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Best Upcoming Video Games of November 2025

1-15

Ignacio Weil Ignacio Weil
Gaming - October 30th 2025, 19:00 GMT+1
Europa Universalis V

Europa Universalis V (November 4 – PC)

The grand strategy heavyweight is back, and Paradox knows exactly what it’s doing: making you lose weeks of your life to diplomacy, revolutions, and rage-quitting because of a bad trade deal. Europa Universalis V promises smarter populations, deeper politics, and even more ways to ruin your empire by accident. It’s ambitious, yes, but also the kind of game where you’ll spend hours tweaking tax sliders while pretending you’re making “strategic decisions.” History buffs and power-hungry micromanagers alike are already drooling – and rightfully so. The rest of us will just be waiting for the memes about collapsing economies. | © Paradox Interactive

Cropped Football Manager 26

Football Manager 26 (November 4 – PS5, Xbox Series X|S, PC, iOS, Android)

Some games let you score goals; this one lets you overanalyze every decision that leads to them. Football Manager 26 continues its reign as the most addictive spreadsheet ever disguised as a sports game. The new match engine looks slick, and the long-awaited inclusion of women’s football has fans genuinely excited. But let’s be honest: it’ll still end the same way – with you screaming at your laptop because your wonderkid missed a penalty. It’s stressful, obsessive, and absolutely brilliant in the way only Football Manager can be. Prepare your caffeine supply. | © SEGA

Cropped Cairn

Cairn (November 5 – PS5)

There’s something quietly terrifying about a game that makes you climb a mountain just to reflect on your own mortality. Cairn trades explosions for exhaustion, asking players to master every movement and grip as they scale Mount Kami. It’s about patience, precision, and those moments where one wrong move means a dramatic plunge into the abyss. The visuals are serene, but the tension never lets up – like meditating while holding your breath. It’s not flashy, it’s not loud, and that’s exactly what makes it fascinating. This is survival by way of introspection. | © The Game Bakers

Dinkum

Dinkum (November 5 – Switch)

Part life sim, part bushland adventure, Dinkum takes the cozy-game formula and throws it into the Australian outback. Farming, fishing, and befriending wildlife are all here – along with enough charm to make you forget the looming threat of a crocodile attack. The PC version quietly built a devoted following, and now the Switch edition looks ready to expand that love even further. It’s bright, relaxed, and almost aggressively wholesome – a reminder that not every great game needs a sword or a doomsday plot. Just remember sunscreen and snacks. | © KRAFTON, Inc.

Hyrule warriors age of imprisonment

Hyrule Warriors: Age of Imprisonment (November 6 – Switch 2)

The Hyrule Warriors series isn’t exactly known for subtlety, and Age of Imprisonment looks like it’s doubling down on chaos. Set during the legendary Imprisoning War, this prequel promises waves of enemies, wild special attacks, and enough Zelda lore to make timeline theorists cry with joy (and confusion). It’s over-the-top, unapologetically repetitive, and somehow still irresistible – the perfect blend of mindless action and mythic storytelling. Expect your thumbs to hurt, your Switch 2 to whir, and your brain to yell “just one more battle.” | © Nintendo

UNBEATABLE

Unbeatable (November 6 – PS5, Xbox Series X|S, PC)

Music games have always been about rhythm, but Unbeatable is about attitude. Half rhythm-action, half narrative adventure, it follows a punk band fighting against a world where music is illegal – basically Footloose, but cooler and with better hair. Every beat feels alive, hand-animated visuals pulse with energy, and the soundtrack absolutely shreds. It’s not just about hitting the notes, but about hitting back at conformity. It oozes style, sincerity, and more teenage angst than a mid-2000s mixtape, and that’s precisely what makes it irresistible. | © D-Cell Games

Anno 117 Pax Romana

Anno 117: Pax Romana (November 13 – PS5, Xbox Series X|S, PC)

After centuries of building trade empires and managing colonies, Anno heads back to ancient Rome – because if anyone knew logistics, it was the Romans. Anno 117: Pax Romana trades windmills and schooners for aqueducts and legions, letting players oversee cities at the height of imperial prosperity. The twist? You’re not just chasing expansion but maintaining peace, which in Roman terms means keeping everyone fed, taxed, and too entertained to rebel. Expect marble roads, olive oil economies, and the creeping dread of political intrigue dressed up as civic duty. | © Ubisoft Mainz

Where Winds Meet

Where Winds Meet (November 14 – PS5, PC)

It’s hard not to be intrigued by Where Winds Meet, a sweeping open-world action RPG that wants to blend martial arts fantasy with historical China. Think Ghost of Tsushima, but with more wuxia flips and the occasional tiger encounter. The combat looks fluid, the world breathtaking, and the physics gloriously exaggerated – because in wuxia, gravity is a polite suggestion. Whether it nails its grand ambitions or not, it’s shaping up to be one of the most visually striking games of the year, and that alone makes it worth watching. | © Everstone Games

Call of Duty Black Ops 7

Call of Duty: Black Ops 7 (November 14 – PS5, PS4, Xbox Series X|S, Xbox One, PC)

