What to Play on the Xbox One
Did you get an Xbox One for the holidays? Wondering what to play on it? Even though the box itself looks like it was designed in the 80s, Microsoft’s brand new gizmo feels like the future, with its voice controls, facial recognition and TV interaction. Despite its goals of living room dominance, the One’s still primarily a gaming system, and at the moment it has more exclusives than the PlayStation 4. That doesn’t necessarily mean it has more games worth playing, though. Below you can find our thoughts on most of the exclusives that are currently available for the Xbox One (including one or two games that also have Xbox 360 versions.) If you want to read up on the best third-party multi-platform games for the Xbox One, check out the third-party publisher section from our piece on what to play on the PlayStation 4.
Zombies are inherently ridiculous and an easy source of comedy, but most zombie games treat them with the utmost seriousness. That’s boring. Dead Rising 3 isn’t an outright farce—it’s tense and dramatic when it needs to be—but it’s not nearly as dour as most zombie games. That lighter tone, combined with the diverse weapon-crafting system and the overwhelming number of zombies on-screen at any given moment, makes Dead Rising 3 one of the better zombie games of late, and probably the best exclusive for the Xbox One.
The new version of the classic zoo simulator is a strategy game that kids and adults can enjoy. It’s less interested in the business side of managing a zoo than in taking care of the animals in your exhibits. There’s even a mode that does away with money and focuses solely on interacting with the virtual animals. The Xbox One version excellently incorporates the new system’s more advanced Kinect camera. Occasionally you’ll feed elephants by sticking out your arm, and when you smile at a monkey it might smile back. The Xbox brand might be synonymous with aggressive action games marketed to young men, but Zoo Tycoon is a pleasant repast for all ages.
Peggle 2 came out a few weeks after the Xbox One, and currently it’s only available on this system. That will almost definitely change in time, because the game’s publisher, EA, is a fan of money, which they will make a lot of once this guaranteed smash is released for smartphones and tablets. Until then, though, you need an Xbox One to play it. It’s perhaps the best pure game on the system, as addictive as the original, with that same dangerous combination of frustration and a sense of accomplishment found in the best games.
Of all the games for the new consoles, the photorealistic Ryse looks the most like what you’d expect a “next generation” game to look like. Combat consists of repetitive swordplay—it’s brutal and acrobatic, and can be a real-life stress reliever, but it barely changes over the course of the game. Ryse is beautiful but hollow—it only looks like the future.