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Every January, the PCGamingUniverse community forums run an annual end-of-year poll asking our members to vote for the games they actually finished, replayed, and recommended to friends across the previous twelve months. The 2026 edition closed with 4,847 ballots cast across the cross-platform categories, and the Xbox Series X subforum returned the most decisive set of community winners we have seen since the 2021 cycle. What follows is not a critic’s list — it is a curation of the games our members chose with their downloads, their hours played, and their forum threads. We have ranked them by community votes, weighted for the proportion of voters who marked each title as “would recommend to a friend who just bought a Series X,” and we have added our own technical context so you can see how each game runs on the hardware in 2026.
The community’s top pick for the best Xbox Series X game to play right now in 2026 was Forza Horizon 5, which received 24 percent of the first-place vote and the highest “would recommend” score of any title on the ballot at 91 percent. That is a remarkable result for a game that launched in late 2021, and it tells us something specific about how our community uses their Series X: as a 4K-60 living room machine for visually stunning, replayable, drop-in-drop-out experiences with great Game Pass economics. The runner-up was Indiana Jones and the Great Circle, the third place went to Halo Infinite (almost entirely on the strength of the multiplayer overhaul), and from there the picks diverged across genre lines that we will unpack in this guide. If the headline you are taking away is “the community picked the same six games every critic likes,” look closer — the order and the reasoning are revealing in ways that critic-led lists often miss.
How Our Community Picks These Games
The PCGamingUniverse Xbox subforum has grown to over 60,000 members across the current console generation, and our annual community poll is open to any member with an account in good standing for at least six months. We do this to discourage review-bombing, the kind of organized brigading that has plagued open-vote game-of-the-year polls on other platforms, and to ensure the results reflect long-term community engagement rather than launch-window enthusiasm. Members vote across eight categories — Game of the Year, Best Visuals, Best Multiplayer, Best Single-Player, Most Replayable, Best Game Pass Value, Best Co-op, and Most Improved Since Launch — and they also rank their top five titles in each category. We pool the rankings, apply a community-weighted scoring algorithm, and the results are what you see below.
What members told us they look for in a 2026 Xbox Series X recommendation, summarized from over 1,200 written-vote comments, was the following. First, the game has to take genuine advantage of the Series X hardware — Quality and Performance modes that demonstrably differ from the Xbox One X version, support for VRR and 120Hz output where it makes sense, ray tracing implementations that do not destroy the frame rate. Second, it has to either be on Game Pass Ultimate (a near-unanimous community preference) or be deep enough to justify a $50 to $70 standalone purchase. Third, it has to have a community around it — active subreddit, regular content updates, working multiplayer if applicable. Fourth, it has to be either complete or actively supported. The forum has burned out on games that ship in early access on console without acknowledging it, and the comment threads were brutal toward two specific 2025 releases that pretended to be finished games.
The common pitfalls our community wants you to avoid before you buy your next Xbox Series X game include these. Do not buy a game on the Microsoft Store while it is also available on Game Pass — half a dozen members shared the story of accidentally double-paying for Starfield. Check the Storage Expansion Card compatibility list before assuming any USB drive will play your games — only the Seagate-branded card runs Series X-optimized titles directly. And do not assume that “available on Xbox” means “optimized for Series X” — some 2025 titles still ship as Xbox One X versions that simply run faster on the newer hardware without using the GPU upgrades, the SSD, or the Velocity Architecture features. Always look for the “Optimized for Xbox Series X|S” badge on the store page.
