The Best New Games of March 2020

We really needed videogames last month. We’re really gonna need ‘em for at least a couple more, too, the way things are looking. Fortunately March gave us at least four games worth playing, and two of them are ones that we could gladly pour hours into every week for the next year, at least. Here’s what we’ve been playing to stay safe, sane and indoors over the last few weeks. And since we’re only looking at new games from March, that means I can’t slip Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 3 on here—even though I played that more than anything else the first week of the quarantine.
1. Animal Crossing: New Horizons
Platform: Switch
Originally Animal Crossing applied almost no pressure to the player. You could pay off your house, or not, and that was pretty much it. Much has changed since 2002, though. Almost everything you do in New Horizons has the residue of productivity on it, even if you’re trying to be as aimless as possible. Instead of playing games within this game, the only way to not accidentally be productive is to literally do nothing—to sit in a chair, or lay on a hammock, and put the controller down. To sit quietly with your own thoughts—thoughts that exist fully outside of your Nintendo Switch.
The fact that you can do that, though, is an example of the confidence within Animal Crossing: New Horizons. Nintendo might have ramped up the numbers and the to-do lists, all the tasks and chores that make New Horizons feel like one of the last outposts of whatever notions of normalcy we might’ve once had, but you can still tune that out and live within your own head for a spell. That head might naturally drift towards the hellishly contorted world we live in, and not the delightfully cartoonish one of Animal Crossing, but escapism is overrated anyway. I’d rather worry about every aspect of modern living while quietly reflecting on the rhythmic roar of a videogame ocean than while sitting slackjawed in a living room I won’t ever be able to leave again. Give me these New Horizons—rigid, commercial, and staid—over the chaos of the last decade.