Gazettely’s 10 Best Open World Games of 2023: Worlds Without Limits

Join us on a guided tour through 10 of the most astonishing virtual realms ever created. From daring journeys across alien planets to magical secret passageways inside Hogwarts, 2023’s open-worlds set interactivity milestones.

As the clock ticks closer to midnight and we prepare to usher in 2024, it’s time to reflect on the standout open world gaming experiences that 2023 gifted us. This past year was stuffed to bursting with rich, vibrant virtual places begging us to ditch reality and lose hundreds of starry-eyed hours to exploration and adventure.

From homecoming tours of beloved fantasy realms to maiden voyages through uncharted galaxies, 2023’s open worlds enveloped our imaginations and unlocked our inner wanderlusts as few years before. We delved into mysterious forests concealing primeval secrets. We assembled odd jobs throughout cozy neighborhood Manhattan to earn rent money and smiles. We wandered ancient streets and surveyed towering architecture unchanged for centuries.

Most memorably, we said tearful goodbyes to courageous heroes who captured our hearts across valiant multi-game journeys. 2023 marked the end of epic gaming sagas over a decade in the telling. The privilege of accompanying these icons on their last travels is something we’ll always treasure.

Yes, when gaming historians reflect on this defining year, it will be the vibrant worlds and personalities that standout brightest. The industry raised the open world bar higher than ever before. Just thinking about the magical places 2023 let us visit helps dull the sadness from closing its final chapter. But now new quests await when the calendar turns. More undiscovered country lies ahead. Our controllers beckon for another round.

10. Sons of the Forest: Primal Peril Awaits in the Open Wilds

Sons of the Forest

Nearly a decade after The Forest marooned players on a remote, cannibal-plagued island, Sons of the Forest finally lets us venture back into the jaws of peril. This long-awaited sequel retains the knuckle-whitening tension and towering trees of the primordial paradise while expanding the world into a fully open-world survival playground.

With total freedom to explore the lush tropics and frigid mountain peaks as you see fit, the threat of attack comes from all sides in Sons of the Forest. The AI tribe seems craftier and more ruthless, using the new seasonal cycles to conceal attacks in fierce blizzards or stalk through autumnal foliage. And the wide-open spaces only heighten the isolation and vulnerability by exposing you to extremes of weather and terrain. It’s a terrifying wide-world sandbox where you’re very much on the menu items.

But with expanded base-building and crafting options, plus four-player online co-op, players have more ways to try enduring the horror. Just when you think you’ve found safe haven, though, the cannibal war drums echo through the forest – you’re never truly safe here. For those who crave grueling, free-range survival challenges, Sons of the Forest ensures the open world is as unforgiving as they come. The risks are grave, but the rewards of withstanding this untamed Eden makes Sons an essential 2023 adventure.

9. Atomic Heart: A Retro-Futuristic Open World Run Amok

On paper, Atomic Heart’s premise evokes kitschy sci-fi pulp serials – you play as a Soviet special agent in 1955 who must contain a robotic uprising across a sprawling facility. But somehow through brilliant writing and environmental storytelling, the game crafts a poignant narrative about humanity’s light and dark instincts. And anchoring this unique vision is a decidedly open-world structure that maximizes creative combat scenarios against the wayward machines.

While objective markers loosely guide your investigation through the varied zones, Atomic Heart encourages improvisational pathways using an increasing arsenal of experimental gadgets and abilities. Boss battles become wide-scale ballets of telekinetic debris hurtling through expansive chambers. Every environment turns into a sandbox laboratory for disabling behemoth enemies via clever combinations of weapon effects. Likewise, branching dialogue choices alter relationships and outcomes while upholding moral ambiguity about prejudice.

What seems like campy alternative history on the surface unfolds into a profound inspection of ethics and technology – all while letting you wildly unleash an ever-growing repertoire of attacks across its open worlds. Atomic Heart is a one-of-a-kind cerebral actioner.

8. Tchia: A Laidback Tropical Trek Across People and Animals

Tchia’s vibrant archipelago setting clearly takes inspiration from New Caledonia, but this charming indie transcends just mimicking tropical tropes. With its playful Soul Jumping mechanic allowing you to possess any animal, Tchia emphasizes community and environmental conscientiousness across its open seas and verdant landscapes.

By inhabiting both humans and creatures during your travelogue, Tchia fosters compassion and understanding for the island residents who feel more like family by journey’s end. And when traversing territories as a pig or bird, maintaining stamina suddenly makes lush flora and clean waters feel essential to survival. It’s a wholesome shift in perspective that colors the whole archipelago as a shared habitat needing protection.