The Community Top Seven: At-a-Glance
| Rank | Game | Community Score | Genre | Game Pass? | “Recommend to a friend” |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Forza Horizon 5 | 92.3 | Open-world racing | Yes | 91% |
| 2 | Indiana Jones and the Great Circle | 89.7 | Action-adventure | Yes, day one | 87% |
| 3 | Halo Infinite | 85.4 | Sci-fi shooter | Yes | 82% (MP), 71% (SP) |
| 4 | Sea of Thieves | 83.9 | Co-op pirate sandbox | Yes | 88% (with friends) |
| 5 | Avowed | 81.2 | First-person fantasy RPG | Yes, day one | 78% |
| 6 | Hollow Knight: Silksong | 80.5 | Metroidvania | Yes | 85% |
| 7 | Starfield (with Shattered Space) | 77.8 | Open-world space RPG | Yes | 69% |
What stands out to anyone who follows the broader gaming press is that Starfield, which sat in the top three of most critic-led 2024 retrospectives, dropped to seventh in our community poll despite the substantial improvements of the Shattered Space expansion and the sixty frames per second Performance mode patch. The community comments explained why: members loved the technical fixes and the Va’ruun storyline, but the structural complaints (load-screen-heavy city interiors, sparse procedural planets) had not been fully addressed, and many of our voters had moved on to other RPGs before they came back to give the updated version a fair shake. Conversely, Hollow Knight: Silksong made the list despite being a 2D Metroidvania that does not need Series X hardware — the community simply ranked it highly because so many members played and finished it in 2025 and recommended it to friends.
1. Forza Horizon 5 — The Community’s Number One
Forza Horizon 5 won the community vote by a comfortable margin, and the comments thread explained the result in three recurring themes. First, the game’s seven content seasons and ongoing biweekly Series rotations meant that members who bought it at launch in 2021 still had reason to boot it up in 2026 — there is always a new playlist, a new car pack, a new rolling road challenge. Second, the technical execution remains best-in-class: a locked sixty frames per second in Quality mode at native 4K with ray-traced reflections in showcase replays, a 120Hz Performance mode for high-refresh displays, and the kind of art direction that makes the Mexico setting feel alive at every time of day across every weather state. Third, the game is free on Game Pass Ultimate, which functions as a permanent recommendation engine for anyone joining the platform.
One member wrote in their ballot comment, and we are paraphrasing because the full quote was 600 words, that Forza Horizon 5 had become the game they recommend to every friend who buys an Xbox Series X because it is the perfect introduction to what the hardware can actually do. The visual fidelity, the responsiveness, the load times — all of it is showcase quality, and you can drop into a session for fifteen minutes and feel like you got something done. Several members noted that the Hot Wheels expansion and the Rally Adventure expansion added genuinely fresh systems rather than just more content, and the EventLab toolset has produced player-created content that rivals the official tracks in creativity. We considered the community vote here a clear endorsement that you do not need a brand-new release to have one of the best Xbox Series X experiences in 2026.
Best for: any new Series X owner looking for the best showcase game, racing fans across the arcade-to-sim spectrum, players who appreciate ongoing free content. Pros: generational visuals, locked 4K 60 in Quality mode, infinite community content, on Game Pass. Cons: career progression can feel grindy, audio for some engine notes is not as crisp as Forza Motorsport, some seasonal events require ownership of specific cars.
2. Indiana Jones and the Great Circle — The Critical Darling the Community Agreed With
Indiana Jones and the Great Circle finished a strong second in our community poll and was the highest-rated single-player-exclusive experience on the ballot. MachineGames’s first-person take on the franchise won over even the members who, like several of our long-time Xbox forum contributors, had been skeptical about playing Indy from a first-person perspective. The community comments overwhelmingly praised the puzzle design — voters specifically called out the Vatican sequence and the Egyptian tomb chapter as franchise highlights — and the Order of Giants expansion released in spring 2026 was singled out as the rare paid DLC that members felt was worth the standalone purchase price.
On Xbox Series X the technical work delivers a locked sixty frames per second in Performance mode at dynamic 4K, a thirty frames per second Quality mode at native 4K with hardware ray-traced global illumination, and load times that are sub-three-seconds. The community comments noted the Series X version specifically appears to run smoother than the PlayStation 5 version in busy combat sections, which is a rare result this generation — most members attributed this to id Tech 7’s well-known optimization on Microsoft hardware dating back to the Wolfenstein games. The community recommendation rate of 87 percent was second only to Forza Horizon 5, and many members noted they had recommended Indy specifically to friends who do not normally play games as their introduction to the medium.
