The best Xbox Game Pass games from 2022

The best Game Pass games from 2022 include an impressive range of rhythm games, horror games, and no shortage of narrative adventures.

Another year is coming to a close, and it was one with no shortage of excellent Xbox Game Pass games. Whether you’re into RPGs, rhythm games, survival horror, or niche historical murder mysteries, Game Pass probably had something for you this year. With so much to choose from, it’s hard to sit down and decide what to actually play  We managed to do it anyway, though, and listed some of our picks for the best Game Pass games of 2022.

 

High on Life is the biggest Game Pass launch of 2022

The FPS from Rick and Morty co-creator Justin Roiland is plenty popular.

High on Life, the bizarre FPS from Rick and Morty co-creator Justin Roiland, is the biggest release on Xbox Game Pass in 2022.

According to Xbox Wire, not only was High on Life more popular than any Game Pass release this year – it’s also the service’s third-largest launch in history.

“This was our first time launching a game with Game Pass,” said Mike Fridley, Squanch Games studio director and COO, said. “We’ve been blown away by the response from the players who have made us the most popular game on Game Pass right now. When Squanch Games was first created, it was to make the games we wanted to play – and Game Pass is helping us reach the players that want to play those games too.”

Impressions for this one are mostly positive, even if this flavor of humor isn’t usually your cup of tea.

High On Life is an incredibly unique title that we’ve been excited about for a long time,” Matt Percy, Xbox general manager of content planning, said. “It’s fantastic to see so many Game Pass members jump into it at launch to experience Squanch’s story for themselves ahead of the holidays.”

Anyone can give High On Life a shot with an active Xbox Game Pass subscription, along with other popular 2022 titles like Norco, Pentiment, and Warhammer 40,000: Darktide.

Written by Kyle Campbell on behalf of GLHF.

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Rick and Morty creator’s new game is way less annoying than you think

Justin Roiland’s High on Life is out this year, and after playing it, it’s better than we first thought.

I appreciate the humor of Rick and Morty creator Justin Roiland. I do. I wouldn’t say it consistently makes me laugh, but I understand why others enjoy it. The non-sequiturs and inane ramblings actually make for a fun and unpredictable ride. Well, as long as you can’t predict it, that’s true. But if you’ve watched a few seasons of Rick and Morty, you already basically know how this is going to go.

High on Life is a brand new title from Roiland’s own studio Squanch Games. In it, you have a filthy alien living in your house that may defecate on your couch, but he’s also built a teleporter, so maybe he’s worth putting up with. More interesting is your gun, or Gatlian – your gun is your friend. He’s sentient, he shoots bullets, he’ll chat to you in Morty’s voice and become a relative voice of “reason” (when compared to the rest of the world, at least).

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High on Life is going to live and die on how much you enjoy the humor it’s aiming to achieve. If you’re a dedicated Rick and Morty fan that eagerly awaits each new episode, then you’re going to get a lot out of this. If you’re entirely jaded and disinterested in Rick’s intergalactic adventures, this is going to bore you to tears. I find myself somewhere in the middle. No laughs, but a wry smile, sure. I appreciate fourth-wall breaks and sheer nonsense as much as any other early-30s white man that spent too much time on the internet as a teenager. The Gatlian’s line about losing the “E for Everyone” rating is good, honestly.

So is the gameplay. Shooting enemies with the Gatlian feels decent. The feedback and response from the visuals, sound effects and controller vibration are all in place, meaning that this doesn’t just feel like a mockery of contemporary shooter titles – it actually is a conventional shooter. Aim-down sights, melee attacks and even a grapple hook are here, giving you the mobility and options you need to make combat feel constantly engaging. Special shots can even hold foes in the air while you blast them for extra damage.

You also acquire a knife that really likes to stab people. Anyone. It doesn’t matter. Having a sentient tool-cross-partner hybrid isn’t exactly a new concept in video games, but it is at least refreshing to have them be so unhelpful, in a weird way. The knife and Gatlian chatter away and, yeah, it’s basically Rick and Morty dialogue all the way through. Again, your preference is going to decide how much of this you can take.

But despite leaning closer to being a jaded old man than I’d like to these days, I enjoyed what I played of High on Life. While I can’t claim that I was roaring with laughter, I enjoyed what I played, and I feel safe in saying that as long as the game doesn’t outstay its welcome, it’ll find a few fans that might’ve never even considered it. 

High on Life launches December 13 on PC and Xbox, and will be available on Xbox Game Pass on day one.

Written by Dave Aubrey on behalf of GLHF.

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