year would be a French turn-based RPG and not Grand Theft Auto VI, I would have asked what save file you loaded. But that’s exactly what made 2025 so special. It was the year of the underdog, the year of the “Finite Game,” and the year the industry finally remembered that bigger isn’t always better—but better is always better.

We didn’t just get games; we got moments. We got the collective jaw-drop of the Switch 2 reveal. We got the “one more run” sleep deprivation of Hades II. We got the “just five more minutes” that turned into 5 A.M. sessions in Civilization VII.

Personal Take: My backlog is currently staring at me with judgment, and my wallet is filing for a restraining order against Steam. But if I had to pick a defining memory? It wasn’t the 4K ray-tracing or the open worlds. It was that specific weekend in April when everyone I knew was playing Clair Obscur. For a brief moment, we weren’t grinding battle passes or complaining about roadmaps. We were just… playing a story. It felt like the golden age of gaming again.

Press Start on 2026

As the credits roll on 2025, the shadow of November 19, 2026 looms large. Yes, Grand Theft Auto VI is finally coming, and yes, it will likely consume the sun. We also have Fable and the full release of Path of Exile 2 on the horizon.

But don’t let the hype for tomorrow erase the wins of today. 2025 wasn’t a transition year. It was a renaissance. It proved that whether you’re a indie dev with a dream or a AAA giant with a legacy, if you respect the player’s time, we will show up.

GG, 2025. Well played.


What was your personal Game of the Year? Did you survive the RedSec battle royale, or are you still stuck in the simulation of Kingdom Come? Let us know in the comments below!

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