Another year, another Call of Duty – but this time, Treyarch seems to be reaching back into its best bag of tricks. Black Ops 7 reportedly takes place during the Gulf War, blending espionage, moral ambiguity, and that familiar blockbuster flair the series can’t help but flex. Sure, we all joke about the yearly release cycle, but the truth is: few shooters feel this polished, this chaotic, or this gloriously over-the-top. It’s comfort food for the trigger finger, and it knows exactly what it’s serving. | © Activision

Solo Leveling ARISE OVERDRIVE

Solo Leveling: Arise Overdrive (November 24 – PC)

The original Solo Leveling: Arise turned heads for its stylish action and flashy boss fights, and Overdrive looks set to push everything into over-the-top anime spectacle. Based on the hit manhwa, it’s equal parts RPG grind and power fantasy, following protagonist Jinwoo Sung as he climbs the monster-slaying hierarchy like it’s an Olympic sport. It’s sleek, fast, and self-aware enough to know exactly what its audience wants: big swords, bigger monsters, and the dopamine rush of pure escalation. Sometimes excess really is the point. | © Netmarble

Morsels

Morsels (November 18 – Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X|S, PC)

Some games feed your competitive spirit, others feed your soul – and Morsels seems happy to do both, one bite at a time. This cozy co-op cooking adventure turns culinary chaos into something oddly wholesome, letting players work together (or hilariously fail together) in kitchens filled with charm and disaster potential. It’s got the tactile satisfaction of chopping, sizzling, and serving up meals for quirky townsfolk, but it’s also about connection – food as the universal language of comfort and catastrophe. Just don’t burn the stew. Again. | © Laundry Bear Games

Moonlighter 2 The Endless Vault

Moonlighter 2: The Endless Vault (November 19 – PS5, Xbox Series X|S, PC)

The first Moonlighter nailed the idea of being both a shopkeeper and a dungeon-crawling hero, and The Endless Vault looks like it’s doubling down on that irresistible loop. This time, the art style shifts to stunning 3D, but the heart remains the same: fight monsters by night, sell loot by day, and question your work-life balance in between. There’s a satisfying rhythm to its design – adventure meets entrepreneurship, grind meets greed – and it’s hard not to root for any game that makes inventory management feel like destiny. | © Digital Sun

Demonschool

Demonschool (November 19 – PS5, PS4, Xbox Series X|S, Xbox One, Nintendo Switch, PC)

High school is already terrifying, but Demonschool takes that anxiety and makes it literal. This tactical RPG from the creators of Hylics fuses Persona-style social life with turn-based demon combat, all wrapped in gorgeous pixel art straight out of a cursed VHS tape. Between classes, friendships, and exorcisms, you’ll juggle the demands of growing up and saving the world – or at least surviving midterms. It’s stylish, spooky, and brimming with personality, like if John Hughes directed Buffy the Tactical Slayer. | © Necrosoft Games

Kirby Air Riders

Kirby Air Riders (November 20 – Nintendo Switch 2)

After two dedicated Nintendo Direct presentations that made lead developer Masahiro Sakurai’s passion for the project unmistakably clear, we’re fully convinced: Even if Kirby Air Riders, like Kirby Air Ride more than 20 years ago, doesn’t turn out to be a commercial hit, it’s bound to earn cult classic status and secure a place in players’ hearts, likely to stand out within today’s crowded fun-racer space due its variety of modes and technical innovations. Even our racer wishlist seems almost completely checked off! | © HAL Laboratory / Nintendo

Terminator 2 D NO FATE

Terminator 2D: No Fate (November 26 – PS5, PS4, Xbox Series X|S, Xbox One, Nintendo Switch, PC)

Reinventing Terminator 2 as a 2D side-scroller sounds like fan-fiction fever, but No Fate somehow makes it work. This stylish reimagining fuses run-and-gun chaos with cinematic callbacks, turning the classic action saga into a retro-futurist playground. You’ll blast through cyborgs, dodge lasers, and try not to hum “Bad to the Bone” while you do it. It’s equal parts nostalgia and reinvention – the kind of game that knows exactly what it is and leans into every pixelated explosion with glee. Hasta la vista, subtlety. | © Artax Games

1-15

As the year winds down, November 2025 looks anything but quiet for gamers. Publishers are pulling out the big guns – sequels, reboots, and brand-new IPs all fighting for your attention before the holiday rush. It’s that magical time when your wallet cries, your download queue overflows, and every trailer seems to whisper, “pre-order me.”

From long-awaited blockbusters to the weird indie titles that sneak up and steal the spotlight, this month’s lineup promises something for everyone. Whether you’re into sprawling open worlds, tactical combat, or narrative-driven chaos, November is shaping up to be a feast of pixels and possibilities – assuming, of course, nobody delays anything again.

  • Facebook X Reddit WhatsApp Copy URL

As the year winds down, November 2025 looks anything but quiet for gamers. Publishers are pulling out the big guns – sequels, reboots, and brand-new IPs all fighting for your attention before the holiday rush. It’s that magical time when your wallet cries, your download queue overflows, and every trailer seems to whisper, “pre-order me.”

From long-awaited blockbusters to the weird indie titles that sneak up and steal the spotlight, this month’s lineup promises something for everyone. Whether you’re into sprawling open worlds, tactical combat, or narrative-driven chaos, November is shaping up to be a feast of pixels and possibilities – assuming, of course, nobody delays anything again.

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