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Games That Are Going To Blow Everyone Away In 2017

There's no denying 2016 was a fantastic year for video games. Honestly, the gaming industry is spoiling us rotten, and we're thrilled. Want to get hyped for the amazing games 2017 has in store? So do we.

Resident Evil 7 -  January 24

For some, Resident Evil 4 marks the spot where the franchise fell off the map: parts 5 and 6 were its most unremarkable installments. But with a jaw-dropping debut at E3 2016 during Sony's press conference, Resident Evil 7 rekindled gamers' desires to find themselves dangerously low on ammo while desperately fleeing shambling horrors and grotesque mutations. This chapter welcomes a new main character to the series, and in its biggest change yet, the game will play entirely first-person. Capcom even promises full virtual reality support, allowing players to play the game from beginning to end in VR.

For Honor - February 14

Get ready for one bloody valentine. With so many alpha gameplay videos on YouTube, it's easy to forget that For Honor has yet to be officially released. An online hack and slash game, For Honor pits factions of knights, vikings, and samurai against each other in a fight to the death. Developed by Ubisoft Montreal, it looks to bring together the best aspects of Chivalry: Medieval Warfare, War of the Vikings, and Samurai Warriors in one medieval fantasy setting. Closed beta starts in January (register here), with the official release slated for February 14, 2017.

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Halo Wars 2 - February 21

Halo is one of the biggest video game franchises in history, and in 2017 it'll return to its real-time strategy roots. It's been a long time since the original Halo Wars hit shelves—Halo Wars 2 will drop almost exactly seven years after the release of its predecessor—but Total War developer Creative Assembly promises to make it worth the wait, putting the series in the capable hands of RTS masters.

Horizon Zero Dawn - February 28

Originality can sometimes feel like it comes at a premium in the game industry. That's why it's refreshing to see a game with as bonkers a premise as Horizon Zero Dawn: 1,000 years in the future, mankind has been reduced to a series of caveman-like tribal groups as the world has reverted back to a pre-historic landscape of lush greenery and dangerous wild animals...that are robots. Yep, a world where every animal is a robot. Unraveling that mystery should be as fun to as Horizon Zero Dawn's gameplay looked in its E3 demo during Sony's 2016 press conference. Guerrilla Games' track record with the Killzone series proves they can create engaging gameplay, and they're not slouching with the story, either, as they've brought on the writer of Fallout: New Vegas to pen the script.

Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild - March 3

It's hard to blame Nintendo for keeping the Zelda franchise relatively unchanged for so long. If it works, don't try to fix it; just add and modify and twist into new shapes to deliver new yet familiar experiences. It's a different story for The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild, which promises a more open and fully exportable world than any Zelda game before it and will be available on both WiiU and Switch. This latest entry shares more in common with Skyrim and Far Cry than traditional entries in the series. Dungeons can be explored in any order; the final boss fight could be fought, and won, at the start of the game, assuming players are crazy (and skilled) enough to pull it off. It's a Zelda unlike any other: it hands you a controller and truly puts you in control.

1 2 Switch - March 3

The first game presented at the Nintendo Switch Presentation 2017, 1 2 Switch is the spiritual successor to the underrated motion-controlled masterpiece WarioWare: Smooth Moves for Nintendo Wii. In a revolutionary twist on the concept of a video game, 1 2 Switch turns the screen into an accessory; players focus on each other's eyes and faces. It's a party game about reflexes, psyching your opponent out, and striking silly poses along the way. We can't wait to try it. A Nintendo Switch launch title, 1 2 Switch hits shelves March 3, 2017.

Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon Wildlands - March 7

The Ghost Recon series is taking a cue from Metal Gear Solid 5 and Grand Theft Auto 5 by removing the idea of levels and setting the upcoming Ghost Recon Wildlands in an enormous open world rife with Bolivian drug cartel baddies who are eagerly anticipating being shot in the back of the head as they stand around guarding an abandoned warehouse. Wildlands features a robust single-player campaign that will have gamers exploring every square inch of terrain for dozens of hours. But the online multiplayer co-op is where the game promises to shine, as you and some buddies can go on raids and chase down escaping drug traffickers from the comfort of your own underwear.

