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The 15 Most-Played Games on PlayStation Consoles in 2025

1-15

Ignacio Weil Ignacio Weil
Gaming - January 18th 2026, 13:00 GMT+1
NBA 2k26

15. NBA 2K26

Virtual hoops always finds a way to turn a “quick run” into a full-night commitment, and that’s exactly why this one shows up so high on the sessions-and-time leaderboard. The appeal isn’t subtle: tight, competitive games that feel good in the hands, plus long-form modes that keep dangling the next reward. NBA 2K26 thrives when your friends are online and bragging rights are on the line, but it’s just as effective when you’re solo and chasing progress in MyCAREER or tinkering with lineups. It’s strong at what it aims to be – even if it can feel like it never wants to let you log off. | © Visual Concepts

EA Sports FC 26

14. EA Sports FC 26

The easiest game to rack up playtime is the one people treat like a routine, and EA Sports FC 26 fits that role perfectly. It’s the default “let’s run one” pick that somehow turns into a whole evening, especially when you’re chasing form, experimenting with tactics, or trying to fix the result of a match that felt unfair. When the gameplay flow clicks, it’s tense in the best way – small decisions matter, momentum swings fast, and the rematch button is basically a dare. Even with the occasional rough edge, the habit factor is enormous. | © EA Vancouver / EA Romania

NBA 2 K25

13. NBA 2k25

Familiarity can be a superpower, and NBA 2K25 benefits from players already having their builds, squads, and muscle memory in place. That means less time “learning the new one” and more time jumping straight into what feels good: quick competitive games, long MyCAREER stretches, or a couple of online runs that keep getting extended by pride. It’s also a social game in a very practical way – friends can drop in, talk trash, and be playing within minutes. If you’re wondering why an older entry still racks up sessions, it’s because it’s comfortable, and comfortable wins a lot of nights. | © Visual Concepts

Dead by Daylight

12. Dead By Deadlight

A match ends, someone makes a mistake they can’t stop thinking about, and suddenly the next queue is already popping. Dead by Daylight thrives on that “run it back” feeling because every round creates a little story – clutch saves, bad reads, hilarious misplays, and those moments where the whole plan collapses in five seconds. It’s popular because it’s social even when it’s stressful, with friends calling shots and reacting in real time like it’s a horror movie you’re all stuck in together. The balance can be cruel, but it’s rarely boring, and that’s what keeps players coming back. | © Behaviour Interactive

Apex Legends

11. Apex Legends

Momentum is everything here: one clean fight can flip the mood of the whole squad, and one messy drop can make everyone swear they’re not ending the night on that. Apex Legends stays near the top because it still feels fast and expressive – movement, positioning, and teamwork matter in a way you can actually feel from match to match. It’s also a game that rewards repetition without feeling like homework, since improvement shows up quickly in smarter rotations and better late-game decisions. Even when it frustrates you, it keeps your attention, and that attention turns into long sessions. | © Respawn Entertainment

Overwatch 2

10. Overwatch 2

Chaotic in the way a good team fight is supposed to be, this one keeps pulling people back because every match offers a new problem to solve – sometimes in the span of 30 seconds. The push-and-pull of roles, ult economy, and map control makes it easy to blame the last loss on “one mistake,” which is basically an invitation to queue again. Overwatch 2 also thrives as a social game: even when the night goes sideways, there’s always another comp to try, another hero to swap to, another strategy to test. It isn’t perfect, and balance swings can be maddening, but few shooters generate this many repeatable “did you see that?” moments. | © Blizzard Entertainment

Rocket League

9. Rocket League

Five minutes on the clock sounds harmless until you realize you’ve played twelve matches and your hands are still tense from the last save. The magic is how clean the idea is – cars playing soccer – yet how deep it becomes once you start learning reads, aerials, and the little mind games around boost control. People stick with Rocket League because improvement feels tangible: today you hit a shot you couldn’t hit last month, and that’s enough to keep chasing the next one. It’s also one of the rare competitive games that works for almost any mood, whether you want a sweaty ranked grind or a loud, laughing session with friends. | © Psyonix

EA Sports FC 25

8. EA Sports FC 25

A tight match, a late equalizer, and that familiar urge to run it back immediately – football games live on that emotional swing, and it’s a big reason the sessions stack up. Small adjustments feel meaningful here: a different press, a new run pattern, a tweak to chance creation, and suddenly you’re convinced you’ve “figured it out.” EA Sports FC 25 benefits from being endlessly restartable, too, because no one treats it like a one-and-done campaign; it’s a routine you dip into whenever you have time. Even when it frustrates, the promise of the next clean win keeps it in the rotation. | © EA Vancouver / EA Romania

