Our Most Anticipated Games of 2023

If you dug through our back catalogue and compared our annual list of the most anticipated games of the year with our annual list of the best games of the year you wouldn’t always see a lot of overlap. A big part of that is because many games on the anticipated lists simply don’t come out those years; there’s a certain sequel that I’m pretty sure is on our list for the fourth year in a row. And it’s not just because very often a game that looks interesting or exciting in trailers and in previews can’t live up to the hype once we actually play it. A third reason those lists don’t always jibe is because very often the best games of the year are ones we aren’t even aware of when the year starts. Surprises come out every year; at this point in 2022 we weren’t anxiously waiting to play Norco or Citizen Sleeper or Signalis, and those are some of the very best games of the year. So take this list with a few grains of salt. We absolutely can’t wait to play all 10 of these games, but that doesn’t mean they’ll wind up being all that good or memorable. They might all be great, they might all disappoint, but until we actually play ‘em it’s all waiting to be seen. As of today, though, we’re looking forward to ‘em all. Here they are, in alphabetical order: Paste’s most anticipatd games of 2023.
AEW: Fight Forever
Platforms: PC, PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X|S, Switch, PlayStation 4, Xbox One
Release Date: First Quarter
Ask any wrestling game aficionado what the genre’s peak is, and they’ll most likely give you one of two answers: either the long-running Japanese series Fire Pro Wrestling, or the beloved wrestling games AKI and Asmik Ace developed for the Nintendo 64 in the late ‘90s. The latter are especially popular in the States, where they were released under licenses with WCW and then WWF at the summit of the cable TV pro wrestling craze. Wrestling fans have been clamoring for over a decade for a new licensed wrestling game that feels and plays like those N64 classics, and from day one All Elite Wrestling, a young promotion that offers a major league alternative to WWE, has promised that with its first game AEW: Fight Forever. Videos have highlighted a grappling system that recalls the AKI games, while also promoting a variety of minigames and large selection of in-match weapons. Those who’ve played it at trade shows like Gamescom have generally had positive things to say, and any wrestling fan whose longed for a spiritual successor to those Nintendo 64 games should keep an eye on Fight Forever.—Garrett Martin
Alan Wake 2
Platforms: Xbox Series X|S, PC, PlayStation 5
Release Date: TBD
Almost a decade before Control strapped Remedy’s interest in esoteric history and conspiracy theories onto a top-notch action game, the studio gave us the twisty, mind-bending Twin Peaks / Stephen King homage known as Alan Wake. A fascinating deep dive into metafiction and the space between reality and imagination, Alan Wake is an Obama-era Twilight Zone you could play, with the structure, pacing, and “OH MY GOD!” cliffhangers of one of those Lost wannabes that regularly came and went from network schedules in the late ‘00s. (It was better than all of those shows, of course.) If there was a knock against Alan Wake, it was the repetitive action, which often felt like killing time between story beats. Will Alan Wake 2 expand and improve on that part of the game? Will it even matter, if the storytelling is as great as it was in the original and in Control? We should find out at some point in ‘23.—Garrett Martin
Bomb Rush Cyberfunk
Platforms: Switch, PC
Release Date: TBD
Let me tell you: the streets have been clamoring for another Jet Set Radio game. Since Sega outright abdicated the throne, Bomb Rush Cyberfunk is out here taking over in 2023 instead. Hideki Naganuma is back on the ones and twos and bringing life back to the streets. It’s funky, it’s bass-pounding, it makes me want to dance and I don’t know how to. We can skateboard, BMX, and inline skate now, and tagging looks more simple, propulsive, and violent than ever. And of course, that classic Jet Set drip has never looked better. I want this game so bad and we only have to wait till this summer to get in on it.—Moises Taveras
El Paso, Elsewhere
Platforms: PC, PlayStation 4, Xbox One
Release Date: TBD
The thing about Xalavier Nelson and his studio Strange Scaffold is I’ve got no damn clue what they’re doing at almost any point in time. Even the weirdest of their games are smashing successes though, so they’ve got all the good will and trust I can possibly muster. Luckily, their next game, El Paso, Elsewhere is entirely up my alley. A third-person “bullet-time” shooter a la Max Payne, El Paso Elsewhere lets players shoot their way through a motel that seems to descend into Actual Hell and ultimately face off against their demonic evil ex. My favorite bit of it all? They’ve made an original hip-hop concept album for the game that I’m dying to hear more of.—Moises Taveras