The Best Games of January 2018

January did what Januaries do: started slow, kinda stayed slow, kept staying just a little bit slow, and then sped way the heck up just before it smashed into February. All the games below came out in the second half of January, with the top four all landing in the last week of the month. Together they give a sense of how diverse videogames can be. There’s a fighting game based on an anime, an almost-endless action-RPG that you can play alone or with friends, an arty game that tries strongly to kill you, another arty game that doesn’t really kill you at all, and finally, well, a third arty game that tries so strongly to kill you that it seems kind of addicted to the idea, but that’s also a poignant depiction of mental illness. (It’s Mega Man crossed with therapy. It’s called Celeste. Play it.) There might be some visual similarities to the beautifully abstract worlds found in Innerspace and Subnautica, but for the most part these five games are all about as different as games can be. Combined with their high level of quality, that made January a surprisingly fascinating month for videogames.
If you haven’t recovered from 2017’s plentiful bounty, and are just now wading into the waters of 2018, here’s what you should prioritize.
5. Innerspace
Platforms: PC, Switch, PlayStation 4, Xbox One, Mac
Innerspace gets flying right. They did the damn thing. You have just enough control to feel the wind whizzing by your face when you skip across the stone surface of a megamonolith, and it’s just arcadey enough that you don’t worry about smashing into that wall when you make a miscalculation. It takes some getting used to, but the lack of fuel, hit points, or any of the other markers of traditional flying mechanics is a welcome absence. Innerspace wants you to feel comfortable flying, and it doesn’t try to get in your way.
It also wants you to get used to diving. The little plane creature that you embody is at home in the sea as much as the air, and you can seamlessly drop into the sea from your flight path anytime you want. Then, when you’re beneath the waves, you can soar up toward the surface and engage your flight ability. It’s like being a dolphin that suddenly grows wings at the apex of its leap, and it feels amazing.—Cameron Kunzelman