Skip to main content

The best video games to play while stuck at home

Being stuck at home isn’t fun for anyone, regardless of the reasoning. Thankfully, video games can be a great time-killer when you have some downtime. The best games to play while stuck at home need to be lengthy, replayable, and entertaining enough to keep players occupied for days — or weeks — at a time. Here, we detail some of our favorite games to play while stuck at home, so you can fight off boredom one title at a time.

Further reading

The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim

Image used with permission by copyright holder

One of the most acclaimed video games ever made, The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim has managed to stay relevant for nearly a decade. Its main questline — which features dangerous dragons and a mysterious warrior blessed with their powers — is engaging in its own right and will take hours to complete. On top of that, there are a ton of separate quests featuring a massive civil war, a dark cult of assassins, and werewolves, to name a few — all of which take players into new territory to discover dungeons and powerful enemies.

Without a standard class system, The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim lets players experiment and make their ideal play-style, giving it endless replay value. The game is also loaded with a collection of optional third-party mods that can make the game more challenging or add new elements to the world to spice up the experience for multiple play-throughs.

Read our full The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim review

The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild

Best Game of 2017 The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild
Image used with permission by copyright holder

This Nintendo masterpiece launched only a few years ago, and it is already becoming an influential template for other open-world games. Rather than stick with the standard dungeon-based approach of past Zelda games, which restricted finding new items to set moments in the story, Breath of the Wild makes almost all of Hyrule accessible from the very beginning. One player’s journey is going to be vastly different from another’s, and the emergent gameplay this format encourages makes every session exciting.

Breath of the Wild is a game that can easily still hide secrets after hundreds of hours, but it doesn’t feel like it’s padding its main story by doing so.

Read our full The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild review

Dark Souls trilogy

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Yes, expert players can get through the Dark Souls trilogy in just a few hours. For those who haven’t played it before, however, the total play-through time will be closer to 50 or 75 hours. FromSoftware’s action-role-playing series is notorious for its difficulty, forcing players to memorize enemies’ locations and attacks in order to survive. This makes victory feel that much sweeter, and those who are keen to explore will find tons of hidden areas and bosses.

The Dark Souls trilogy is available on PS4, Xbox One, and PC, while Dark Souls Remastered is also available on Nintendo Switch for anyone looking to play in bed or when someone else is using the television.

Super Mario Maker 2

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Perfect for classic platformer fans and anyone interested in trying out level design, Super Mario Maker 2 contains essentially endless content because of its creation tools. Any player can design their own 2D Mario course and upload it to the game’s servers, where it can then be played by anyone else. If players are interested in making their own levels, perfecting them will take hours on end. Anyone just interested in playing with others’ creations will find a huge number of creative and challenging courses.

There is also a full-fledged single-player campaign in Super Mario Maker 2 that teaches all the basic platforming mechanics and even features a fun story. And if you’re gaming with a roommate or family member, you can play local co-op on one Switch console.

Read our full Super Mario Maker 2 review

Fire Emblem: Three Houses

Byleth from Fire Emblem: Three Houses
Image used with permission by copyright holder

The Fire Emblem games are always fairly long, but this game for Nintendo Switch takes things a step further.

Fire Emblem: Three Houses features three branching storylines, plus a fourth included as premium DLC, and seeing all of its content will take dozens of hours. Even those satisfied with choosing one of the game’s titular three houses and viewing the final credits are committing more than 40 hours to the game, split between academy-based training sections and intense tactical combat. It’s the Fire Emblem series at its peak, with a great story and several difficulty options so players of all ages and skill levels can enjoy.

Death Stranding

Death Stranding gameplay
Kojima Productions

Death Stranding isn’t a game for everyone. It’s extremely slow, with much of its more than 30 hours spent walking in solitude across empty caverns. However, that also makes it a great choice for hunkering down inside, as there is no way to fast-forward through its story. The mysterious science fiction tale is filled with twists from its opening moments to its final credits, and its slow tempo is a nice change compared to other brutally fast AAA games.

Some of Death Stranding’s best moments involve simply walking through a peaceful field marveling at the world while beautiful music grows louder.

Read our full Death Stranding review

Red Dead Redemption II

Image used with permission by copyright holder

The long-awaited prequel to one of the best open-world games ever made, Red Dead Redemption II is stunningly detailed and rich. If players want to avoid the main story and play poker for hours at a time, that is an option, or they could go hunting and find the rarest pelts in America.

Exploring the enormous map Rockstar Games created will take several hours on its own, and when factoring in all the missions and collectibles strewn throughout, Red Dead Redemption II can keep players busy for months. That’s before even considering the multiplayer component Red Dead Online, which is updated constantly with new content and events.

Read our full Red Dead Redemption II review

Tetris 99

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Tetris 99 is a unique game to jump into because it requires 98 other players to enjoy its signature mode. A battle royale take on Tetris, players clear lines with the same pieces they always have, but they then send those lines to other players in an attempt to knock them out.