Mass Effect: Andromeda - March 21

Commander Shepard isn't the only thing the Mass Effect series is leaving behind. It's abandoning the Milky Way galaxy and setting up shop on the Citadel in our celestial neighbor, the Andromeda galaxy. All new planets. All new terrain. All new alien races. Actually, by definition, you will be playing the invading alien race of the series. Set centuries after the events of the original Mass Effect trilogy, the new series has you controlling a new protagonist, named Ryder, whose mission is to discover a new planet for the human race to call home.

Persona 5 - April 4

Rabid fans of the Persona series—is there are any other kind?—have waited eight excruciating years for the next official installment. The last to see release, Persona 4, came out in 2008 for the PlayStation 2. But 2017 will change all that with another turn-based RPG adventure for the PlayStation 4. In the new installment you'll spend a year in the shoes of the new kid at Shujin High School as he and his fellow students use their "persona" powers, or manifestations of their psyche, to battle a shadowy group known only as the Phantom Thieves of Hearts.

Yooka-Laylee - April 11

Designers who worked on Banjo-Kazooie and Donkey Kong Country have formed Playtonic Games to develop the upcoming Yooka-Laylee. Funded in 2015 by 80,000 Kickstarter backers, the game aspires to be a "collect-em-up for the modern era." Note the hyphenated title. That's no accident. It's meant to make us nostalgic for the N64's golden era—and it's working. April 11 can't arrive soon enough.

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Full Throttle - April 18

Wait, what's a game from 1995 doing on this list of the most anticipated games of 2017? Well, it's one of the greatest adventure games of all time, with some of the most memorable characters and a delightfully silly sense of humor—and more importantly, 2017 is the year Tim Shafer's classic adventure Full Throttle gets a fully remastered re-release. If you missed the wildly original tale of a biker who refuses to believe his chopper can be replaced by a silly anti-gravitational bike, this is the perfect time to hop on and ride off into the sunset with one of the best games ever made.

Outlast II - April 25

Don't call Outlast fun; it isn't fun. It's stressful, upsetting, haunting, and the best first-person survival horror game this side of Alien: Isolation over the last ten years. Inspired by the Amnesia series, first-time developer Red Barrels' first game surpassed its forebears in virtually every way, capturing the horror of being trapped among the violently the insane in an asylum. Trading the deranged sanitarium for an upside-down cross-burning, backwoods religious cult, Outlast II should be another not-fun masterpiece of survival horror. It's already piqued gamers' interest in unexpected ways: for instance, the original teaser featured a creepy reversed audio clip of a preacher menacingly reading from the Bible.

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Prey - May 5

The Prey series, if you can even call it that, has had a rough life. The original Prey, released in 2006, had been in development since 1995, and went through multiple massive overhauls before it finally arrived to fan acclaim. Its sequel went through something similar before eventually being canceled long after its public announcement. But now the minds behind Fallout and Elder Scrolls are putting their full force into a new iteration of the alien invasion epic. Bethesda envisions the new Prey not as a sequel or remake, but a complete reimagining of the franchise.

Injustice 2 - May 16

NetherRealm, the makers of Mortal Kombat, shocked the world with Injustice. Finally, we could live out childhood dreams of pitting Superman and Batman against one another in a fight to find out—once and for all—who would win. Or Superman vs. the Flash. Or Doomsday vs. Lex Luthor. Even better, the game was great. Injustice 2 will feature gameplay mechanics similar to the original, like the trait system and the game's show-stopping super moves, while offering new twists, like a loot-dropping system that allows players to collect gear during fights that offer costume-specific upgrades altering play.

