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15 Best Video Games Set in United States

1-15

Only in America.

Nazarii Verbitskiy Nazarii Verbitskiy
Gaming - May 8th 2026, 19:00 GMT+2
The crew 2

15. The Crew (2014)

The Crew promised to let you drive across the entire United States in one massive open world, then delivered exactly that with a map so big it took actual hours to cross from coast to coast. The problem was that most of those hours felt empty, because the world prioritized scale over density and left huge stretches of highway with nothing interesting to discover. Ubisoft's driving felt loose and arcade-simple compared to more focused racing games, but the ambition of recreating America as one giant playground was undeniably impressive. The real appeal came from road trips with friends, turning that vast emptiness into a feature instead of a bug. | © Ubisoft

No More Heroes

14. No More Heroes (2007)

No More Heroes turns the idea of climbing a deadly assassin ranking into a deliberately trashy B-movie where you mow lawns and take out garbage between katana fights. Travis Touchdown swaggers through a fake California town that looks like it was built from leftover Grand Theft Auto assets, and somehow that cheapness becomes part of the charm. The boss battles explode with personality and weird energy, but getting to them means wandering through mostly empty streets doing mundane jobs for gas money. It is punk rock game design that refuses to apologize for being rough around the edges. | © Ubisoft
Cropped Watch Dogs 2

13. Watch Dogs 2 (2016)

Watch Dogs 2 dumps you into a sun-soaked San Francisco where hacking isn't just a gameplay mechanic but the entire personality of the experience. Marcus and his DedSec crew treat digital rebellion like performance art, turning every security camera into a weapon and every traffic light into chaos with an infectious energy that makes cyberterrorism feel genuinely fun. The game finally figured out what the first Watch Dogs was trying to be, trading Aiden Pearce's grim vigilante nonsense for characters who actually seem to enjoy the power they're wielding. It's less about making profound statements about surveillance culture and more about the pure joy of turning a tech company's own infrastructure against them. | © Ubisoft
Cropped assassins creed iii

12. Assassin's Creed III (2012)

Assassin's Creed III dropped players into Revolutionary War America with muskets, tomahawks, and the promise of stabbing redcoats in Colonial Boston. The game delivered on that fantasy while also being messier and more ambitious than any entry before it, cramming naval combat, frontier exploration, and political intrigue into one sprawling package. Connor Kenway never quite matched Ezio's charisma, but watching him parkour through snowy forests and participate in actual historical battles felt like something no other game was trying to do. The naval missions alone made everything else worth tolerating. | © Ubisoft
Detroit Become Human

11. Detroit: Become Human (2018)

Detroit: Become Human turns every conversation into a moral test where androids ask uncomfortable questions about consciousness, slavery, and what makes someone human. The game forces you to navigate three separate storylines about artificial beings discovering free will in a near-future Detroit, with each choice rippling through branching narratives that can end in wildly different places. David Cage's heavy-handed approach to serious themes lands somewhere between thought-provoking and preachy, but the technical achievement of making every major decision feel genuinely consequential keeps you invested. The real tension comes from watching your choices splinter the story into directions you never intended. | © Sony Interactive Entertainment
Far Cry 5

10. Far Cry 5 (2018)

Far Cry 5 drops you into rural Montana where a doomsday cult has taken over Hope County, and the game commits fully to that unhinged premise. The cult leader Joseph Seed delivers genuinely unsettling monologues about societal collapse while his followers hunt you through wheat fields and mountain forests that look like postcard America gone wrong. Ubisoft built their biggest playground yet around this setup, letting you recruit bears as companions or dive-bomb cultists in stolen planes between story missions. The ending refuses to give you the satisfaction most shooters promise, instead doubling down on Seed's apocalyptic warnings in ways that left players arguing about what actually happened. | © Ubisoft
Resident Evil 2

9. Resident Evil 2 (2019)

Resident Evil 2 remake takes everything that made the 1998 original terrifying and rebuilds it from the ground up without losing the specific dread that made people love it in the first place. Leon and Claire still feel helpless as they navigate the zombie-infested Raccoon City Police Department, but now every shadow hides something worse and every footstep echoes with new menace. The Mr. X encounters turn what used to be scripted scares into relentless stalking sequences where his heavy footsteps become the most frightening sound in gaming. Capcom proved that remakes don't have to just update graphics when they can completely reimagine what fear feels like. | © Capcom
L A Noire

8. L.A. Noire (2017)

L.A. Noire drops you into 1947 Los Angeles as a detective climbing the ranks through vice, arson, and homicide cases that feel ripped from classic noir films. The game's revolutionary facial capture technology lets you read suspects' expressions for lies, turning every interrogation into a tense psychological duel where a raised eyebrow might crack a case wide open. Each crime scene demands actual detective work, from analyzing blood spatter to matching evidence, making you feel like you earned every breakthrough. It is the rare game that trusts players to think like cops instead of just shooting like them. | © Rockstar Games
Days gone

