Top 5 Games Coming to Your PS5 in 2026
- XmisterfruitsX

- 2 days ago
- 4 min read

Every year sees hyped releases — some earn their buzz, others don’t. But 2026 is shaping up differently: a mix of long-awaited sequels, reboots with real promise, and fresh takes on classic franchises.
Let’s cut through the hype and talk about the Top 5 Games You Should Actually Care About in 2026 — the ones worth preordering, tracking, or getting excited for without feeling like you’re chasing marketing.
1. Forza Horizon 6 — Because Everybody Needs Some Open-World Joy

Understand this: people don’t want another burnout clone.
They want the sensation of freedom.
That’s what Forza Horizon has delivered since day one.
Why this matters in 2026
Forza Horizon 6 isn’t just a sequel — it’s the latest benchmark in open-world driving bliss. Bigger map. Better weather systems. More dynamic events. If the series has proven one thing, it’s that it can keep evolving without losing the joyful chaos that made it a favorite.
The real reason to care
Racing games often flip between simulator and arcade extremes. Forza Horizon has always found the sweet spot that’s accessible without being shallow. If this iteration pushes that balance even a little further — especially with crossplay, seasonal content, and deeper community features — it’s a must-play.
Hustle Zombie take:
You don’t need to be a racing fanatic to enjoy this. You just need the kind of gameplay that feels good every time you pick up the controller.
2. Resident Evil Requiem — Horror, Nostalgia, or Ego Trip?

Now, this one is interesting.
Resident Evil sequels walk a weird line:
Too safe → stale
Too wild → alienates fans
Requiem looks like it’s aiming for a sweet spot — honoring survival horror roots and modern pacing.
What’s important here
Resident Evil’s legacy vacillates between atmospheric tension and cinematic action. Requiem seems aware of that tension and promising features like:
Darker exploration
Tactical resource management
Story beats that lean into psychological dread
That’s a good thing. Too many recent horror franchises forget that horror isn’t about jump scares — it’s about vulnerability.
Hustle Zombie take:
If Requiem delivers horror without cheap tricks, it could be the hero sequel the series has needed for years.
3. Tomb Raider: Legacy of Atlantis — A Deeper Dive Than Expected

Look, Tomb Raider titles get written off too quickly because of assumptions about “yet another archaeologist game.”
But this one isn’t another “run-and-gun adventure”; it’s subtitled Legacy of Atlantis.
Why that matters
This implies:
Lore central to gameplay
Environmental puzzle design
Worldbuilding that goes beyond “find the next relic”
Lara Croft games have been strongest when they’make location feel like character — meaning the environment is part of the challenge, not just scenery.
Early previews promise ancient mythos, smarter navigation systems, and broader exploration tools.
Hustle Zombie take:
If the game leans fully into world discovery + puzzle satisfaction, this could be the fall classic in 2026.
4. 007: First Light — Doing Justice to Spy Fantasy

Licensed games have a bad rep — but every so often one lands just right.
First Light is looking to do that.
What it’s promising
Fluid stealth mechanics
Narrative cadence built like a spy thriller
Player choice in how encounters unfold
Too many shooters lean heavy on spectacle but ditch subtlety. A James Bond game that rewards thinking, timing, and improvisation would be amazing.
The potential highlight
A sandbox mission structure with freedom in execution — silent takedowns, creative gadget use, multi-route planning — that’s where this title could shine.
Hustle Zombie take:
This is one of 2026’s dark horse hits — not because it’s licensed, but because its mechanics have a chance to outshine its name.
5. Marvel’s Wolverine — Redemption or Fan Service?

Wolverine has been a tricky character to translate into a fully satisfying game.
Bloodborne-style combat? Brutal.
Cinematic experience? Fun.
Simple button masher? Yawn.
Marvel’s Wolverine looks like it’s trying to find the right balance, weaving:
Fluid combat depth
Story that respects the character’s inner conflict
Environments worthy of his abilities
Unlike many boxed superhero games, this one appears to be character first, not just set-piece first.
Hustle Zombie take:
If the game nails tone and nails combat, it isn’t just fan service — it’s a standout action game.
Why These Matter More Than Most 2026 Hype

Here’s the pattern that matters:
Not sequel fatigue — meaningful sequels or reinventions
Not filler experiences — actual gameplay identity
Not empty spectacle — purposeful mechanics
Not licensed laziness — thoughtful design intent
2026 has a lot of releases. A lot of noise. A lot of inflated hype.
These five stand out because they
Lean into what makes their franchises unique
Avoid simple “graphics flex” as their selling point
Prioritize player experience
That’s a different bar than “big marketing.” It’s about actual interest.
Final Thoughts: What 2026 Really Looks Like
We’re living in an era where:
Games are both bigger and more disposable
AAA budgets don’t guarantee satisfaction
Reviews are often about consensus, not experience
The titles above are worth watching — not because they’re the “biggest,” but because they have reasons to be good.
Not all games live up to every promise. Some will fizzle. Some will surprise.
But if you’re tracking releases that are actually designed to matter — gameplay-wise and identity-wise — these five are the ones most worth marking on your calendar.




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