Mastering the Tetris 99 takes strategy, patience, and a lot of practice at quickly placing pieces, but finally winning a match is a tremendous feeling.

Dreams

media molecule's dreams
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Like Super Mario Maker 2, Dreams is both a sandbox-style creator and a playable game (or, more accurately, hundreds of games) rolled into one. But while Super Mario Maker 2 only creates Mario games, Dreams offers a robust platform that can make nearly any type of game. Gamers have designed various options, like horror games, first-person shooter games, and RPG-style adventure games. Some users have even reimagined classic games and put modern spins on old favorites.

Whether you’re creative or like to game, Dreams has something for everyone. If you want to get creative before you play, you can design a game customized to your liking. Even if you don’t want to design your own game, you can see what other players have created before you start playing.

MLB The Show 20

mlb the show review
Image used with permission by copyright holder

With MLB The Show 20, you can enjoy baseball, albeit virtually, even if the Major Leagues aren’t currently playing. 

MLB The Show 20 is a baseball simulator packed to the gills with features, including Road to the Show mode, Diamond Dynasty, and online multiplayer. It’s the perfect choice for baseball fans missing the more traditional feel of an MLB season in 2020. Now games mirror life since you’re able to play as real Minor League baseball players while you’re working your way up from the lower levels of the game. It may take a lot longer to get good at MLB The Show 20, which may come as a blessing with all the time we are spending hunkering down at home.

Gabe Gurwin
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Gabe Gurwin has been playing games since 1997, beginning with the N64 and the Super Nintendo. He began his journalism career…
Worst video game controllers of all time
tech flops

The best video game controllers are the ones you don't even think about. They let you fully immerse yourself in the game and let you forget you're even holding them. The best controllers today all follow a mostly standard design, but in the early console generations, each system took a completely unique approach. In fact, many consoles would experiment with multiple types of controllers of various shapes, sizes, and input methods. Most of them were bad, and there were a few that were even painful. No matter how amazing the game was to play or how great the graphics were, a bad controller would completely tank the experience. Looking back from the days of the NES up to the PS5, we've recalled the very worst video game controllers of all time.
Dreamcast controller

We're starting off with a tame one here before working our way up. The Dreamcast controller looks fairly standard for the time -- it has an analog stick, D-pad, triggers, and four face buttons. The problem with it is everything else. This thing is somehow bulkier and less comfortable to hold than the original Xbox's Duke controller but made worse because the cable comes out of the bottom rather than the back or top. This made it awkward to handle for any length of time, and even the D-pad and buttons were hard on the thumbs. It wasn't bad enough to cause the console to die the early death it did, but it by no means helped.
Power Glove

Read more
Wizardry takes home the Grammy for best video game soundrack
A green door with a frog face blocks the path in Wizardry: Proving Grounds of the Mad Overlord.

Wizardry: Proving Grounds of the Mad Overlord - Launch Trailer | PS5 & PS4 Games

Wizardry: Proving Grounds of the Mad Overlord claimed the prize for Best Score Soundtrack for Video Games and Other Interactive Media. Penned by Winifred Phillips, the score for the game is appropriately bombastic, especially when its cover hearkens back to pulp fantasy books of the 1980s.

Read more
The hardest boss fights in video game history
Sans telling the player they're about to have a bad time.

From the first console generation to the last, there have always been boss fights. These battles upped the difficulty to test players on all the skills they learned up until that point and push them even further beyond. Boss fights come in all shapes and sizes depending on the genre, such as shooters and fighting games, but they always stand as the game's highest challenge. A perfectly tuned boss fight can be the highlight of a given game, but if it leans a bit too far one way or the other in terms of difficulty, it can fall flat. An easy boss fight is dull, but one that is way, way too hard can completely ruin a game. Thankfully, most games hide their intentionally punishing bosses as secret or optional challenges, but there are a few that have caused many players to give up before seeing the credits roll. We don't know if any upcoming video games will feature bosses harder than these brutal battles from all of video game history.
Sans - Undertale

One of the most unique aspects of Undertale is the fact that you don't actually have to kill a single enemy. You can play the game as a complete pacifist and are rewarded for it. However, anyone who opts to go the opposite direction and aim for the genocide ending will be faced with the most difficult boss in the game: Sans. The normally cheerful and joking skeleton will show up as your final opponent to stop your rampage and will probably be successful. Each of his attacks, which play out in various iterations of bullet-hell-style dodging sequences, require near-perfect execution and memorization to avoid. Even though you will have a ton of HP at this point, even a single too early can ruin your run since his attacks will inflict poison and slowly dwindle your health away. Unlike most bosses, this one really makes you feel like you're not supposed to win.
Mike Tyson - Mike Tyson's Punch-Out!!

Read more