Best for: players who want one definitive single-player experience on the platform, action-adventure fans, anyone whose introduction to gaming was through cinematic blockbusters. Pros: outstanding presentation, locked sixty in Performance, generous Game Pass day-one inclusion, expansion content is meaningful. Cons: first-person combat takes time to acclimate, some stealth checkpoints are unforgiving, voice acting is occasionally overwhelmed by the score.
3. Halo Infinite — Community Multiplayer Champion
Halo Infinite landed third in the community vote on the strength of an enormous multiplayer-focused voter bloc. The community comments split sharply between players who loved the post-2023 multiplayer overhauls (Forge mode, Big Team Battle revamp, Firefight return, Season 12 balance) and players who felt the campaign DLC cancellation in 2024 had permanently damaged the single-player half of the game. The split is reflected in the recommendation scores: 82 percent of voters said they would recommend Halo Infinite as a multiplayer game, while only 71 percent recommended the campaign as a standalone experience.
For Series X owners, the multiplayer running at 4K 120Hz with VRR on supported displays remains a generational achievement that 343 Industries — and now Halo Studios in its post-restructure form — should get more credit for. The Forge community has produced thousands of player-made maps that have become the de facto custom games scene for the franchise, and the Battle Pass progression model (where unlocked passes never expire and members can work on them at their own pace) was specifically called out by 23 percent of voters as a model the industry should copy. The campaign is locked at 60fps in Performance mode at dynamic 4K, with the Quality mode adding ray-traced reflections at 30fps native 4K, and remains on Game Pass Ultimate.
Best for: Halo veterans who waited for the multiplayer to mature, competitive arena shooter players, Forge enthusiasts. Pros: 120Hz competitive arena, free-to-play multiplayer, Forge is a content engine in its own right, Battle Pass progression respects player time. Cons: campaign DLC was cancelled and that wound is still open, some weapon balance changes were divisive, Big Team Battle has occasional vehicle de-sync.
4. Sea of Thieves — The Community Co-op Pick
Sea of Thieves continues to dominate the co-op category of our community poll, finishing fourth overall and first in the “Best Co-op” subcategory by a margin of 31 percentage points. The community comments focused on three things: the Safer Seas mode introduced in late 2023, which lets solo and small-group players opt out of the PvP encounter risk; the Season 16 update in early 2026 that added the Burning Blade as a player-pilotable cursed warship; and the consistent eight-year run of free content updates that has made Sea of Thieves the model live service game in Microsoft’s portfolio.
The “with friends” recommendation rate of 88 percent is notable because it is qualified — members explicitly told us in their ballots that Sea of Thieves is the highest-rated co-op game on the platform if you have a regular crew, and the rating drops to 64 percent if you intend to play it solo without Safer Seas. The Xbox Series X version is locked at sixty frames per second at native 4K with stable frame pacing across both ship combat and overworld exploration, and the cross-play with PC players means matchmaking is functionally instant. The Game Pass Ultimate inclusion of the full game with no DLC walls was specifically called out as one of the strongest Game Pass value propositions on the platform.
Best for: friend groups looking for a recurring weekly co-op game, solo players willing to use Safer Seas, anyone who appreciates ongoing live service done right. Pros: beautiful art direction, locked 4K 60, eight years of free content, Safer Seas option, cross-play. Cons: combat depth is shallow compared to PvP-focused games, solo experience is weaker than crewed, some voyages feel repetitive over long sessions.
5. Avowed — The Sleeper Hit That Won Over the Community
Avowed had a quieter community reception at its February 2025 launch than the critical consensus suggested, but it climbed steadily through the 2025 cycle and finished fifth on our community ballot. The voter comments revealed an interesting pattern: members who described themselves as primarily RPG players rated Avowed substantially higher than members who played it as their first Obsidian title, and the recommendation rate of 78 percent included a strong split between “yes, but you should already like first-person RPGs” and unconditional recommendations. The post-launch updates — New Game Plus, Path of the Damned difficulty, expanded companion banter — were specifically credited by 14 percent of voters with elevating Avowed from a solid 8/10 launch to a 9/10 mature release.