Tekken 7 - June 2

Technically, the latest installment of the Tekken series has already been out since February 2015...but only in Japan, where it had a limited arcade release. In 2017 it'll finally reach western shores, and it'll finally be playable on everything that can play video games, except the Wii U. According to its E3 2016 trailer, the seventh chapter of the long-running series will include a new addition to the roaster of classic Tekken characters: Street Fighter's Akuma. Sadly, it's rumored that he may be the only Street Fighter character making a cameo.

Arms - June 16

Announced by Kosuke Yabuki at the Nintendo Switch Presentation 2017, Arms looks like a mix of Wii Sports' boxing, shooting, and WiiFit. The motion controls make use of the joycons' gyroscopic technology. Expect to sweat as you dash and jump around, using jabs, hooks, and special attacks to beat your opponent to a pulp. And it's all set in a bright, crisp art-style reminiscent of both Splatoon for the Wii U and Ready 2 Rumble: Boxing, a classic of the N64 era. Step into the arena in spring 2017.

Splatoon 2 - July 21

The segment on Splatoon 2 at the Nintendo Switch Presentation 2017 was one of our favorite highlights. Nintendo's clever, family-friendly take on ruthless hardcore shooters, the squid ink-spattered Splatoon was a notable high-point of the Wii U's short life span. New arenas, game modes, special weapons, and new types of inklings mean the turf war will be even crazier the second time around. The next one promises network play and local multiplayer, as well as multiple control schemes. Join the turf war this summer.

Agents of Mayhem - August 15

Volition is taking a breaking from the wild and ridiculous Saints Row series to bring us...a Saints Row spinoff! Set sometime after the events of Saint's Row: Gat out of Hell, Agents of Mayhem is an open world third-person action game that revolves around an anti-terrorist organization known as—you guessed it—Agents of Mayhem, who are trying to stop the evil terrorist organization Legion from destroying the world. Players can swap between one of three characters on the fly in the midst of battle. Perform a stun maneuver to freeze all enemies on the battlefield, and instantly swap in another character that can kill them all with a well-placed grenade. It may not be Saints Row, but for now it'll do just fine.

Middle-earth: Shadow of War - August 22

Forget The Hobbit. The Nemesis System, which transformed run-of-the-mill enemies into fully fleshed out characters with their own histories, personalities, and grudges, made Middle-earth: Shadow of Mordor one of the most epic Middle-earth adventures in years—and Middle-earth: Shadow of War will be even bigger.

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As the undead ranger Talion, Middle-earth players will fight the forces of Sauron by using the Nemesis system to recruit an army of loyal followers, and then launching full-scale attacks against the Dark Lord's many fortresses. Developer Monolith Productions promises Middle-earth: Shadow of War has a revamped combat system that gives players more freedom than ever, and warns that Talion's allies, called Followers, will be just as complex as the first game's orcs—so be on your best behavior. It's one thing to have a longtime enemy kill you. It's another when the murderer is one of your friends.

Destiny 2 - September 8

Destiny delivered a smooth, addictive, and fun experience in spite of its flaws. If Bungie has its way, Destiny 2 won't have any flaws at all.

Like the first game, Destiny 2 will see players explore the far reaches of the Solar System in a shared virtual world, decimating enemies in order to save the galaxy—and score tons of sweet loot. But this time around, everything should be a lot smoother. An in-game clan system will make teaming up with friends a lot easier (and provides some options for players who normally tackle challenges solo), while Destiny 2's wide-open spaces will be filled with interesting things to do.

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Add in three new classes, some fresh weapon types, a PC port (which should run at a blistering 60 frames per second), and, y'know, an actual story, and Destiny 2 is shaping up to be the online shooter everyone was dreaming of in 2014. Better late than never!

Marvel vs. Capcom: Infinite - September 19

The latest entry in the long-running Marvel vs. Capcom series came out in 2011, and a lot has changed since then: mainly, Marvel Studios launched The Avengers, which conquered the box office and made Marvel's deep bench of characters more popular than ever.

