The Best Short Games on Xbox Game Pass

Sometimes, we just don’t have time to play games. Life can become a whirlwind of working, cooking, seeing friends, and dozens of other overwhelming activities that make spending 20 hours inside a digital world seem frivolous. Thankfully, some developers not only understand this dilemma, but create games around it.
That’s right, I’m talking about short games. Those ones that mimic the infamous tweet: “i want shorter games with worse graphics made by people who are paid more to work less and i’m not kidding.” Being bite-sized doesn’t mean the developers put in any less time or effort in these experiences; oftentimes their smaller nature allows for a final product that’s more consistent and polished than games that try to do more.
Luckily for everyone, the deep line-up within Xbox Game Pass doesn’t just include the latest Halo and Forza Horizon games, but a few hidden gems that you can spend an afternoon conquering. So put down Horizon Forbidden West and lock up the Pokémon, and let us here at Paste show you what’s good in the under eight hour hood. It’s time to enjoy the little things.
Titanfall 2
The largest game on the list, Titanfall 2’s single-player campaign speeds by in a mere six hours. The developers at Respawn Entertainment don’t waste a second though, crafting a tightly knit story built around some of the best controls this side of Call of Duty. Each level utilizes their specific gimmicks to the fullest, forcing players to platform in a sideways city to literally hop between time. The game is an imaginative, addicting thrill-ride that will leave your clamoring for a long-awaited sequel.
Donut County
From the brilliantly wacky mind of Ben Esposito, Donut County answers one of the world’s most important questions: What if you controlled a hole that swallowed up everything? Players control BK, an anthropomorphic racoon, who goes about sucking up everything around town in an attempt to win a quadcopter drone. Following Katamari rules, the more you suck up the bigger the hole becomes. The levels are full of charm and engaging but simple puzzles while the story weaves a surprisingly poignant tale about gentrification. Annapurna doesn’t miss.
The Pedestrian
Sticking to the puzzle game genre, The Pedestrian is a 2.5D puzzle platformer that requires players to manipulate the physical space around them to progress. Controlling a man/woman pictogram from bathroom signs, you move among many flat surfaces to find keys, boxes, and parts as you venture throughout the city. The puzzles never feel too complex, keeping the goal neatly in sight but just out of reach. Each new area adds more and more mechanics, culminating in a brain-tickling massive puzzle that puts everything you know to the test.
Olija
After being eaten by a whale, broke Lord Faraday awakes in a dilapidated and corroding underworld. With none of his crew in sight, Faraday ventures forth into the world, finding himself embroiled in a prophecy to stop the darkness and find his way back home. With its 8-bit art style and macabre vibe, Olija draws inspiration from Castlevania. Players control Faraday and utilize a magical harpoon to traverse the world and attack enemies. The mostly one man team at Skeleton Crew Studios crafts a slim and touching story that feels great to spend a few hours killing baddies in.
Exo One
After a handful of astronauts vanish during a mission around Saturn, the lone survivor agrees to fly a highly experimental spherical spacecraft gifted to Earth by aliens to track them down. The journey is lonely and dangerous, the deep quiet punctuated by sharp electric guitars as your sphere rolls through desolate landscapes, gaining speed until you flatten out and catch air. The strong dependence on physics creates an addicting gameplay loop and the ethereal and spoon-fed story entices you to keep venturing to further and further frontiers.