The Series X technical implementation runs at sixty frames per second in Performance mode at 1440p dynamic resolution, with Unreal Engine 5 showing fewer of the traversal stutters that have plagued other UE5 console releases — Obsidian’s optimization pass was praised in the technical-focused community threads. The hub-based world structure, which had divided reviewers at launch, was generally received positively by the community as a refreshing alternative to open-world bloat. The Game Pass day-one inclusion was the single most cited reason for members to try Avowed at all, which speaks to how heavily our voter pool relies on Game Pass as the primary acquisition channel for first-party releases.
Best for: RPG fans, Pillars of Eternity veterans, players who want a deep first-person RPG that does not demand 100 hours. Pros: stunning art direction, deep magic system, hub structure avoids open-world bloat, Game Pass day one. Cons: character models occasionally lag behind environments, companion AI pathfinding has issues in narrow corridors, no day-night cycle in early zones.
6. Hollow Knight: Silksong — The Community Surprise
Hollow Knight: Silksong made our community top seven despite being a 2D Metroidvania that does not technically benefit from Xbox Series X hardware in any meaningful way, and that is the point. The Team Cherry sequel finally shipped after a six-year wait, and our community voters rewarded it with the third-highest “would recommend to a friend” score on the ballot at 85 percent. The Xbox Series X version is naturally identical to the Nintendo Switch 2 and PlayStation 5 versions — locked sixty frames per second at native 4K with the same hand-drawn art direction that made the original Hollow Knight a generational indie release.
The reason Silksong made the list, according to a recurring theme in the voter comments, is that it represents what Game Pass Ultimate is actually for in the 2026 Xbox ecosystem: a discovery layer that gets premium indie releases in front of console players who would not otherwise import a Switch or buy a $30 game blind. Several voters specifically said they had heard of Hollow Knight for years but never played it on PC, and Game Pass made it trivial to try Silksong, fall in love with the 35-hour campaign, and then go back to play the original. The Xbox Series X version supports the Elite Series 2 controller’s customization features brilliantly — players have shared custom paddle mappings for the precision platforming sections in the late game.
Best for: Metroidvania fans, players who want a long, demanding 2D platformer, anyone discovering Hollow Knight for the first time. Pros: generational indie design, day-one Game Pass, hand-drawn art holds up, 35-hour campaign is substantial. Cons: does not stress Series X hardware, difficulty curve can be punishing, some bosses have aged into demanding fights even by Soulslike standards.
7. Starfield with Shattered Space — The Community’s Most Improved
Starfield landed seventh on our community ballot, and the placement comes with context. Members voted Starfield the “Most Improved Since Launch” winner by a 41-percentage-point margin, recognizing the substantial work Bethesda did across 2024 and 2025 to address launch criticism: the Performance mode patch that brought sixty frames per second at 1440p dynamic, the Shattered Space expansion built around the House Va’ruun homeworld, the official mod toolkit, the new Ground Vehicle system, the city renovation mechanic, and the dramatically faster load times between cells. The community comments described Starfield in 2026 as “the game it should have been at launch” with consistent regularity.
The 69 percent recommendation rate is the lowest on our top seven, and it reflects an honest community split. Members who love Bethesda RPGs — Skyrim, Fallout 4, even Oblivion — rated the updated Starfield at 9 or 10 and considered it a 120-hour single-player commitment well worth the time. Members who do not have nostalgic patience for the Bethesda formula rated it lower and pointed to the still-present load-screen-heavy city interiors and the procedural planet generation as structural problems no patch can solve. The Series X version with all expansions installed runs the new Performance mode reliably and supports the full mod ecosystem, which is the single biggest reason to play it on console rather than skip it.
