The Most Anticipated Games of 2024

Over the last week every gaming site on the internet asked some variation of this question: how can 2024 ever hope to match up to 2023, one of the greatest years for games ever? It’s a silly thing, as 2023 wasn’t some pivotal year for the medium, and many of the popular games that make people think it was weren’t high on everybody’s radar at the start of the year. Who knows what surprises 2024 will bring, from already hyped games greatly exceeding expectations, to total unknowns coming out of nowhere and blowing everybody away? We don’t really know what 2024 will manifest in the world of videogames, just as we don’t really know how any year will turn out only five days in. The best we can do is look through the mass of games already announced for the year and single out the ones we’re most excited for. Paste‘s games team—senior editor Garrett Martin, assistant editor Moises Taveras, and assistant TV editor and games contributor Elijah Gonzales—have done just that. Here are their most anticipated games of 2024
Dragon’s Dogma 2
Platform: PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X|S, PC
Release Date: March 24
I’m waiting with bated breath for the next time I get my hands on Dragon’s Dogma 2, if only to see how much further I can push the bounds of its emergent capabilities. I reckon the story of the game, which I got zero insight into, isn’t going to be what keeps me going. Instead, jumping more minotaurs, and maybe even finally riding a griffin, sounds like a much more appealing way to get to know the game. Maybe even get to the bottom of whatever ghost killed me at the end of my warrior playthrough. I want to see how much weirder it can get and how much more I can make its elements collide and what fun new surprises it might yield. Based on my hour with Dragon’s Dogma 2, I wouldn’t discount how wonderfully out of hand things can get, and finding out is one reason it’s one of our most anticipated games of the year.—Moises Taveras
Earthblade
Platform: PC
Release Date: TBA
Knocking it out of the park with a game like Celeste makes any follow up to it a tall order. Earthblade, the next game from Extremely Ok Games, has hardly been seen since its announcement, and in that absence, I’ve only grown more insatiable for it. The relatively little bit that has been divulged points to yet another beautiful, 2D platformer (this time in the vein of Metroid) that’s taking some cues from one of the best games of the generation—The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild—in its approach to music and exploration. 2024 has been the intended target since the game was announced, hopefully meaning that the silence around the title will soon give way to a deluge of information and a release in the near future. Expectations are high, but if there’s a team capable of meeting and even rising above them, it’s this one.—Moises Taveras
Final Fantasy VII: Rebirth
Platform: PlayStation 5
Release Date: February 29
Like many of us, I’ve spent too much of my adult life thinking about Final Fantasy VII, and the latest chapter in the remake trilogy guarantees this won’t change any time soon. The previous game featured one of the best translations of turn-based combat to real-time action that Square Enix has ever cooked up, which sets up a strong foundation for this sequel. But perhaps even more impressive was that despite shouldering a legacy heavier than Midgar’s upper plates, Final Fantasy VII Remake largely handled this burden with grace as it fleshed out the characters and details of this corporate dystopia. Whether Rebirth will be able to pay off the metatextual threads established in the 2020 release remains to be seen, but the studio has accomplished the impressive task of making me excited to learn what comes next, even though I should already know how this story ends. Can they pull off a minor miracle twice and continue successfully riffing on one of the most seminal narratives in the medium, or will it all come crashing down in a convoluted nest of Compilation nonsense where we need to know what happened in Final Fantasy VII G-Bike to understand what the hell is going on? Only time will tell, but I couldn’t be more eager to find out. —Elijah Gonzalez
Llamasoft: The Jeff Minter Story
Platforms: TBA
Release Datee: TBA
Digital Eclipse’s follow up to 2023’s excellent The Making of Karateka is devoted to Jeff Minter, the legendary game designer who’s been making idiosyncratic games about llamas, camels and psychedelia since 1979. This interactive documentary includes 42 of Minter’s games from 1981 through 1994, from early Sinclar ZX81 and Commodore VIC-20 games like 3D3D, Hellgate, and the seminal Gridrunner, up to ’94’s Jaguar release Tempest 2000—the best (and maybe only) reason to own a Jaguar. There’s also a reimagined version of Gridrunner, which will be roughly the umpteenth version of that game. Minter has a purity of vision rarely seen in games, and if you connect with what he’s doing—classic ’80s style arcade action with psychedelic music and visuals—it’s easy to become obsessed with his work. We don’t have a release date yet for this second installment of the Gold Master Series, but it’s definitely one of our most anticipated games of 2024.—Garrett Martin