Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Gaming
  3. News

Xbox Game Pass’ new Standard tier is missing some big games

Add as a preferred source on Google
Lilith staring into the camera in Diablo 4. She has giant horns and red wings behind her.
Activision Blizzard

Players are digging into Xbox Game Pass now that the company has officially launched its new Xbox Game Pass Standard tier. However, they’ve discovered that it’s missing quite a few noteworthy titles, including some that were already on the service before Xbox switched to its new payment structure.

Xbox published a post on September 10 marking the move, and explaining its new Game Pass plans in a succinct manner. Want to just use your Xbox for multiplayer? Grab Game Pass Core. Just want games on your PC? Get PC Game Pass. Game Pass Standard, arguably the most confusing new tier of the bunch when it was announced back in July, is for people who want to “level up [their] Xbox console gaming experience at a great value.” It costs $15 per month compared to Ultimate’s $20 per month (up from $17).

Recommended Videos

With the launch comes a retooled online catalog, which users have been using to see what’s missing on Standard (via Kotaku). If you go to the Xbox website, you can sort games by membership. If you click on Game Pass Standard, you’ll see that it features 370 games at the time of this writing, compared to Ultimate’s 508.

This was expected, since Xbox said only its Ultimate tier would be getting day-one launches, although an Xbox spokesperson confirmed to Digital Trends that existing Game Pass for Console players will receive day-one games if they keep their subscriptions. Call of Duty: Black Ops 6, out in November, is only coming to Ultimate, Game Pass for Console, and PC Game Pass, for example. However, Standard is missing some first-party titles that are already out. That includes recent releases like Starfield, Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3Diablo 4Forza MotorsportValorant, and Senua’s Saga: Hellblade 2. There are still some first-party titles on Standard, of course, like Minecraft and spinoffs, PentimentPrey, the Dishonored games, and Psychonauts games.

However, third-party titles that were added to the service over the past couple of months aren’t available: Age of Mythology: Retold, Still Wakes the DeepStar Trucker, and Flintlock: The Siege of Dawn, just to name a few. (There’s a handy list on the Xbox subreddit that shows what games are missing, although it’s not complete.)

Xbox hasn’t made it clear how long it will take day-one launches on Ultimate to make it to the Standard tier, only noting that they might be added to Standard “up to 12 months late or more.” Since the subscription tiers have changed over, players should also note that cloud gaming is only available on the Ultimate tier.

Carli Velocci
Carli is a technology, culture, and games editor and journalist. They were the Gaming Lead and Copy Chief at Windows Central…
Gaming against AI could make you more confident with real teammates
Turns out getting beaten by bots wasn't the worst thing after all
Representative image of mobile gaming

Artificial intelligence is often blamed for making people less social. Whether it's AI replacing conversations, reducing teamwork, or making gaming feel less human, the narrative has largely remained the same. But a new study suggests the opposite could also be true. In fact, AI might be quietly encouraging people to spend more time with their friends.

Researchers studying PUBG: Battlegrounds have found that introducing AI-controlled opponents into multiplayer matches didn't isolate players. Instead, it made them more confident, kept them playing longer, and even encouraged them to squad up with friends more often. The findings, which will appear in the journal Information Systems Research, offer an interesting perspective on how AI can improve user experiences rather than simply automating them.

Read more
As Sony closes the door on PS3 games, RPCS3 has preserved thousands on PC
The open-source emulator now considers 2,681 PS3 titles fully playable before Sony stops selling games through the console
A stack of PS3 games.

Sony is preparing to close the PlayStation Store on PS3, ending new purchases globally by July 2027. Less than two weeks after that announcement, the team behind RPCS3 revealed a very different milestone.

The open-source PS3 emulator now lists 75% of the console’s tracked library as playable on PC. That covers 2,681 of 3,559 games, and the rating means they can be completed with acceptable performance and no game-breaking glitches.

Read more
This PS5-exclusive Game of the Year is now running on PC… sort of
Sony isn't planning PC ports for its PlayStation exclusives, but that isn't stopping the emulation community.
Astro Bot dresses like the hero from Ape Escape.

Nobody wants to wait for Grand Theft Auto VI on PC. With Rockstar still promising only PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X/S versions for November 19, a sudden burst of PS5-emulation progress has naturally attracted plenty of attention. 

Two open-source projects, KytyPS5 and SharpEmu, can now boot genuine commercial PS5 software on computers. Both remain extremely experimental, so anyone picturing GTA VI running on a gaming laptop this November should lower their expectations considerably. 

Read more