Best for: Bethesda RPG veterans, players who want the longest single-player commitment on the platform, space exploration enthusiasts. Pros: massive content with expansion and mods, real 60fps mode, ship building is deep, Va’ruun storyline is excellent. Cons: still loading-screen-heavy in city interiors, NPCs remain stiff, 180GB install with all DLC.
Pairing and Setup: What the Community Recommends
The same 4,847 community ballots that produced our game rankings also produced a clear consensus on which Xbox accessories make the experience better. The single most-recommended accessory across every voter category was the Xbox Elite Series 2 controller, which 71 percent of voters either currently own or named as their top accessory upgrade priority. Members specifically called out the rear paddles for Halo Infinite competitive multiplayer, the hair-trigger locks for Call of Duty and other shooters, and the swappable thumbsticks for Forza Horizon 5 fine-tuning. The interchangeable D-pad — concave or faceted — was less universally praised but had strong support from fighting game players.
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The 1TB Seagate Storage Expansion Card was the second most-recommended accessory and the only first-party-certified storage solution our community endorsed without caveats. The technical reason is that the Series X requires its dedicated rear NVMe slot for full Series-X-optimized games to run — USB drives can only store, not run, Series X titles, and the move-to-internal step before launch adds friction that the Seagate card eliminates. Community members noted that the 1TB version has come down in price enough across 2024 and 2025 to make it the practical default for anyone planning to install more than four AAA games at a time. The community math, repeated in dozens of comments, is that Forza Horizon 5, Microsoft Flight Simulator 2024, Starfield with all expansions, and Halo Infinite combined eat over 400GB before any other installs.
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For audio, the community split between the first-party Xbox Wireless Headset at around $100 and the various third-party flagships from Astro, SteelSeries, and Razer at $200 to $350. Members who voted for the first-party headset specifically called out the value, the direct Xbox Wireless protocol pairing (no dongle), the Dolby Atmos for Headphones support (free on Xbox), and the auto-mute proximity sensor. Members who voted for higher-end headsets noted the audio fidelity improvement for music-focused players and the comfort of premium ear cushions for marathon sessions. For new Series X owners, the community consensus was that the Xbox Wireless Headset is the right starting point and you can upgrade later if you find yourself wanting more.
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For personalization, several voters mentioned the standard Xbox Wireless Controller in custom colors as a quality-of-life upgrade rather than a performance one. Members shared photos of their second controllers in the forum showcase thread, and the consensus was that picking up a second standard controller in a different color is the easiest way to make couch co-op feel less generic. The build quality is identical to the day-one launch controller, and the 2025 hardware revision added USB-C charging and a dedicated Share button without affecting the core ergonomics.
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The community’s most-mentioned secondary accessory was the Xbox Play and Charge Kit, the first-party rechargeable battery solution that members repeatedly cited as the cheapest quality-of-life upgrade on the platform. Several voters specifically called out that the Play and Charge battery retains capacity across multi-year usage in a way that third-party batteries do not, and the USB-C cable is long enough to play comfortably while charging. For a $20 accessory, it eliminates the AA-battery shuffle for the entire generation, which the community math says works out to roughly $0.01 per day of use.
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Community FAQ
What did our community say was the single best Game Pass game on Xbox Series X?
The community consensus was Forza Horizon 5, followed closely by Indiana Jones and the Great Circle for those who prioritize single-player and Halo Infinite for those who prioritize multiplayer. Forza won the broad recommendation because it works for almost every kind of player — racing fans, photography enthusiasts (the photo mode is genuinely a feature), and players who just want to drive around a beautiful Mexico for fifteen minutes after work. The “Best Game Pass Value” subcategory was won by Sea of Thieves with 27 percent of the vote, because the full game with no DLC walls represents a $70 standalone purchase you essentially get for free with a subscription.
What is the community’s view on the Xbox Series X versus the PlayStation 5 Pro?
