2023 has been a big year for gaming, as I’m sure you’ve heard a thousand times by now. It’s easy though when we look back to see 2023 as one giant entity, not as a series of games that eventually built into something mighty. As 2023 draws to a close, we look back on the year to see which 12 games defined the last 12 months.
These aren’t the best 12 games of the year (check outour GOTY list for the top ten), nor the best in each month. Instead, they’re the 12 games that best define each of the past 12 months.

January
January is usually a quiet time for game releases, coming down from the Christmas rush and before titles are rushed out to beat the first financial quarter. It’s often a sign of a publisher’s lack of faith in a game, hoping that the limited competition can help a title that might have otherwise floundered. In many ways, that madeForspokena textbook January release, but the plan backfired. Forspoken was bad-to-okay, sure, but it probably received a harsher spotlight due to there being nothing else to talk about at the time.
February
February isn’t too different to January in this sense, although towards the latter stages we’re out of that ‘bumped from last year’ territory and into the first real fresh meat. Some of the more experimental games that aren’t aiming for summer or Christmas, but still expect to make a splash, often see February as good ground to land in, and that’s what the PS VR2 plumbed for, with Horizon: Call of the Mountain its big launch title. Unfortunatelythe price tagmeant it was met with a bumpy landing. Awizard game was also released in February.
Hi-Fi Rushfeels like a classic February game, and I even thought it was a February game, but it actually released in the back end of January. Time flies when you’re gaming.

March
March is where things get a little more serious, althoughFinal Fantasy 7 RebirthandYakuza: Infinite Wealthwill both have arrived before March ‘24 kicks off. It’s when we’re finally used to living in whatever year it is, and when talk turns once more to Game of the Year.Resident Evil 4 Remake, which went on to be nominated for Game of the Year atThe Game Awards(as well as placing fourth in our list, a far more prestigious achievement) typifies the early March frontrunner.
April
April was a month of disappointments.Minecraft Legends,Afterimage, The Last Case of Benedict Fox,Cassette Beasts, and The Mageseeker all failed to live up to their potential sleeper hit billing, while even the month’s biggest hit,Star Wars Jedi: Survivor, was buggy on launch and fizzled in the end of year awards. If we look at April on the whole, it’s a bit of a letdown, and that’s why it has to go toDisney Speedstorm.
May
In some ways, May was a continuation of April, withRedfallandGollumboth arriving with a splat. However, there is a clear stand-out for the definitive game of May -Tears of the Kingdom. Looking back, 2023 might have had some good games early on, but it didn’t truly enter the ‘best year ever’ conversations until Zelda arrived. After that, the hits just kept on coming.
June
June might be best defined by divisive sequels.Diablo 4garnered a new wave of fans for its greater focus on narrative direction, but squandered its base with its rocky endgame and seasonal updates. Then there wasFinal Fantasy 16, which many will tell you is nothing like a Final Fantasy game, and many others will tell you is the best Final Fantasy game ever to exist. But in this year of surprise smash hits, June belonged toStreet Fighter 6, which took the series from the wilderness of 5 to the top of the fighting game tree once again, appeasing its hardcore followers while taking newcomers along for the ride too.
July
July was a month that kept things ticking over. Zelda and June’s releases left us all with quite the backlog, and so July offered a breather before August (and every month after) solidified 2023 as an all-timer. With the likes ofDisney Illusion IslandandViewfinder, it was a month to take stock of the year while squeezing in some less intense offerings. For that reason, it is aPikmin 4of a month through and through.
August
Much like May was Zelda’s, August opened up withBaldur’s Gate 3, and from there the year never looked back.Armored Core 6,Sea of Stars, and Videoverse all underlined that 2023 was bangers all the way down, but Baldur’s Gate 3 is the game that best represents 2023 as a whole, and easily the standout in its own month.
September
Baldur’s Gate 3 had such a long tail that really, it’s also the definitive game of September, especially as the PS5 launch brought a new section of fans with it. However,Starfielddefines September even as a handful of other great games (Cocoon,My Time at Sandrock,Lies of P) launched just because it is impossible to talk about 2023 without mentioning the game that was probably the biggest loser of the calendar. 2023 is being talked about as the best year ever, and rarely is Starfield mentioned - and it’s no Xbox Tax, because Hi-Fi Rush is part of 2023’s greatness. Starfield was kicked out of paradise in September, drifting aimlessly through space.
October
October sawSpider-Man 2andSuper Mario Bros. Wondergo head to head on the same release date, as 2023 continued to underline its strength in depth. However, when it comes to the game of the spooky season, it has to beAlan Wake 2. The fact it managed to reach such a broad audience while staying very true to its unique vision is another signifier of just why 2023 has been such a mammoth year for gaming.
November
November can be a big month, but when three GOTY contenders hit at the end of October, you might expect a quieter time. Not so in 2023. While some, likePersona 5 TacticaandLike A Dragon Gaiden, went under the radar, remakes stole the show. Star Ocean The Second Story R and Jurassic Park Classic Games Collection both made a late dart for 2023’s hall of fame, but the pick of the bunch was undoubtedlySuper Mario RPG.
December
December is like a practice January. While we occasionally get a December game that arrives after being delayed out of October and November to make sure it doesn’t arrive broken (a plan that failed withCyberpunk 2077), mostly it’s for games where the publisher lacks some belief.The Game Awardseligibility is closed, the GOTY lists are picked, the Christmas money is spent. It’s January without the safety net of lack of competition. It’s a burial ground. And this year’s biggest victim, deserved or not, isAvatar: Frontiers of Pandora.