Marvel rivals emma frost cropped processed by imagy

7. Marvel Rivals

Superhero games usually sell you power; this one sells you teamwork that looks and sounds like a comic-book panel exploding in real time. The hook is immediate – big abilities, readable chaos, and match flow that rewards coordinating with friends instead of playing next to them. Marvel Rivals stays popular because variety is baked in: different characters change the whole rhythm of a session, and the “let’s try this combo” mindset can stretch a short play window into a full night. It’s not subtle and it doesn’t need to be; it’s built for momentum, and momentum is what turns curiosity into serious playtime. | © NetEase Games

Tom Clancys Rainbow Six Siege

6. Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six Siege

One wrong peek can end a round, and that threat is exactly why people keep coming back – the tension never really fades. The tactical identity is still sharp: information matters, patience matters, and the best plays often look boring right up until they suddenly aren’t. Tom Clancy’s Rainbow Six Siege has remained a long-term favorite because it rewards investment without turning into a math problem; you learn maps, operators, and patterns, then you test that knowledge under pressure. It can be brutal for newcomers and unforgiving on bad nights, but for players who like high-stakes team shooters, very little feels as satisfying. | © Ubisoft Montreal

Call of Duty Modern Warfare II

5. Call of Duty: Modern Warfare II

Even years after release, some shooters stay in the rotation because they’re the fastest way to turn a free half-hour into a full night. The gunplay still feels weighty and crisp, and the multiplayer loop is built for repeat sessions – drop in, chase a challenge, run it back because the last match ended on a bad note. Call of Duty: Modern Warfare II also benefits from being a comfort pick in friend groups: it’s familiar, it’s loud, and it’s always one invite away from becoming the plan. It’s not the freshest entry, but “fresh” isn’t always what drives playtime; reliability does. | © Infinity Ward

Minecraft cropped processed by imagy

4. Minecraft

The secret to long-term popularity isn’t always novelty – it’s the freedom to make your own reason to play. One session is a quiet building night, the next is a frantic resource run, and the next is “we’re just going to fix the roof,” which turns into a two-hour renovation. That flexibility is why Minecraft keeps stacking huge session totals year after year, especially on consoles where it becomes the shared game everyone can agree on. It’s also one of the rare titles that works across moods: relaxing when you want it, demanding when you push it, and endlessly social when friends jump in. | © Mojang Studios

Grand Theft Auto V

3. Grand Theft Auto V

The secret to Grand Theft Auto V’s long-term popularity isn’t constant reinvention – it’s the freedom to create your own reason to play. One session is a calm drive through Los Santos with the radio on, the next is a chaotic heist with friends, and the next starts as “we’ll just customize one car,” only to turn into a three-hour online adventure. That flexibility is why GTA 5 continues to rack up massive playtime years after release, especially online, where it often becomes the one game everyone agrees on. It’s also one of the rare titles that fits every mood: relaxing when you want to unwind, intense when you chase action, and endlessly social the moment friends jump in. | © Rockstar Games

Roblox

2. Roblox

This isn’t one game so much as an entire arcade of games, and that structure is basically a playtime machine. You hop in for something quick, bounce to a new experience when it gets stale, and suddenly you’ve tried five different modes without ever leaving the platform. That’s why Roblox racks up sessions so consistently: it’s part social space, part discovery feed, part creativity tool, and it always has a fresh rabbit hole waiting. Quality varies wildly from experience to experience, but the convenience of “there’s always something else” keeps people playing longer than they meant to. | © Roblox Corporation

Fortnite homer simpson

1. Fortnite

In 2025, Fortnite remains the most played game on PlayStation because it fits effortlessly into how people use their consoles. It’s free, instantly familiar, and works just as well for a quick match as it does for an all-night session with friends. One moment it’s relaxed Zero Build squads, the next a tense ranked match, and the next a live event that turns the game into a shared experience rather than just a competition. That flexibility – combined with constant but approachable updates and its role as a social hub – is what keeps Fortnite at the top of PlayStation playtime year after year. | © Epic Games

1-15

PlayStation players didn’t just sample games in 2025 – they lived in them. Based on aggregated stats from number of sessions and total session time across every PSN-connected PlayStation console (that’s PS5, PS4, PS3, and PS Vita), this list captures what people actually kept coming back to, week after week.

This isn’t a ranking built on hype cycles or loud launch months – it’s a snapshot of habits. Whether you’re here to see which giants stayed on top or which surprises quietly ate up everyone’s free time, these are the titles that dominated PlayStation play in 2025.

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PlayStation players didn’t just sample games in 2025 – they lived in them. Based on aggregated stats from number of sessions and total session time across every PSN-connected PlayStation console (that’s PS5, PS4, PS3, and PS Vita), this list captures what people actually kept coming back to, week after week.

This isn’t a ranking built on hype cycles or loud launch months – it’s a snapshot of habits. Whether you’re here to see which giants stayed on top or which surprises quietly ate up everyone’s free time, these are the titles that dominated PlayStation play in 2025.

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