Gaming Reviews, News, Tips and More.
We may earn a commission from links on this page.
Gaming Reviews, News, Tips and More.

Game Pass' Latest Lineup Falls Short Of Our High Expectations

Shredders and Weird West are just about the only buzzy games hitting Microsoft’s service

We may earn a commission from links on this page.
A snowboarder does a seatbelt nosegrab on a bluebird day in Shredders on Xbox Game Pass.
Screenshot: FoamPunch

Game Pass started March off with a bang, adding a well-regarded blockbuster (Guardians of the Galaxy) less than six months after release, plus one of the best-written games ever (Kentucky Route Zero). The rest of the month, in comparison, lacks the big headline punch we’ve grown so used to, much as it did for the whole of February. Here are the planned additions to Microsoft’s games-on-demand service in the coming weeks:

March 17

  • Shredders (Cloud, PC, next-gen console)
  • The Dungeon of Naheulbeuk: The Amulet of Chaos (Cloud, Console, PC)

March 22

  • Tainted Grail: Conquest (Console)
  • Zero Escape: The Nonary Games (Cloud, Console, PC)

March 24

  • Norco (PC)
  • F1 2021 (Console, via EA Play)

March 29

  • Crusader Kings III (Next-gen console)

March 31

  • Weird West (Cloud, Console, PC)

It’s wonderful that lesser-known games are due for some extra attention, perhaps more than they’d get from a typical marketing push, but there’s no denying that we’ve gotten used to Game Pass being propped up by tentpole releases. On the plus side, at least the library isn’t getting any thinner. Alongside three Destiny 2 expansions—Forsaken, Shadowkeep, and Beyond Light—departing the service on April 11, just three games will go away on March 31:

  • Madden NFL 20 (Cloud, Console, PC)
  • Narita Boy (Cloud, Console, PC)
  • Shadow Warrior 2 (Cloud, Console, PC)

Look, I don’t wanna sound ungrateful here. The snowboarding game Shredders, as I’ve written previously, is destined to eat up every second of my free time from now through the start of next ski season. Weird West, an isometric role-playing game developed by the co-creator of Dishonored and set in a fantasy-tinged American frontier, certainly has my attention. And I’m curious to see how Crusader Kings III works (or doesn’t work) on console.

Advertisement

But when you compare lineups like this with the jaw-dropping rosters from the shoulder season, it’s hard not to want for more. Microsoft might agree: In October, Game Pass subscriptions missed the company’s target.