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00:00Alright, listen. If you slept on games in 2025, this video might physically hurt, because this
00:06year casually dropped banger after banger while half of us were still finishing one more side
00:10quest. So today, we're counting down 20 of the best games of 2025 that you will absolutely
00:16regret not playing. The kind of regret that hits when everyone's calling it a classic.
00:20No fillers, no fake hype, just straight up, why didn't I play this? Energy. Let's go.
00:30Silent Hill F is the kind of game that makes you question why you ever thought horror was
00:36fun. Set in 1960s Japan, you play Hinako, a high schooler who basically wakes up one day
00:42and realizes her entire town has been turned into a biology experiment gone wrong. The
00:47fog is so thick you could butter toast with it, the monsters look like mushrooms that
00:52went to art school, and every hallway feels like it was designed by someone who hates
00:57teenagers. You'll walk into a classroom and think, oh cool, maybe math homework, but nope,
01:03it's a fungus demon that wants to eat your GPA. The game is terrifying, but in that classy
01:09way where you're screaming while also admiring the wallpaper. It's like being chased by death
01:15while simultaneously thinking, wow, these curtains really tie the room together. If you don't
01:20play it, you'll regret it forever. Like forgetting to save your Pokemon game before the Elite Four
01:25and realizing you have to grind for another 40 hours. Silent Hill F isn't just horror,
01:31it's trauma wrapped in poetry, dipped in fungus, and served with a side of regret.
01:47Blueprints is basically a haunted mansion simulator designed by a troll. You enter Mont
01:51Holly, this massive estate, and every time you open a door, the house rearranges itself like
01:56it's auditioning for Cirque du Soleil. Yesterday, the kitchen was next to the library, today it's
02:01a dungeon with a piano that wants to kill you. It's like living inside a Rubik's Cube that
02:07hates you personally. The game resets daily, so it's Groundhog Day, but with more furniture-related
02:12trauma. You'll spend hours thinking, wait, wasn't the bathroom here yesterday? Nope. Now it's
02:18a labyrinth with a chandelier that looks suspiciously carnivorous. The mansion feels alive, like it's
02:24judging your every move, and honestly, it probably is. Playing Blueprints is like being trapped in
02:30Ikea, except instead of meatballs, you get existential dread. It's stylish, creepy, and the closest you'll
02:38get to living inside a puzzle designed by Guillermo del Toro after three espressos. Skip it, and you'll regret
02:45missing the only game where interior design is actively trying to murder you.
02:58Split Fiction is the co-op game that will ruin friendships faster than Monopoly and Uno combined.
03:03From the creators of It Takes Two, this game throws you and your buddy into multiple worlds
03:08where teamwork is mandatory, but patience is optional. One minute you're solving puzzles together,
03:13the next you're screaming, why did you jump off the ledge? It's emotional, inventive,
03:18and hilarious in that way, where you're crying at the story, but also crying because your partner
03:23can't figure out how to press a button. The game constantly shifts genres, platforming, puzzles,
03:29action, and every shift feels like the developers are saying, let's see how long before these
03:34two stop being friends. It's basically couples therapy disguised as a video game, except instead
03:40of talking about feelings, you're yelling about switches and levers. If you don't play it,
03:45you'll regret missing the most fun argument simulator of 2025. Split Fiction isn't just a game,
03:52it's a test of patience, love, and whether your friendship can survive a boss fight where one
03:57person keeps forgetting to dodge. Despolote is the most wholesome soccer game you'll ever play,
04:11and by wholesome, I mean you're basically a kid causing chaos in Quito during Ecuador's 2002 World
04:17Cup run. Forget FIFA. This isn't about scoring goals, it's about scoring childhood memories.
04:22You're kicking a ball around town like it's the most powerful artifact in existence,
04:26bouncing it off cars, walls, and occasionally your neighbor's dignity. NPCs react like you're
04:31the local menace, and honestly, you are. The game captures that magical feeling of being a kid where
04:37the ball is life, and every kick feels like destiny. It's heartfelt, nostalgic, and somehow
04:43makes you feel like soccer is the meaning of existence. Play it, or forever regret missing the
04:49only game where nutmegging your neighbor counts as a side quest. Despolote isn't about winning,
04:54it's about remembering that time you kicked a ball into traffic and thought, yeah, this is peak
04:59childhood. It's charming chaos wrapped in nostalgia, and it'll make you cry, laugh, and maybe apologize
05:05to your neighbors.
05:05Kojima looked at Death Stranding and said, what if we made it even weirder? Welcome to On the Beach,
05:20where Norman Reedus delivers packages across a world that looks like Iceland after a breakup.