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Marvel vs. Capcom: Infinite reflects this new reality with a roster heavily inspired by the Marvel Cinematic Universe—you won't see any X-Men this time around, but Ultron, Captain Marvel, and Rocket Raccoon are all front and center—and new gameplay mechanics centered on the Infinity Stones, the subjects of the upcoming movie Avengers: Infinity War. On the Capcom side, things look a little more familiar, and while the series' tried-and-true tag-team-based combat can be intimidating for newcomers, Capcom is hoping to ease rookies into the experience with a brand new "auto-combo" mode. Pry yourself away from Injustice 2 in September and check this one out. You won't be disappointed.

South Park: The Fractured But Whole - October 17

Obsidian Entertainment's South Park: The Stick of Truth surprised us in 2014. A mechanically sound RPG with a long campaign, enjoyable combat, hilarious writing, and fan service galore, Stick of Truth renewed gamers' trust in the franchise. (If you played the mediocre South Park games for N64 and Playstation, you know all too well why they might have been skeptical.) A D&D parody, The Stick of Truth contained four classes (Fighter, Mage, Thief, and Jew), while the superhero-themed The Fractured But Whole features twelve (Brutalist, Blaster, Speedster, Elementalist, Gadgeteer, Mystic, Cyborg, Psychic, Assassin, Commander, Netherborn, and Karate Kid). By all accounts, The Fractured But Whole is going to be bigger and better than its predecessor.

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Tacoma - Spring 2017

Fullbright Company turned some heads after they departed Irrational Games and released Gone Home, a little game about 21-year-old girl who comes home from overseas and is greeted by an empty house she must explore to unravel the mystery of her sister's coming-of-age story. The studio's follow-up, Tacoma, takes place on a derelict space station 200,000 miles from Earth. As with Gone Home, players must explore the empty vessel to discover what happened to the crew. Players won't encounter any actual people; instead, the ship has recorded the voices and movements of its crew members and replays them as holograms that the player must follow to unravel the ship's mystery.

Cuphead - Mid-2017

Inspired by old Mickey Mouse cartoons, Cuphead in Don't Deal with the Devil aspires to be a playable old-timey cartoon with side-scrolling, platforming, retro charm. In development for several years, it's the brainchild of first-time indie developer Studio MDHR. Rumor has it the designers are putting their finishing touches on the co-op mode. No further delays are anticipated—which is good news for Disney and Rayman Legends fans alike.

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Fire Emblem Warriors - Fall 2017

It took awhile, but thanks to the well-received 3DS games, the mobile hit Fire Emblem Heroes, and a number of appearances in Super Smash Bros., Fire Emblem is finally being recognized as one of Nintendo's key franchises—and that means that it's time for some spinoffs.

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Like Hyrule Warriors before it, Fire Emblem Warriors throws classic Nintendo characters into the massive, frantic hack 'n slash battles made famous by the Dynasty Warriors series. It's very, very different from the deliberate, turn-based strategy that Fire Emblem is known for, but if Hyrule Warriors is any indication, Fire Emblem Warriors will have enough fan service to keep Fire Emblem diehards entertained for months—and for the rest of us? If you like killing things, you're good to go.

Sonic Forces - Q4 2017

Fan artists rejoice. While Sonic Forces stars not one but two versions of Sega's speedy little rodent, the game's biggest draw is the ability to create your very own hedgehog (or rabbit, or cat, or other critter) and unleash him or her on Sonic Forces' post-apocalyptic landscape. You'll use your new creation to take down Doctor Eggman while conquering stages inspired by both Sonic's 3D outings and his classic 2D platformers along the way.

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In addition to the Sonic Generations-like gameplay, characters in Sonic Forces will be able to use tools called Wispons (including, for example, a flamethrower) to surmount obstacles, while collecting Wisps will give your character special powers, a la Sonic Colors. Sonic's had a rough decade or so, and hopefully Sonic Forces—along with the retro-styled Sonic Mania, which is due later this year—will be the hedgehog's long-awaited return to form. We'll see.

