
REANIMAL
Coming in 2026 on PC (Steam, Xbox PC, Epic Game Store), Xbox Series X|S, PlayStation 5 and Nintendo Switch 2.
REANIMAL casts you in the role of two children – a brother and sister, who have to go through this terrifying world to rescue their missing friends and escape to safety. You’ll be able to explore the environment on foot and perhaps more interestingly – by boat.
Planet of Lana II
Launching on March 12th, 2026 on PC (Steam and Xbox PC) Xbox Series X|S, Xbox One, PlayStation 5 and 4 and Nintendo Switch.
Day One on Xbox Game Pass
After saving their planet from an invading Robot army, Lana and Mui continue to uncover its mysterious past. Pass through icy mountains, deep oceans and forgotten ruins in this cinematic puzzle adventure. Unravel a deeper, longer story, tougher challenges, and an unbreakable bond.
Replaced
Launching on March 12th, 2026 on PC (Steam and Xbox PC) and Xbox Series X|S.
Day One on Xbox Game Pass
Every now and then a game will come along that defies expectations, and REPLACED certainly fits that bill. It’s an utterly stunning 2.5D dystopian sci-fi adventure, dripping with atmosphere and an eye-catching pixel art style that has to be seen in motion to truly appreciate. We’ve played it, we want it, and we want it now. Highly anticipated!

Pragmata
Launching on April 24th, 2026 on PC (Steam), Xbox Series X|S, PlayStation 5 and Nintendo Switch 2.
What’s that? Pragmata, that game revealed waaaaaay back in June 2020? It’s actually releasing this year? You read that right, 2026 is indeed the year of long announced games finally getting out of their containment. Capcom’s shown us quite a bit now of this sci-fi third person shooter and after playing it last year, we have a feeling it’s not going to be one to sleep on.

LEGO Batman: Legacy of the Dark Knight
Launching on May 29th, 2026 on PC (Steam), Xbox Series X|S, PlayStation 5 and Nintendo Switch 2.
The Batman Arkham series has been in limbo ever since Arkham Knight, which is at this point over a decade old. Well, it’s essentially continuing in the unlikeliest of fashions: via a LEGO game. Borrowing the combat, the open world style, many traversal options and more from the Arkham games, Legacy of the Dark Knight throws in the infectious LEGO style for a game that seems accessible for newcomers and hardcore Batman fans alike.
It looks really good, packing the best of both worlds and a seemingly massive amount of content.