05:25The beaches are endless, the whales are suspiciously judgmental, and every cutscene feels like a TED
05:31talk from another dimension. It's cinematic, surreal, and somehow makes walking feel like an Olympic
05:38sport. You'll cry, you'll laugh, you'll wonder why your backpack has more physics than your car in GTA.
05:44The game is packed with Kojima's signature weirdness, cryptic dialogue, bizarre cameos,
05:50and moments where you're not sure if you're playing a game or attending an avant-garde film festival.
05:55Every delivery feels monumental, like you're carrying the fate of humanity in a box of Amazon Prime.
06:02If you skip this, you'll regret missing the most confusing masterpiece of 2025.
06:07Death Stranding 2 isn't just a sequel. It's a philosophical journey about beaches,
06:12whales, and why Norman Reedus is the most important delivery guy in history.
06:25Absalom is what happens when someone takes a fantasy beat-em-up, sprinkles roguelike mechanics
06:29on top, and then says, oh yeah, magic is illegal now. Good luck.
06:34You're basically living in a world where casting a fireball is treated like tax fraud,
06:38and every fight feels like you're punching your way through medieval bureaucracy.
06:42The combat is fast, flashy, and so chaotic that half the time you're not sure if you're winning
06:47or just auditioning for a medieval Cirque du Soleil.
06:50The roguelike structure means every run is different.
06:53So one day, you're a wizard outlaw with lightning fists.
06:56The next, you're a broke peasant who dies to a rat with an attitude problem.
07:00The art style screams arcade nostalgia, but the difficulty screams, why do you hate yourself?
07:07It's the kind of game where you'll rage quit, come back five minutes later,
07:11and then rage quit again because a goblin stole your lunch money.
07:15If you skip Absalom, you'll regret missing the only game where beating up knights feels like
07:20a political statement.
07:23Ghost of Yotei is basically Ghost of Tsushima's cooler cousin who studied abroad in Hokkaido
07:36and came back with a vengeance.
07:38You play Atsu, a mercenary in 1603, and the game immediately throws you into a snow-covered
07:44world so gorgeous you'll want to frame every screenshot and pretend you're a professional
07:48photographer.
07:49The combat is slick, cinematic, and so satisfying that you'll start judging real-life sword fights
07:56for not having enough particle effects.
07:58Every duel feels like a samurai movie directed by Quentin Tarantino after a sake binge.
08:05The story is pure revenge fantasy, but with enough emotional depth to make you cry while also
08:11yelling,
08:11The landscapes are breathtaking. Mountains, temples, villages, and every NPC looks like
08:19they're hiding a tragic backstory. Ghost of Yotei isn't just a game, it's a tourism ad
08:25for feudal Japan. Except instead of brochures, you get decapitations. Skip it, and you'll regret
08:31missing the only game where Snowfall feels like a boss fight mechanic.
08:43Shinobi, Art of Vengeance's Sega saying, Remember Joe Musashi? He's back and he's angrier than
08:50your wifi when you forget the password.
08:53This hand-drawn 2D platformer is so stylish it looks like a comic book that ate too much
08:58sushi. You're flipping, slashing, and throwing shuriken like you're auditioning for Ninja
09:04Warrior Anime Edition.
09:06The game is pure retro roots with modern flair, meaning you'll die constantly, but at least
09:12you'll look cool doing it. Every level feels like a fever dream of neon lights, cherry blossoms,
09:19and enemies who exist solely to ruin your day. The bosses are massive, ridiculous, and somehow
09:25always have more weapons than you, which feels unfair, but also hilarious. Shinobi is the
09:31kind of game where you'll yell, I am the knight, while simultaneously crying because a random
09:36spear guy just ended your 20 minute run. If you skip it, you'll regret missing the only
09:41game where Ninja Parkour doubles as therapy.
09:53Kingdom Come, Deliverance 2 is Medieval Realism turned up to 11. You're Henry of Scalets and
09:58instead of dragons or magic, you get betrayal, revenge, and the joy of eating stale bread in
10:0415th century Bohemia. The game is so authentic that you'll spend half your time sharpening swords, and the other half
10:10wondering why your horse has more personality than you. Combat is brutal, unforgiving, and so realistic
10:17that you'll start googling how to swing a sword without dying. The story is pure medieval soap opera,
10:23betrayals, politics, revenge, and every NPC looks like they're one bad day away from starting a peasant revolt.
10:32Deliverance 2 makes you feel like you're actually living in history, which is great until you realize
10:38history didn't have fast travel. It's immersive, punishing, and the closest you'll get to time
10:44travel without inventing a flux capacitor. Skip it, and you'll regret missing the only game where
10:50eating cabbage counts as a survival mechanic.