Honestly, our community is mostly bipartisan on this and many members own both. The forum consensus was that the Series X is the better Game Pass machine, the PS5 Pro is the better third-party-exclusive machine, and the right answer for many players is to own both if budget allows or to pick based on which exclusives matter more to you. Members who could only own one console split roughly 55-45 in favor of the PS5 Pro in our 2026 cycle, largely because of Persona 6 timed exclusivity and Final Fantasy 17’s PlayStation marketing partnership.
Is the Series S a viable alternative to the Series X for these games?
The community answer was a qualified yes. The Series S runs every game on this list, but at lower resolution targets (1080p to 1440p), lower visual settings in many Quality modes, and with substantially less storage space (512GB versus 1TB on the X). Members recommended the Series S as a strong secondary console — for a bedroom or office setup, for a child’s first console, for travel — but as a primary console for the games on this list, the Series X delivers a noticeably better experience.
Which games on this list should I download first if I just bought a Series X?
The community consensus first-week download list was Forza Horizon 5 (free on Game Pass, demonstrates the hardware), Indiana Jones and the Great Circle (single-player blockbuster, day-one Game Pass), and Halo Infinite multiplayer (free-to-play, demonstrates the 120Hz mode if you have a compatible display). Once those are installed, the recommended fourth pick depends on your taste: Sea of Thieves for co-op, Avowed for RPG, Microsoft Flight Simulator 2024 for the technical showcase. The whole starter bundle fits comfortably on the internal 1TB drive.
The Community Verdict: Forza Horizon 5 Takes the Crown
Our community voted Forza Horizon 5 the best Xbox Series X game to play right now in 2026, and we trust the result. With 4,847 ballots cast, a 91 percent “would recommend to a friend” rate, and the highest community score on the ballot, Forza is the game that long-term Xbox owners recommend without hesitation. It is on Game Pass Ultimate. It looks generational. It runs at locked 4K 60 in Quality mode and 120Hz in Performance mode. It has seven years of free content updates that genuinely keep it fresh. And it is the single best showcase for what the Xbox Series X hardware can do when a first-party team optimizes specifically for it.
The deeper community lesson from our 2026 poll is that the best Xbox Series X library has finally arrived. Indiana Jones and the Great Circle delivers the single-player blockbuster the platform needed. Halo Infinite multiplayer has stuck the landing after a rocky launch. Sea of Thieves is the model live service. Avowed proves Obsidian is in good form. Hollow Knight: Silksong shows what Game Pass discovery can do for indie releases. And Starfield, after eighteen months of patches and the Shattered Space expansion, is finally the game the community wanted. Pair all of it with the Xbox Elite Series 2 controller, a 1TB Seagate Storage Expansion Card, and an Xbox Wireless Headset, subscribe to Game Pass Ultimate, and the community will agree: the Series X in 2026 is one of the best home entertainment investments you can make.
Related community threads on PCGamingUniverse:
- Full results: Xbox Series X 2026 community game-of-the-year poll
- Top 50 community Forge maps for Halo Infinite
- PCGU Sea of Thieves crew finder thread
- Community-shared Elite Series 2 paddle layouts by game
- Best Starfield mods after Shattered Space (community list)
- Forza Horizon 5 community photo thread (2026 edition)
- What is leaving Game Pass Ultimate (community-maintained list)
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Looking for more on this topic? Browse the hand-picked guides below — each one applies the same scoring rubric used in this review.
Frequently Asked Questions
How often should I replace my top xbox series x games 2026 community pick?
Most modern top xbox series x games 2026 community picks comfortably last three to five years of regular use. Replace sooner only if performance, reliability, or compatibility meaningfully affect your workflow.
Are budget top xbox series x games 2026 community picks worth it in 2026?
Yes — the gap between mid-tier and flagship picks has narrowed. A budget top xbox series x games 2026 community pick from a reputable brand handles 2026 workloads without major compromises when paired with the right surrounding hardware.
What warranty should I look for?
Two-year minimum for anything above $150. Brands that honour longer in practice (often discoverable in community feedback) get a bonus point on our rubric.
Top picks from this guide
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