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Fall preview: 15 games we’re excited for in 2018

From Bard’s Tale IV to the Walking Dead’s final season.

- BY HAYDEN DINGMAN

The bad news: Two of the mosthyped games this fall aren’t coming to PC. Not yet anyway, and maybe not ever: Red Dead Redemption 2 and Insomniac’s Spider-man. But now for the good news: A staggering number of excellent games are coming to PC this holiday season. Like seriously, too many for any one person to play.

We’ve rounded up 15 of the PC games we’re most looking forward to this fall. While a few of the usual heavy hitters make the list (Forza), we’ve also tried to pick out a few surprises, or games you might not have heard of, like The Occupation. Because hey, you definitely know Shadow of the Tomb Raider

( go.pcworld.com/shtr) is coming out this fall, but have you heard the good word about Outer Wilds?

Read on for more.

1. THE WALKING DEAD: THE FINAL SEASON

Release Date: August 14

Six years ago when Telltale put out The Walking Dead, it felt like a revelation. Why not take the story parts of an adventure game, present it cinematica­lly, and leave out most of the puzzles and the usual adventure game busywork?

The formula’s been done to death since, not least by Telltale itself, but all these years later I’m excited to see what a “Final Season” of The Walking Dead looks like, and what that means for fan-favorite protagonis­t

Clementine. It’s been a long and tough journey, and I hope Telltale can pull out a proper send-off.

The Walking Dead: The Final Season ($20 on Humble, go.pcworld. com/wkdd) started on August 14 and presumably goes through the end of the year, or perhaps early 2019.

2. TWO POINT HOSPITAL

Release Date: August 30

The late ‘80s and early ‘90s were this weird and wonderful time where it seemed like everything was ripe for a PC simulation. Cities? Sure, we’ve got Simcity. Ants? Simant. Elevators? Simtower.

Then there was Theme Hospital, one of

Bullfrog’s (RIP) best games, and a cult classic worth revisiting. Or even remaking, as two decades later some of the original Theme Hospital talent is back working on a spiritual successor called Two Point Hospital ( go. pcworld.com/ho2p; $35 on Humble, go.pcworld.com/by2p).

And…yup. It’s Theme Hospital. Fully 3D now, and with a much better interface, but you’re still building up armies of nurses, doctors, receptioni­sts, and janitors to cure outlandish diseases like “Cubism” and “Light-headedness.” And yes, in the latter the patient’s head does turn into a light bulb. It’s good fun, and a great update to a PC classic.

3. DESTINY 2: FORSAKEN

Release Date: September 4

Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me. Fool me however many times Destiny 2 has fooled me and—wait, why is this on the list again?

I honestly am looking forward to Destiny 2’s massive Forsaken expansion ($40 on Battle.net, go.pcworld.com/byfs) though. Maybe it’s naive, but everything Bungie’s shown so far has been heartening, from a shorter time-to-kill to more flexible load-outs to the creative Gambit mode we tested at E3 ( go.pcworld.com/gbmd). The latter is the most fun I’ve had with Destiny 2 in ages.

Assuming Bungie can pull off a halfway decent story, this has all the potential to be the Taken King–style reboot Destiny 2 needs. And sure, that’s a huge assumption. I’m hopeful though.

4. BARD’S TALE IV

Release Date: September 18

Inspiratio­n is circular. A few years back, Legend of Grimrock drew upon Bard’s Tale and other long-dormant dungeon crawlers of old to resurrect the genre for a modern audience, complete with graph-paper map. And now? A few years on, and Bard’s Tale IV

( go.pcworld.com/byb4) is clearly drawing from Legend of Grimrock to create its own modernized sequel.

Grimrock and...hearthston­e? Yes, this is certainly not a traditiona­l dungeon crawler, opting for mana-based combat and even free-roaming exploratio­n. Strange. And yet the classic dungeon crawler feel pokes through, with labyrinthi­ne halls packed full of secret entrances and fake walls and puzzle after puzzle. And it’s Inxile, so hopefully we can count on the writing being pretty damn good.

One more for the “Crowdfundi­ng Revival” success pile, hopefully.

5. PATHFINDER: KINGMAKER

Release Date: September 25

Every time I’ve seen Pathfinder: Kingmaker ($40 on Humble, go.pcworld.com/path) I’ve come away overwhelme­d. On the surface it looks like an Infinity Engine–style isometric CRPG. On the surface.

An effort’s been made to adapt the whole Kingmaker module from Pathfinder though, and I mean the whole thing. Not a streamline­d version, not a version that cuts corners for the digital release. It’s an incredibly ambitious project, from the freeform leveling system to a story that spans huge stretches of time and allows you to reshape your kingdom as you see fit—and all from a first-time developer.

If they pull it off, it could be one of the best CRPGS of all time. That’s a big “if,” though.

6. LIFE IS STRANGE 2

Release Date: September 27

“It’s Life is Strange 2!” I thought, when Microsoft ran a Dontnod trailer during E3— and then it wasn’t. It was a free-to-play prologue of sorts, The Awesome Adventures of Captain Spirit ( go.pcworld.com/bycp).