7. Days Gone (2019)

Days Gone throws you into the Pacific Northwest during a zombie apocalypse, but the real draw is watching a gruff biker named Deacon slowly piece his life back together. The game's massive zombie hordes can overwhelm your screen with hundreds of enemies at once, creating genuine panic when you realize your motorcycle is parked too far away. What starts as another zombie survival story becomes something more personal as Deacon searches for his missing wife while trying to figure out what kind of person he wants to be in this new world. | © Sony Interactive Entertainment
Fallout 4

6. Fallout 4 (2015)

Fallout 4 drops you into a post-nuclear Boston where every landmark got twisted into something both familiar and wrong. The freedom to build settlements anywhere turns wasteland exploration into a weird mix of scavenging and home renovation, because apparently even after the apocalypse someone needs to worry about where to put the beds. Voice acting your character changes how the whole thing feels compared to earlier games, making conversations more cinematic but less like you're truly creating someone from scratch. The world feels lived-in and ruined at the same time, which is exactly what wandering through radioactive Massachusetts should be. | © Bethesda Softworks
Alan Wake 2

5. Alan Wake 2 (2023)

Alan Wake 2 turns the Pacific Northwest into a fever dream where reality keeps slipping away from you. The game splits time between a writer trapped in his own horror story and an FBI agent investigating murders that might be fiction bleeding into the real world. Remedy Entertainment built something that feels more like interactive David Lynch than traditional survival horror, complete with musical numbers that somehow make the nightmare logic even stranger. Most horror games try to scare you with monsters, but this one scares you by making you question whether anything you're experiencing actually happened. | © Epic Games
Marvels Spider Man Remastered

4. Marvel's Spider-Man Remastered (2022)

Marvel's Spider-Man Remastered proves that sometimes the best superhero stories happen between the big moments, when you're just swinging through Manhattan at sunset and the city feels completely alive below you. The game nails the fantasy of being Spider-Man better than most movies do, because it lets you move through New York with the kind of fluid grace that makes every trip across town feel like showing off. Combat stays snappy without getting too complicated, but the real magic happens in those quiet seconds when you're perched on a rooftop and can actually hear the city breathing. Web-swinging has never felt this good, and that matters more than any villain could. | © Sony Interactive Entertainment
Grand Theft Auto V

3. Grand Theft Auto V (2013)

Grand Theft Auto V drops you into Los Santos with three different criminals whose stories weave together through heists, family drama, and mid-life crises that somehow make bank robbery feel like therapy. The game lets you switch between Michael's suburban desperation, Franklin's ambition, and Trevor's complete psychotic break at any moment, turning every mission into a choose-your-own-chaos adventure. Rockstar built a satire so sharp it cuts through its own excess, making every radio ad, billboard, and NPC conversation feel like a perfectly aimed dart at American culture. The result is less like playing a crime game and more like living inside the world's most expensive and cynical comedy special. | © Rockstar Games
The Last of Us Part 1

2. The Last of Us - Part I (2022)

The Last of Us Part I takes the apocalypse seriously enough to make you care about finding batteries for a flashlight. Twenty years after a fungal outbreak turns most of humanity into monsters, Joel and Ellie cross a ruined America where every abandoned suburb and overgrown highway tells its own story of how things fell apart. The game builds tension through scarcity and stealth rather than constant action, making every encounter feel dangerous because resources actually matter. What started as a technical showcase for survival horror became something closer to a father-daughter road trip through the end of the world. | © Sony Interactive Entertainment
Red dead redemption

1. Red Dead Redemption (2010)

Red Dead Redemption drops you into 1911 as outlaw John Marston, forced by federal agents to hunt down his former gang members in exchange for his family's freedom. The game treats the dying Wild West with the weight of a proper Western film, complete with Mexican standoffs, dusty frontier towns, and that specific brand of violence where every shootout feels personal. Rockstar built a world so convincing that riding across the desert at sunset while that haunting soundtrack swells became a genuine emotional experience for players. What separates it from other open-world games is how it uses emptiness and silence as storytelling tools rather than trying to fill every corner with activities. | © Rockstar Games
1-15

Few gaming settings are as versatile as the United States, from the neon-soaked streets of Las Vegas to the sprawling wilderness of the American frontier. These games use their American backdrop to tell stories that only work in this specific setting. Here are the best of them.

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Few gaming settings are as versatile as the United States, from the neon-soaked streets of Las Vegas to the sprawling wilderness of the American frontier. These games use their American backdrop to tell stories that only work in this specific setting. Here are the best of them.

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