While light on complex missions, Tchia inspires investment instead through its warm locales and personalities. The biomes burst with handicrafts and stories that make you an active participant in cultural traditions. And with no shortage of delightful diversions – like snowboarding down grassy hills as a penguin – Tchia bubbles over with tropical delights begging you to soak up its chill vibes. Don’t be surprised if you sudden have urges to learn the ukulele or mix fruity cocktails after just a few hours here.

7. Hogwarts Legacy: Immerse Yourself in The Wizarding World

Harry Potter fans have dreamt about wandering the hallowed halls of Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry for decades now. Hogwarts Legacy finally makes those long-held fantasies an open-world reality. Beyond just offering a fastidiously faithful recreation of JK Rowling’s beloved landmarks like the Grand Staircase and Gryffindor Common Room, developer Avalanche also expands the scope to never-before-seen environs.

These fresh territories – from the mystical Outer Isles to a robust hub world in Hogsmeade Village – deepen series lore while strengthening the immersive scope as an RPG. Core to the experience remains attending magical lessons, joining Houses, and honing your wizarding talents though. Studiously prepping for tests or excelling at Quidditch matches here proves just as essential as besting trolls in combat when fully realizing your Hogwarts Alter-Ego.

For Potter devotees, simply just being at Hogwarts captures all the magic and whimsy they dreamed about for ages. But Hogwarts Legacy enhances the world into a fully realized wizarding life simulator poised to gobble up hundreds of hours. Consider your letter from Hogwarts finally arrived – time to let those Harry Potter fantasies run wild across the expansive grounds.

6. Star Wars Jedi: Survivor – Cal Kestis’ Darkest Odyssey

After destroying a Holocron housing Force-sensitive children in Fallen Order, Cal Kestis reemerges five years later as a battle-hardened fugitive being ruthlessly hunted by the Empire in Star Wars Jedi: Survivor. This grimmer galaxy tour revisits some locales like the Wookie homeworld Kashyyyk while venturing into the uncharted ocean moon Jabiim and other stark frontiers.

But more than just offering visual variety, these hostile alien vistas channel Cal’s desperate mindset, forcing him to tap into more aggressive Force abilities against overwhelming odds. Whether harnessing Force lightning to disable machinery or commandeering droids amid intense firefights, signature Jedi skills now pack grittier, more improvisational punch – as Survivor’s expanded Soulslike melee captures Cal’s raw physicality and trauma.

While Survivor’s larger worlds evoke the familiar Star Wars milieu, its deadlier obstacle courses and high-risk set-pieces are designed specifically around testing Cal’s new survival skills against ruthless enemies. The open-ended level layouts encourage lateral experimentation where environmental hazards can serve as devastating tactical advantages. So while Cal appears hopelessly outmatched, the calculating warrior within begins to shine brighter than his Jedi weapon against the darkness.

5. Assassin’s Creed Mirage: A Nimble Return to Stealth Roots

After sprawling role-playing epics in fantastical ancient worlds, Assassin’s Creed comes home to its urban traversal roots with Mirage. Set during medieval-era Baghdad’s cultural zenith, Mirage condenses its city scale to emphasize verticality in its design and nimble navigation challenges that test both combat and parkour dexterity.

Refining gameplay towards mobility and subterfuge means missions reward swift assassinations, narrow escapes across dizzying heights, and harmonizing your moveset with specific gear loadouts tailored around calculated preparation. Mirage doubles down on close-quarters blade confrontations while emphasizing impromptu environmental tactics – like using crowds or merchant stalls for quick evasions.

Ubisoft also injects more meaningful NPC interactions and routine behaviors to reinforce Baghdad’s vibrant ambience and heighten emergent scenarios. Whether assisting a scholar’s mathematical research or liberating enslaved citizens from cruel viziers, Mirage’s enhanced world logic helps ground your one-assassin uprising in local interests. By keeping its world compact but dense with parkour possibilities, Mirage brings back that signature Assassin’s Creed fantasy.

4. Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora – Protecting a Lush Alien Utopia

James Cameron’s cinematic return to the alien utopia of Pandora arrives just in time for gamers to also visit its bioluminescent rainforests and majestic floating peaks in Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora. Set in the never-before-seen Western Frontier region, Frontiers presents a window into Na’vi culture still thriving harmoniously with other indigenous species.