Call of Duty: WWII - November 3

After the high-tech shenanigans of Call of Duty: Infinite Warfare, Call of Duty: WWII takes the franchise back to the conflict that started it all this November. But don't be fooled: while the setting might be familiar, Sledgehammer Games is trying to make the biggest, best Call of Duty game yet.

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As a member of the US Army's "Bloody First," players will fight through the beaches of Normandy and across the European theater in Call of Duty: WWII's single-player campaign, take on Nazi zombies in multiplayer co-op, and fight for either the Axis or Allied forces in multiplayer. The setting isn't the only way Call of Duty: WWII is going back to basics, either: unlike more modern Call of Duty entries, Call of Duty: WWII won't feature recharging health or movement options like double-jumping or wall-running, focusing instead on what Sledgehammer Games calls the "boots-on-the-ground" experience.

Star Wars Battlefront 2 - November 17

Star Wars Battlefront 2's list of features is like a catalog of everything fans wanted from the gorgeous but shallow Battlefront reboot that launched in 2015. Unlike its predecessor, Battlefront 2 has a fully fleshed-out single-player story, which focuses on Imperial officer Iden Versio and her adventures between Return of the Jedi and The Force Awakens. It has space battles, stars characters and levels from all three major Star Wars timelines, and features a class-based multiplayer mode that'll let you customize and grow your character over time. In short, Star Wars Battlefront II is poised to be the definitive Star Wars experience on modern consoles—at the very least, it'll make the long, agonizing wait for The Last Jedi a little easier to swallow when the game launches later this fall.

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Super Mario Odyssey - Holiday 2017

We know a lot more than we once did about Super Mario Odyssey. The game takes place in strange worlds beyond the Mushroom Kingdom, including one similar to our own. Mario wears a sentient cap with googly eyes on it. He uses the cap to perform special jumps. In combat, he makes like Oddjob from the Bond movies–or Kung Lao from Mortal Kombat–and flings it at his enemies. He also flies around in a tugboat-spaceship because of course he does. The gameplay looks even smoother than Super Mario Galaxy's. Look for Mario's familiar face this holiday season.

Shenmue 3 - December

The long-awaited third installment in the Shenmue franchise will finally, mercifully be released in 2017. Yi Syzuki's series, which began way back in the Dreamcast days, was years ahead of its time. Sadly, despite mounds of critical praise, it proved a commercial failure—which is why the gaming community was blown away when Sony announced during its 2015 E3 presser that a Kickstarter fundraiser had been started to gauge interest in a possible Shenmue 3. Within nine hours its $2 million goal had been surpassed; all in all, $6.6 million was raised, making it the most heavily funded game in Kickstarter history.

Suda51's Travis Touchdown game - Title and release date TBD

Suda51 is an oddball, but he makes compelling games. The No More Heroes games were blood-spattered reasons to get a Wii and a Wii U. Killer is Dead puts a purple-drenched, psychedelic spin on Seijun Suzuki's already nonsensical–and just as brilliant–hit man movies. Whatever Suda51 is working on for Nintendo Switch, you can trust it will be both weird and worth a look.

New Megami Tensei game - Title and release date TBD

Atlus's Megami Tensei series, and its multiple spin-off series–such as the Persona games about teenagers who fight demons–are a lot of fun. These turn-based JRPGs have amassed a devoted following for being a weirder, headier alternative to the Final Fantasy series. A Shin Megami Tensei is early in development for Nintendo Switch.

Crackdown 3 - Q4 2017

Since we're on the subject of Saints Row, why not mention a game similar in terms of tone and gameplay? By the time Crackdown 3 comes out, it'll have been six years since its predecessor debuted. What has Ruffian Games been up to all this time? Well, truthfully, no one really knows. Not much has been revealed about Crackdown 3. But what we do know is exciting: it'll feature an open world sandbox like the previous games in the series, for sure, and judging from the trailer shown off at Microsoft's 2015 Gamescom presentation, gamers will be transported to a massively destructive city that you can level with your god-like powers.

