Paste’s Fall Games Preview: 10 Games We’re Excited for Through the End of 2024

It’s almost fall, which means it is once again almost time for a deluge of potentially great new videogames. The bulk of the year’s new releases always come out between the start of September and Thanksgiving, with a few notables slipping into early December. This year is no different; the next three months will bring us the latest in major series like Assassin’s Creed and Call of Duty, Indiana Jones’ latest adventure, the return of one of Life Is Strange’s earlier characters, and a whole flotilla of cool games by smaller studios that seem to have the personality and creativity so frequently missing from major corporate games. For Paste‘s fall games preview our games editors Garrett Martin and Elijah Gonzalez sifted through the avalanche of upcoming titles and found 10 that they really can’t wait to play. Here are their picks for the most interesting new games this fall.
I Am Your Beast
Release Date: 9/10
Platform: PC
Xalavier Nelson Jr. is a prolific and unpredictable designer who, along with a rotating crew of collaborators, has made some of the most interesting games of the last few years; his work is smart, challenging, and unconstrained by genre, and since the start of 2023 includes the animal poker / mob revenge thriller Sunshine Shuffle, the ruminative speed shooter El Paso Elsewhere, the horror puzzler Life Eater, and the existential examination of power dynamics / clicker game parody Clickolding. His latest, I Am Your Beast, arrives tomorrow via his usual Strange Scaffold label, and is another inspired tribute to and subversion of ‘00s-era shooters. Its fast-paced, superhuman exploits are built atop a foundation critical of the military-industrial complex, and with the stylish but naturalistic writing and dialogue Nelson’s become known for. A Steam demo has us thinking this could be one of the year’s best; we’ll find out when the full game hits our PC this week.—Garrett Martin
UFO 50
Release Date: 9/18
Platform: PC
What if one of those collections of games from the ‘80s—like the ones with Sega’s early hits, or Capcom’s arcade games, or the amazing Gold Master Series—was made up of entirely new games that were presented as forgotten classics? That’s the concept behind UFO 50, which purports to gather together the major works of the groundbreaking and entirely fictional UFOSoft. With 50 new, full games designed by the folks behind Spelunky, Downwell, and other old-fashioned hits from the last 15 years, UFO 50 seems like the coolest game jam in ages. Anybody who was playing games in the ‘80s should be intrigued by this new treasure trove of fake classics, and to anybody who wasn’t around at the time, it’ll probably feel just like picking up one of those comps of legit ‘80s games. It’ll only be on PC at first, but this new golden era of fake retro classics should hit consoles eventually.—Garrett Martin
Mouthwashing
Release Date: 9/26
Platform: PC
Coming off the weird, gross, and fascinating How Fish Is Made, Wrong Organ seems to be cooking up another nightmarish creation with their latest. Mouthwashing is an upcoming first-person narrative horror game about being trapped on a marooned spaceship with little chance of survival. Having played the demo, this lo-fi world is downright brutal, a purgatory where a bickering crew of interplanetary blue-collar workers await a seemingly grisly end as you explore rusted corridors and learn how they ended up in this dire situation. What I’ve seen so far makes great use of its polygonal graphics and delivers sordid turns via smash cuts that place us in the disorienting headspace of the protagonist as we partake in sharply written conversations with the crew. Beyond this stylish editing and writing, there is a specificity in this overwhelming bleak setting; as you creep through rusted corridors, you can’t help but wonder if there is something out to get you on this derelict freighter or if you should be more afraid of your increasingly desperate co-workers. Mouthwashing seems to be as thematically pitch black as the vacuum of space, but considering how smartly this gloom is presented, I’m quite excited for some truly terrible times.—Elijah Gonzalez
The Legend of Zelda: Echoes of Wisdom
Release Date: 9/26
Platform: Switch
Despite her name being in the title of these dang videogames, The Legend of Zelda series has rarely let you play as the titular princess aside from spin-offs like the campy Zelda: The Wand Of Gamelon or the Hyrule Warriors games. That will finally change with The Legend of Zelda: Echoes of Wisdom, a top-down action game that looks built on top of the 2019’s wonderful Link’s Awakening remake. But while its art style is familiar, Echoes of Wisdom seems to mostly be going in its own direction, in large part because of Zelda’s unique toolset. Using the Tri Rod, she can create “echoes” of items and beings, which allows her to stack crates and furniture to traverse the world or summon minions to do her bidding. While she’ll occasionally be able to channel Link’s swordsmanship, most of the time, she’ll be using her own skills to save the day as she navigates the rifts that have consumed much of Hyrule. Compared to the well-established blade-swinging gameplay of other top-down entries in the series, there are a lot of unknowns about how it will feel to use these new powers, but the creativity this could allow has some magical potential.—Elijah Gonzalez