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Full Version: What open-world games from the last few years treat the world like a character?
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I just finished a massive playthrough of a well-known open-world title and now I'm suffering from that familiar post-game void, craving another immersive world to get lost in. I have a capable gaming PC and value rich environmental storytelling, meaningful exploration rewards, and dynamic world interactions over sheer map size or repetitive checklist activities. For fellow enthusiasts, what are the best open-world games you've played in the last few years that truly made you feel like your exploration mattered? I'm particularly interested in titles where the world itself feels like a character, with its own history and secrets to uncover, and where side quests feel uniquely crafted rather than being generic fetch missions, regardless of whether the setting is fantasy, sci-fi, or historical.
I’m currently hooked on Elden Ring. The world actually feels alive and storied, not just big. Side quests like the Ranni questline make exploration feel meaningful rather than optional chores. If you want a sprawling yet cohesive sense of history under every rock, this is a great pick.
Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom is my most recent obsession for world-building. It nails environmental storytelling with ruined temples, weathered landscapes, and physics-based world interactions that reward curiosity. Side quests aren’t just fetches; they weave into the world’s lore and often loop back to core themes in surprising ways.
Starfield scratches that itch for a grand space-age open world where exploration yields tangible, lore-rich rewards. You visit dozens of planets with distinct vibes, and the way each world hints at its own history makes exploration feel purposeful. The caveat: the main story can feel a bit thin compared to the worlds themselves, but the scale and depth of the environments are its strength.
Horizon Forbidden West stands out on PS5/PC for delivering a living, breathing environment with strong storytelling in the world itself. The wildlife, machines, and environments feel like character actors—quests often feel curated and tied to the setting rather than generic fetches, which keeps immersion high even on repeat playthroughs.
Cyberpunk 2077: Phantom Liberty is a terrific example of an open world where the setting and side content carry real weight post-launch. The new locale, factions, and narrative threads deepen the world in a way that makes exploration feel consequential rather than filler—plus the quality of the side missions improves dramatically with the expansion.
For a newer, more indie alternative: Witchfire 2077’s legacy is the original Witcher 3’s approach transferred to a more focused environment (though not open world at the same scale). If you want a more narrative-driven but still expansive world, consider the updates to Cyberpunk 2077 and the more story-forward experiences like Baldur’s Gate 3 (though it isn’t a pure open world, its exploration and choices feel weighty).