But surprise, Life is Strange 2 ($40 on Humble, go.pcworld.com/lfs2) proper was announced scant weeks after E3, and will apparently include characters from Captain Spirit in some capacity—though not as main characters. What does this all mean? I have no idea, except that in September the sequel to the best Telltale-style adventure of the last few years ( go.pcworld.com/lfrv) will roll out its first episode. New setting, new characters, new slang.

Believe me, I’m hella excited.

7. FORZA HORIZON 4

Release Date: October 2

On the one hand, four entries in and the Forza Horizon formula’s gotten a bit stale. On the other…well, it’s all we’ve got. The Crew 2 certainly didn’t satisfy ( go.pcworld.com/ cwrv) my arcade racing needs, and it’s looking dubious whether Onrush ever gets a much-deserved PC port after its dismal console sales and a round of layoffs.

So Forza Horizon 4 ( go.pcworld.com/ f4ho) it is ($60 on Amazon, go.pcworld.

combyf4). This year the series returns to Europe, or England to be exact. And that’s about all you need to know, because otherwise it looks like business as usual: Lots of cars, big open world to explore, great music, and iconic set-piece races against jets or hot air balloons or probably Queen Elizabeth II riding a dune buggy or something. Who knows?

8. ASSASSIN’S CREED: ODYSSEY

Release Date: October 5

2018’s already played host to my favorite Assassin’s Creed experience in years, the Curse of the Pharaohs

expansion ( go. pcworld.com/ crph) for Origins.

Blending history and myth, Curse of the Pharaohs took the leash off

Assassin’s Creed’s

art team and designers and the result was

stunning. You might even say otherworld­ly. (Heh.)

Assassin’s Creed: Odyssey ( go.pcworld. com/odho; $60 on Humble, go.pcworld. com/byod) looks like it might take a similar tack, and that’s got me excited. Set in Ancient Greece, there will be the usual nods to history—our E3 demo had us chatting up Socrates, for instance. But it also looks like elements of Greek mythology will be present,

as evidenced by the minotaur at the end of the E3 trailer. Excited to see how far the series goes in that direction.

9. BATTLEFIEL­D V

Release Date: October 19

Back in 2016 we awarded Battlefiel­d 1 our coveted Game of the Year prize ( go. pcworld.com/ bt16). Sure, it wasn’t the strongest year for game releases, and in most other years I don’t think it would take top honors—but it was a fantastic shooter neverthele­ss, and its vignette-style War Stories campaign was a wonderful departure from the usual Battlefiel­d bloat.

Take those ideas and in Battlefiel­d V ( go. pcworld.com/ hobv; $60 on Amazon, go.pcworld.com/bybv) transpose them to the iconic underpinni­ngs of World War II? Yeah, that’s an easy sell for me, especially since Call of Duty: WWII barely scratched that itch last year. And remember: There’s no more Battlefiel­d Premium. All post-release maps and modes will be free this year. Fingers crossed whatever monetizati­on scheme EA

replaces it with doesn’t sink Battlefiel­d V the way it sank Battlefron­t II last year.

10. HITMAN II

Release Date: November 13

As I said at E3: I’m not 100 percent sure why IO decided to brand Hitman 2 ( go.pcworld. com/hoh2; $60 on Humble, go.pcworld. com/byh2) a full-fledged sequel and not another “season,” even without an episodic release schedule. It just feels like “More Hitman,” full stop.

I mean that in a good way, though. Hitman was one of 2016’s best games, each level an ultra-detailed and elaborate puzzle box where the solution is always some creative form of murder. When Square dumped IO I feared the worst, but the breakup appears to have been more amicable than anyone could’ve imagined, and I’m looking forward to Agent 47’s return.

11. DARKSIDERS III

Release Date: November 27

Another series I feared was lost to time, when THQ shuttered I assumed we’d never see another Darksiders.

And we didn’t, for a long time. This November, though, we’ll finally get Darksiders III ($60 on Humble, go.pcworld. com/byd3), telling us what Fury was up to when the Apocalypse occurred. I’m not 100 percent sold yet, especially since I didn’t love the loot-grind in Darksiders II as much as

the Zelda-like trappings of the original. I want to believe though, because I love the Darksiders world and its strange pulp lore, and I’m hoping against hope the long wait pays off.

Darksiders might always be a cult classic series, but I’d love it to be a cult classic series that eventually gets a proper ending.

12. JUST CAUSE 4

Release Date: December 4

Let me guess: bigger map, even more vehicles and weapons, and a whole lotta stuff to blow up. Sometimes you’re just looking for the simple pleasures, and the Just Cause series is one of the simplest, an entire game predicated on explosives and physics tech. Like Goat Simulator, with a hundred times the budget.

The gimmick in Just Cause 4 ($60 on Humble; go.pcworld.com/byj4) is weather. Blizzards? Check. Tornadoes? Check. Sandstorms? I guess that counts as weather, so sure. Also the enemy AI is apparently smarter, though it’d be hard not to be—those soldiers in Just Cause 3 are dumb as bricks. Mostly looking forward to the old grappling hook, parachute, C4, explosion loop though. Like always.

13. OUTER WILDS

Release Date: 2018

No Man’s Sky has been on a sort-of redemption arc lately, with this summer’s huge NEXT update fixing many of the game’s perceived issues. But

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