11:01Dispatch is basically a superhero comedy drama that feels like Marvel got drunk and decided to make a
11:07telltale game. You're playing episodic adventures where every choice matters, but also every choice
11:12is hilarious. One minute you're saving the city, the next you're arguing with your sidekick about who
11:17gets the last slice of pizza. The writing is sharp, witty, and so self-aware it feels like the game is
11:24roasting you personally. The characters are ridiculous in the best way, heroes with powers that are useful,
11:30but also kind of embarrassing, like a guy who can only turn invisible when nobody's looking. The episodic format
11:36means cliffhangers galore, so you'll binge it like Netflix while also screaming at the screen because
11:41you picked the wrong dialogue option. Dispatch isn't just a game, it's a sitcom disguised as a superhero
11:47adventure, and it's glorious. Skip it, and you'll regret missing the only game where saving the world
11:53comes with a laugh track.
11:54The first Berserker, Kazan, is basically what happens when someone takes Dark Souls, feeds it
12:08three energy drinks, and then says, okay, now make it anime. You play Kazan, a warrior so angry he makes
12:14Kratos look like a yoga instructor. The combat is fast, brutal, and stylish, like ballet, but if ballet
12:20involves giant swords and screaming at demons. Every boss fight feels like a therapy session where the
12:26therapist is a 40-foot monster trying to crush you. The art style is gorgeous, but also terrifying,
12:32because every enemy looks like it crawled out of your worst nightmare and then hired a stylist.
12:37You'll die constantly, but at least you'll look cool doing it. The game is so intense that you'll start
12:42questioning your life choices, like why you thought fighting a dragon with glowing abs was a good idea.
12:48Skip it, and you'll regret missing the only game where rage is a legitimate combat mechanic.
13:02Hollow Knight Silksong finally arrived after years of waiting, and it's basically the Metroidvania
13:07equivalent of Beyonce dropping a surprise album. You play Hornet, who is faster, sassier, and deadlier
13:13than her bug brother. The game throws over 200 new enemies at you, which is basically Team Cherry
13:19saying, we love you, but also we hate you. The bosses are insane. Giant bugs with moves so flashy they
13:26look like they're auditioning for Cirque du Soleil. The world is massive, beautiful, and so detailed you'll
13:31want to stop and admire the scenery, but then a beetle with anger issues will stab you in the face. The combat
13:37is fluid, the exploration is addictive, and every death feels like a personal insult. Silksong isn't
13:44just a sequel. It's a lifestyle, a religion, and a reminder that bugs are cooler than humans.
13:50Skip it, and you'll regret missing the only game where insect parkour feels like high art.
13:55South of Midnight is basically southern gothic meets monster hunting, and it's glorious. You play
14:09Hazel, who fights mythical beasts with lyrical boss battles that feel like poetry slam nights gone wrong.
14:16The game is dripping with atmosphere. Swamps, shadows, and creatures that look like they crawled out of
14:23your grandma's bedtime stories if your grandma was secretly a witch. The combat is stylish,
14:29the story is heartfelt, and the whole vibe screams, yes, this is art, but also please don't let that
14:36giant spider eat me. The soundtrack is haunting, the visuals are stunning, and every fight feels like
14:43a dance with death. It's the kind of game that makes you want to light a candle, put on jazz, and then
14:49stab a monster in the face. Skip it, and you'll regret missing the only game where folklore becomes a boss fight.
15:04Mafia. The old country is the prequel nobody knew they needed, set in the 1900s Sicily. Forget fast cars
15:10and tommy guns, this is about the brutal origins of organized crime, where betrayal is currency and
15:15pasta is probably poisoned. You play a young gangster climbing the ranks and the game
15:20immediately throws you into a world so authentic you'll start craving cannoli while dodging bullets.
15:26The story is cinematic, emotional, and packed with enough drama to make The Godfather look like a romcom.
15:33The visuals are stunning. Cobblestone streets, candlelit taverns, and villages where everyone looks like
15:40they're plotting something. The combat is gritty, the choices are brutal, and every mission feels like
15:45you're auditioning for history's most dangerous family reunion. Skip it, and you'll regret missing the
15:51only game where spaghetti night ends in a shootout. Arc Raiders is basically what happens when someone says,
16:05let's make a free to play shooter, but also let's throw in giant killer robots, because why not?
16:10You and your squad drop into a post-apocalyptic wasteland where metallic enemies roam like they own
16:16the place. The combat is fast, chaotic, and so explosive you'll start wondering if Michael Bay secretly
16:23directed it. Every raid feels like a desperate scramble for survival, with loot so precious you'll fight
16:29your own teammates for it. The visuals are stunning. Dusty landscapes, neon explosions, and robots that
16:36look like they were designed by IKEA if IKEA hated humanity. The game is squad-based chaos, and half the
16:44fun is yelling at your friends for stealing your ammo. Skip it, and you'll regret missing the only game
16:49where teamwork means screaming, revive me, while a robot stomps on your face.
