The 10 Best Xbox One Games of 2019 (So Far)

As usual the Xbox One doesn’t quite have the deep well of great exclusives this year that can be found on the PlayStation 4 and Nintendo Switch. It does have one crucial thing in its favor though: it’s the only place outside of a PC to currently play the best game of the year. The Outer Wilds is a smart, challenging, sad game with an equal serving of emotional and intellectual heft, and if you own an Xbox One it’s an absolute must-play. Elsewhere on this list, though, you’ll find a number of games that are playable on other consoles, including at least one that’s available on both the PlayStation 4 and Switch. That doesn’t mean anything if you only own an Xbox One—it’s not like Sekiro or Metro Exodus becomes worse just because you can also play ‘em on Sony’s machine. And Microsoft’s open embrace of backwards compatibility means you can play any number of excellent Xbox 360 games if you still have those discs lying around. So there’s no shortage of new or old games to play on this system, even if very few of them are genuinely exclusive.
Let’s take a look at the new games from 2019 that you have to play if you’re an Xbox One owner.
10. Far Cry: New Dawn
Far Cry New Dawn is like Far Cry Primal in that it takes a lot of existing Far Cry assets and reconfigures them in a way that I find impressive. Game development is an expensive business, and creatively repackaging Hope County with a fresh coat of post-apocalyptic paint is, from a practical perspective, a stroke of brilliance. I like the feeling of returning to familiar places post-disaster (it’s one of the many reasons I love the Fallout series) and this new spin, which sees the protagonist rebuilding a settlement of survivors following the apocalypse at the end of Far Cry 5, gives the developers a chance to take some liberties with the setting without threatening the series’s core basis in pseudo-reality. The results are gorgeous. The buried ruins, vibrant overgrowth and purple wildflowers that spread throughout Hope County are a welcome facelift on a familiar setting.—Holly Green
9. Metro Exodus
Metro Exodus gave me the same feeling that I had playing the first-person games of the early ‘00s. It is messy, full of stock situations, and doesn’t quite work in all instances, but it is also experimental and willing to be a little unpolished if it creates a situation or a series of moments that are memorable and compelling. It is a great game that had to smear itself in a layer of whatever-nothing to convince you that it belonged in a certain genre. But like the octopus pretending to be a rock, Metro Exodus is a brilliant creature in the guise of a worse one. With some time, energy, and emotional investment it springs to life.—Cameron Kunzelman
8. Kingdom Hearts III
When comparisons between Kingdom Hearts and other franchises come up as a way of giving some cover to the keyblade game, I bristle. The power of Kingdom Hearts and all of its weirdness is contained in its implosive capability, its ability to be totally separated from all narrative responsibility. And as far as I can tell, that’s the greatest power in videogames.—Cameron Kunzelman
7. Mortal Kombat 11
Mortal Kombat 11 goes out of its way to break down the barrier between experts and regular players. It reduces the imperceptible into easy-to-follow, step-by-step chunks that anybody can learn. Of course simply knowing how to count frame data doesn’t mean most players will be able to do it that effectively with any regularity. Also, it’s entirely possible that new meta techniques will be discovered by the fighting game community as they continue to look for advantages, once again leaving most players out of the loop. And perhaps NetherRealm intentionally baked new meta tactics into Mortal Kombat 11, knowing that the most dedicated players would quickly find them and pass them around clandestinely like they once did these other techniques.
For now, though, Mortal Kombat 11 blows up so much of the mystery around fighting games. I’ve been playing Mortal Kombat games for almost 30 years, but this is the first time I’ve really played one the way fighting games are meant to be played these days.—Garrett Martin