Developer Massive Entertainment leverages next-gen hardware to fully render Pandora’s transcendent sci-fi ecology – right down to every alien insect and plant. Guiding your Na’vi hero through dense jungles or across impossibly steep cliffsides reveals jaw-dropping attention to alien world-building. Most memorably, panoramic skyborn kingdom vistas materialize with true cinematic splendor.

But Frontiers’ greatest success lies not just in visual splendor but making Pandora’s vulnerable beauty a core motivator. As the Na’Vi, preserving sacred ancestral grounds from human invasion fosters an intimate protective bond. Having wildlife aid your resistance efforts also shows increased ecological awareness towards preserving Pandora’s delicate balance. Few virtual worlds evoke an innate desire to safeguard nature as poignantly as Avatar – where every alien element feels like a wondrous discovery yet fragile treasure.

3. Starfield – The Space Opera Renaissance Has Begun

As gaming’s most coveted manufacturers of endless role-playing freedom, expectations have awailed ambitions new IP from Bethesda Game Studios for ages. Yet somehow Starfield still manages to astonish in scale, scope and graphic fidelity across its simulate-able Milky Way galaxy. With over 1000 explorable planets comprising entirely unique environments, cultures and visual palettes, Starfield’s breadth as both an interstellar simulator and open-world quest hub is simply unprecedented.

Spaceflight mechanics offer deep customization for your vessel while skill trees enable broad playstyle customization towards diplomacy, combat or commerce specialities. Exploring alien landscapes or space station counter cultures rewards investment with meaningful factions choices that avoid binary morality. Everything coheres around engrossing lore codexes for charting your personalized journey through the stars. Even just gazing upon the smallest discoveries like an impressive nebula feels positively astounding thanks to Starfield’s unrivaled cosmic rendering.

For all its technical milestones though, Starfield’s magic resides in the childlike awe and limitless opportunity driving your individual galactic roadtrip. Brace for a renaissance in spacefaring adventures where whole lifetimes still couldn’t uncover all secrets. The vast expanse awaits.

2. Marvel’s Spider-Man 2: The Greatest Superhero Fantasy Refined

Insomniac Games already delivered an exhilarating open-world realized of the web-slinging fantasy back in 2018. But everything we loved about being Spider-Man has now been enhanced and expanded for the PS5 sequel. The boroughs of Peter Parker’s New York City encompass even more verticality for high-flying feats alongside miles of additional street-level locales like Queens and Brooklyn.

Equally important, you can now also freely roam as Miles Morales, whose flashy bio-electric moves add more kinetic flavor when covering distance. Web-swinging feels faster and more physics-based across both movesets, introducing more skill expression for navigating the concrete jungle. Likewise, signature toolbox abilities have upgraded for more versatile functionality during urban exploration or chaotic combat.

Speaking of brawling – prepare for elaborate boss battles with classic rogues like The Lizard that fully embrace Spidey’s superpowered mobility. Between managing destructive set-pieces and skillfully overcoming multiple enemy types, the sequel leans into cinematic spectacle without undermining player creativity. And the crimes Peter/Miles can involve themselves range from petty theft to supernatural mysteries, bringing welcome unpredictability.

Whether you fancy web-swinging like an Olympian gymnast or roleplaying anFriendly Neighborhood’ do-gooder, Spider-Man 2 perfects everything that defined its sensational predecessor. This is open-world superhero wish-fulfillment done right. Excelsior!

1. The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom – Redefining Open-World Design

In the same way Ocarina of Time proved foundational for 3D game worlds decades ago, Breath of the Wild recently redefined freedom and exploration with its algo open-air Hyrule. Rather than retreading the past, Tears of the Kingdom finds inspiration upwards – adding entire Sky Islands and subterranean depths called The Depths connected vertically.

This amplified sense of scale and discovery remains rooted in nonlinear progression though. Obtaining tools from floating realms may help uncover hidden treasures back on Hyrule’s surface. Or Brightbloom seeds found underground can sustain Link against corruption lurking in the stratosphere. It’s a brilliant synergy constantly rewarding inquisitive wandering between layers.

Equally impressive is the refined world logic, where weather patterns and NPC behaviors help Hyrule feel more alive and unpredictable. Systems elegantly interweave too – like weapon durability forcing you to always consider environments providing improvised attacks. Everything coheres towards heightening immersion and possibility rather than hand-holding your path.

At its core, Tears understands open worlds are magical when they simulate the unscripted magic of reality full of secrets waiting to be unearthed. It strikes a perfect balance between Nintendo charm and frontier spirit for trailblazing your own legends. That pioneering sense of mystery and freedom to chart any journey is why Hyrule remains gaming’s timeless promised land. All hail the king.

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