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These are the seven video games we’re excited to play in 2025

Surprisingly, these aren’t all racing games
GTA 6 coming soon
PHOTO: Rockstar Games

Each new year brings hope. Yes, you’ve just spent a week eating leftovers for breakfast, but 2025 doesn’t judge you for it. Instead, it offers you a clean slate. A fresh set of 365 new and unsullied days of change, growth, and possibility.

And that’s why it’s important to look ahead at all the games coming out in 2025. Because you absolutely are going to be playing these, and therefore need to balance your calendar between finishing your daily societal requirements and completing a campaign.

Adjust your new year’s resolutions accordingly as it’s a big year for video games ahead, and these are what we are looking forward to the most.

1) Assetto Corsa Evo

Assetto Corsa Evo

Frankly, after the years of fun we’ve had in Assetto Corsa and Competizione, developer Kunos Simulazioni could announce that they’re releasing a scientific novel about the rate of grass growth in 2025 and it’d still be one of our most anticipated moments of the year. Evo, mind you, is a thrilling prospect for much more than the cars attached.

Powered by an all-new game engine that looks especially great at vehicle interiors and changing weather effects, it’s not just a sandbox or an esports-ready motorsport series, but also a pretty massive 600sqm open world, similar to Forza Horizon and The Crew. It’s based on the German countryside that surrounds the Nürburgring, and in typically forensic style, Kunos have gone out and laser-scanned that entire region in real life.

The car list’s looking particularly enticing too, with modern thirst traps like Hyundai’s N Vision sitting alongside classic Ferraris and appropriately enough given the game title, a Lancia Delta HF Integrale Evoluzione, to name only a few highlights.

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2) Kingdom Come Deliverance II

Kingdom Come Deliverance 2

An open-world RPG with not a single elf, dragonm or +2 enchanted sword of the ancients in sight. Like the 2018 original, KCD II isn’t trying to topple Skyrim’s reign over fantasy land, but instead builds an obsessively researched, rigorously accurate corner of medieval Bohemia and lets you loose to flail various arrows, swords, and other sharp weapons around in it.

Original protagonist Henry is back with his old pal Sir Hans, and with a newfound knack for comedic delivery. Laughs were in short supply during the opening massacre of the first game, but the central pair’s friendship fuels many laughs this time, and its impressively captured by some impressive motion-capture tech.

Combat was famously tricky before, and now it has had an overhaul that doesn’t lack for depth but feels a bit easier to learn now. The trademark historical detail also comes good for picking out armor and weapon sets that exploit your enemies’ loadouts. If they’re in chainmail, pick a spear. If they’re in plate armor, pick a hammer. And if all else fails, just leg it.

3) DOOM: The Dark Ages

Doom the Dark Ages

From one vision of medieval times that couldn’t be more authentic if it tried, to, well, a guy with a chainsaw shield fighting off the hordes of hell in an Olde Worlde setting. Not to worry, DOOM: The Dark Ages doesn’t want to impress scholars and historians—it just wants to make you feel even more monstrously powerful than ever before.

While some shooters want to tell you a deep story and mix up the pace with a stealthy section, or a bit where you’re escorting the president out of a hostage situation, id Software says, here, have these devastating weapons. Here’s room after room of monsters, each of which blows up in particularly satisfying ways. Have fun.

And we will, id Software. We will.

4) Project Motor Racing

Project Motor Racing

The artist formerly known as GTRevival has a new name, a new game engine, and a new publishing deal with Giants Software. In 2025, it’s finally primed and ready to hit the racing sim heights of Project CARS and GTR—two titles that members of Straight4Studios created previously. That impressive credits list is part of the reason we’re counting down the days until PMR lands. After all, we’re still playing Project CARS 2 even after it was pulled from distribution on Steam.

But there’s also the ambition of the project. While the likes of iRacing are hamstrung by aged game engines, Straight4Studios has built a thoroughly modern engine that can implement more realistic physics simulations and leverage the power of modern graphics cards.

Plus we’ve spotted a Lister Storm in the pre-release assets, so this one’s a done deal as far as we’re concerned.

5) Fable

Fable

Maybe it’s still too early to get our hopes up about Forza Horizon developer Playground Games’ take on the classic Fable RPG series. But if you will insist on releasing brilliant cinematic trailers with smart writing, Richard Ayoade, and biting criticism on age-old RPG tropes, Playground, we can’t help but get invested.

There’s no publicly available gameplay footage yet, so look, there’s still a chance it won’t be a refreshing spin on the epic fantasy adventure with great comedic writing, and incredible systems like the old Fables had. But if original series creator Peter Molyneux taught us anything, it was to shut out the nagging doubts and lose yourself to the fantasy.

6) Rennsport

Rennsport

Say it out loud. It just sounds fast, doesn’t it? In the open beta (available to everyone right now, by the way), it looks at first glance like an ACC-like proposition: GT3 cars with a super-serious sim-racing model where tire and brake temps are the end-all, be-all. But Rennsport’s ambitions go beyond simply occupying the space Kunos Simulazioni once occupied before moving on with Evo. There are plans for many more vehicles, across different categories, and crucially, all of them will feel convincing to drive.

The best bit is that the team at Competition Company is taking feedback very seriously, so you can hop into their Discord and shape the racing sim you want to drive.

7) Grand Theft Auto VI

Screencap from Grand Theft Auto VI (GTA 6)

Imagine a list about games coming out in 2025 without GTA VI on it. Where would one even go to find such a thing? It’d be like a ‘best French hypercars’ list without a Bugatti, or an office Christmas party without someone getting hilariously drunk and loud.

No, we need these conventions otherwise chaos would preside. Also, it looks really good, doesn’t it? Only one video games company could drop the biggest trailer of all time and then leave us on read for a year, but there’s so much to digest about our first glance at modern-day Vice City. The everglades and the dusty highways, and the Bonnie and Clyde story that seems to be emerging from Lucia and Jason—the two central characters in the reveal vid.

All the news stories, taking aim at real-world events and showing them back to us through a funhouse mirror. How real and lived-in the place feels, with ads for fictional brands plastered everywhere and familiar vehicle brands popping up in precious glimpses. There’s a reason everyone’s quite excited about this one: GTA is a genre unto itself, and there’s no one else who can reach these heights.

Honorable mention: The annual franchises and live service games

A video game being played on board the all-new 2023 BMW 5-Series

You never see them pop up on these lists, but let’s take a moment to acknowledge these types of games. Like every year, we’re going to spend a lot of 2025 playing the new Codemasters F1 game, and the new EA FC. We’re also still going to be pretending we’re good at PUBG. We’ll regularly be sightseeing around The Crew Motorfest’s Hawaiian islands, and when Football Manager 2025 arrives in March, we’ll be there, in a big coat and some stylish spectacles, pretending to know what a Trequartista does.

NOTE: This story first appeared on TopGear.com. Minor edits have been made.

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PHOTO: Rockstar Games
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