17:02Ninja Gaiden 4 is basically Team Ninja and Platinum games saying, what if we made a game so fast it
17:08breaks the laws of physics? Ryu Hayabusa returns, and he's angrier than ever, slicing through enemies like
17:15Gordon Ramsay slices through bad cooking. The combat is so intense that you'll blink once and miss an
17:21entire boss fight. Every move feels like you're auditioning for Ninja Warrior, except instead of foam
17:27pits, you get demons with chainsaws. The difficulty is legendary. You'll die so often you'll start
17:32questioning if the game is secretly a roguelike. But it's stylish, cinematic, and packed with combos so
17:39flashy they should come with a seizure warning. And just when you think you've mastered it, the game
17:43throws Yakimo, a new hero, into the mix, and suddenly you're juggling two ninjas like you're running a
17:49martial arts daycare. Skip it, and you'll regret missing the only game where rage quitting feels
17:54like a spiritual journey. Donkey Kong Bonanza is Nintendo saying, what if Donkey Kong went underground
18:10and started smashing stuff like a construction worker on caffeine? It's a sandbox style adventure
18:15where every environment is destructible, meaning you'll spend half your time exploring and the
18:20other half gleefully breaking everything like a toddler in a toy store. Pauline joins the fun,
18:26and together they're basically the Bonnie and Clyde of bananas. The game is chaotic, hilarious,
18:32and somehow makes Donkey Kong feel like the most relatable character of 2025. You'll swing,
18:38smash, and occasionally wonder why the physics engine is more realistic than your car insurance.
18:43It's colorful, ridiculous, and the closest you'll get to playing Minecraft if Minecraft was run by
18:48gorillas, skip it, and you'll regret missing the only game where bananas are treated like sacred relics.
18:55Hades 2 is Supergiant Games saying, we already made the best roguelike ever, so let's do it again,
19:09but bigger. This time you play Melanoe, the daughter of Persephone, and she's basically the goth queen of
19:15the underworld. The combat is deeper, faster, and more stylish than ever with new weapons that make you
19:21feel like you're auditioning for mythological America's Got Talent. The bosses are brutal,
19:26the dialogue is witty, and every run feels like a Greek tragedy written by stand-up comedians.
19:32The art style is stunning, the soundtrack slaps harder than Zeus's lightning, and the story is
19:38emotional enough to make you cry while also yelling, yes, die Minotaur! Hades 2 isn't just a sequel,
19:45it's a lifestyle, a religion, and a reminder that roguelikes can be both punishing and hilarious.
19:51Skip it, and you'll regret missing the only game where family drama involves stabbing gods in the face.
19:56Lost Records Bloom and Rage is basically Life is Strange, but with even more nostalgia and emotional damage.
20:12You play across two timelines, 1995 and today, exploring friendship, secrets, and the kind of
20:18teenage angst that makes you want to write bad poetry. The game is heartfelt, cinematic, and so
20:25emotional, you'll start texting your old high school friends just to say,
20:28sorry for stealing your Walkman. The choices matter, the dialogue is sharp, and the soundtrack is pure
20:3490s gold. It's the kind of game that makes you laugh, cry, and then cry again because you picked
20:41the wrong dialogue option and ruined a friendship forever. Bloom and Rage isn't just a game, it's
20:47therapy disguised as interactive storytelling. Skip it, and you'll regret missing the only game where
20:53nostalgia hits harder than a mixtape made in 1995.
20:56What the fuck is this?
21:06Claire Obscure, Expedition 33 is basically French art school meets JRPG, and it's glorious. Set in
21:13Belle Epoque France, you're fighting against the paintress, an artist who erases lives every year
21:18like she's running the world's deadliest art class. This time she paints 33, and guess what,
21:24you're on the list. The combat is turn-based but with real-time mechanics, meaning you'll spend half
21:30your time strategizing and the other half panicking because you pressed the wrong button. The visuals are
21:35stunning, Parisian streets, surreal dreamscapes, and bosses that look like they belong in a museum.
21:41The story is dark, stylish, and so emotional you'll start questioning why you ever thought art was safe.
21:47Expedition 33 isn't just a game, it's a philosophical journey about mortality,
21:52creativity, and why French villains are always so fashionable. Skip it,
21:56and you'll regret missing the only game where death comes with a paintbrush.
22:11And that's the list. Drop a comment with the game you're mad at yourself for skipping,
22:15hit like if at least one of these is getting installed tonight, and subscribe for more
22:19gaming pain disguised as recommendations. See you in the next one.
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