Toshihiro Nagoshi's Switch game - Title and release date TBD 2017

We don't know anything about this game, but we know a lot about the astonishing track record of Sega's Toshihiro Nagoshi-san. Nagoshi-san created the celebrated Yakuza series as well as Binary Domain, the top-of-the-line anime-styled third-person shooter. Part design genius and part philosopher, he makes violent games with intentionally low body counts–unless you count the blown-apart robots.

Quake Champions - TBD 2017

The quintessential multiplayer first-person arena shooter series returns in 2017, as Quake Champions will try to show these young whippersnapper shooters what a good multiplayer FPS looks like. It's going to have to battle the likes of Overwatch, Call of Duty, and Battlefield—a lofty mission, but if any FPS can change the game, it's Quake. The Quake series bounces stylistically between different aesthetics. So far, Champions is shaping up to resemble the most beloved entry in the series, Quake 3 Arena.

Detroit: Become Human - TBD 2017

The brilliant minds at Quantic Dream, the folks behind the fascinating PS3 classic Heavy Rain, are always trying to push the boundaries of video game storytelling. With Detroit: Become Human, they're pushing even further. It's a neo-noir thriller centered around two characters: Conner, a police android investigating the mystery behind other androids ignoring their programming, and Kara, a fully conscious android trying to make sense of a world where her kind typically aren't sentient and free. Every action, every death, every choice, promises to have serious story ramifications. Every scenario can play out in vastly different ways depending on player choices.

Spider-Man PS4 game - TBD 2017

For some gamers, the web-slinger's run peaked way back in 2000 with his PlayStation debut. For others, it doesn't get any better than 2012's The Amazing Spider-Man. Aside from fantastic appearances in the underrated Lego Marvel franchises, Spidey's current-gen presence has been pretty lackluster. (Looking at you, The Amazing Spider-Man 2.) So why are we excited about the upcoming Spider-Man game? It marks Insomniac Games' first tangle with the franchise. The Ratchet and Clank developer's Spider-Man title will hit the PS4 sometime in 2017.

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Dead Island 2 - TBD 2017

Sumo Digital has big blood-stained shoes to fill. Dying Light, Techland's unofficial follow-up to its interesting, albeit underwhelming, zombies-on-Banoi-beach brawler Dead Island, reinvigorated the zombie-bashing genre. It also managed to do the parkour from Mirror's Edge better than Mirror's Edge did. To stand out, Dead Island 2 has brought the zombie apocalypse stateside (to the island of... Los Angeles?) and put the focus on cooperative multiplayer and slapstick silliness. Does Sumo Digital have what it takes to reanimate the Dead Island franchise with a direct sequel? We'll find out sometime in 2017.

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Gwent - TBD

The Witcher 3 was an astounding game with another great game hidden deep inside, like a Russian nesting doll of video games. This hidden game, a card game called Gwent, was originally made by a couple of designers at CD Projekt Red in their spare time. It impressed the higher-ups and made it into The Witcher 3, where it became something of an obsession among diehard fans, who loved it so much that many made their own standalone versions. Now it's becoming a standalone title in the style of Hearthstone, but with a twist—this release is a collectable card game with single-player campaigns.

Days Gone - TBD 2017

Currently, Naughty Dog's masterpiece—you know the one—has no equal. That could change, of course, if Sony Entertainment gets its way: their Days Gone appears to be staking claim on the apocalyptic territory between The Last of Us's near-hopelessness and Dead Rising 4's over-the-top zombie-slaughter. While we wait for The Last of Us Part II, we'll be riding around Yellowstone Park on a motorcycle, only pulling over to scrounge for scraps or to cap hordes of bloodthirsty zombies.

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