Last year was all about legendary releases. Titles like Baldur’s Gate 3 and Alan Wake 2 captivated gamers across the globe, but life behind-the-scenes was a world on fire. We felt the consequences of that in 2024. Studios had a turbulent year and many big releases were delayed or cancelled. So was it a good year for video games, like as a whole? In time, we’ll see. For now, we’re going to celebrate the fact that plenty of incredible games came out in 2024 by awarding the best of them.
This year wasn’t about one (or three) standout generation-defining titles. Instead, a bunch of niches and fanbases popped off for their own thing. If you loved long RPGs you were eating good with Final Fantasy VII Rebirth, Metaphor: Re:Fantazio, or Dragon Age: The Veilguard. Though we’ve been so swamped, two of us barely had time to catch up on the masterful Remake from 2020, let alone any of this year’s 60+ hour epics. On top of that, indie games were unassailable in 2024. Animal Well was one of the most inventive takes on the Metrodvania in years and 1000XRESIST tells one of the best stories of the year, hands down. And in other news, Silent Hill 2 finally got a remake, and it wasn’t terrible! There was even a pretty good Batman game in VR. Those are all great ways to spend your time. None of them even made it close to our top five list.
This year wasn’t just about the new releases, either. From controllers to gaming chairs and keyboards, we’ve spent the year finding the best in gamer gear. Only the things we truly loved get an Esquire Gaming Award. So, here they are.
Esquire’s Games of the Year
If you’re unfamiliar with the Discourse, 2024’s game of the year debate is reaching existential crisis territory. Unlike with our top title in 2023, Alan Wake 2, there’s no clear-cut winner this year. Can a DLC (Elden Ring: Shadow of the Erdtree) win the year’s top honors? What about a remake (Final Fantasy 7 Rebirth)? Or could it just be Astro Bot? When we hashed it out, we kept coming back to one improbable title, a release we never expected to award Game of the Year back in January. EA Sports delivered an acclaimed game to a niche of notoriously picky fans after an eleven-year-long wait. (Bethesda, are you taking notes?) At a certain point, you simply can’t ignore the outsized cultural impact of a moment like that. Even if it’s for a sports game. Cue your fight song of choice—Esquire’s Game of the Year is College Football 25.
After taking a digital beating (and then some) for lackluster Madden efforts, EA Sports built a football sim that actually feels new. Do you know how hard that is to pull off? College Football 25‘s gameplay feels like college football. Schemes are wonderfully weird, and playing defense sometimes feels impossible. Big stadiums like Ohio State’s horseshoe, Oregon’s Autzen, and LSU’s Death Valley are markedly more difficult to play in. EA Sports painstakingly incorporated details and quirks of all 134 FBS schools to make every fan—from Texas to Toledo—feel like their program was cared for. And the beloved dynasty mode? I won’t even tell you how many years I’ve burned through so far. In the end, it felt like the world stopped the day College Football 25 reached the masses, and we had the most fun gaming this year when we were airing it out on Saturday afternoons.—Brady Langmann
Why get one NES-throwback style indie when you can get 50 of them for the same price? Yes, you read that correctly. While most major studios struggle to make one $70 title function correctly, UFO 50’s team of indie developers came together to make fifty games plus a whole meta narrative-slash-hidden-game. The kicker? They’re all fucking good.
The 80’s-inspired collection features brand new platformers, puzzlers, and RPGs that range from quick bursts of fun to multi-hour affairs. Highlights include Party House, a strategy rogue-lite about throwing the perfect party before the cops arrive; Mortol, an action-platformer about sacrificing copies of your character to cross obstacles and reach the next stage, only to have to turn around; and Pilot Quest, an idle game that runs in the background until it transforms into a full-fledged RPG on its own. The entire collection costs just $24.99, meaning that you’re clocking out at around $0.50 a title. That’s INSANE. I can fully guarantee that you won’t find a better deal this year.—Josh Rosenberg
Like a Dragon is the greatest video game franchise of all time. I have no reservations about that statement. As any fan will tell you, the Japanese gangster RPG contains one of the wackiest, longest-running stories in interactive storytelling today, as well as a treasure trove of side quests that rival the title’s core content. The latest title is no exception. In fact, Infinite Wealth is a magnum opus for the series.
The game combines characters from across its 20-year history to tell a wide-reaching and compelling story about Japanese gangsters in Hawaii. Infinite Wealth also manages to pack in even more mini-games than ever before. After spending hours at the dartboard, the batting cage, the karaoke bar, the mahjong parlor, the go-kart tournament, or even the Animal Crossing-esque island creator, you’ll forget that you haven’t touched the main story in days. Controlled insanity is the key to Infinite Wealth‘s success. I know it sounds daunting, and incredibly silly. Just call and thank me after the most ridiculous side quest still manages to make you weep.—J.R.
This year’s biggest bundle of feel-good nostalgia has got to be PlayStation’s homage to the mascot platformer. In and of itself, Astro Bot is a tight, ambitious, creative 3D platformer that nearly single-handedly revives the very genre it’s paying homage to. It incorporates every unique feature of the DualSense controller, reminding you why you got a PS5 in the first place.
But it’s the targeted and refined nostalgia play that makes it my personal Game of the Year. For so many fans and critics who lived through the eras it celebrates, it was pure joy. With over 150 unique bots to find, triumphant themed levels based on Uncharted, God of War, and even some more obscure fan favorites, Astro Bot is as much of an easter egg hunt as it is a history lesson. —Bryn Gelbart
Tears of the Kingdom excelled because it granted players nearly unlimited creativity. It was also incredibly hard. Using the core mechanics of grabbing things and sticking them together to build a giant robot was a blast, but it wasn’t easy, nor did it make getting to the final boss that much easier.
In The Legend of Zelda: Echoes of Wisdom, Nintendo allowed players to “break the game” once again, this time completely in the player’s favor. In Zelda’s first-ever leading title, the princess possesses the ability to copy and reuse just about any object you find in Hyrule. Players can combine two beds to forge bridges or populate chairs in the wild to reach high ledges. Multiple solutions exist for every puzzle. And as always with Nintendo, the title’s design is incredibly intuitive for younger players to enjoy. If you’re picking up a Nintendo title for the holidays this year, this better be it.—J.R.
Best Gaming Devices of 2024
Best Gaming Accessories of 2024
Everything Else We Loved in 2024
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