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| The January 2026 wave of upcoming games coming to Xbox Game Pass |
By Jon Scarr
Xbox has revealed the next wave of games coming to Xbox Game Pass in January, with a mix of major releases, day-one additions, and cloud-enabled titles rolling out across the month.
Highlights include Star Wars Outlaws and Resident Evil Village, alongside several new arrivals launching directly into the service.
Available Today
- Brews & Bastards (Cloud, PC, Xbox Series X|S)
- Little Nightmares Enhanced Edition (Cloud, Handheld, PC, Xbox Series X|S)
Coming Soon to Xbox Game Pass
- Atomfall – January 7 (Cloud, Console, Handheld, PC)
- Lost in Random: The Eternal Die – January 7 (Cloud, Xbox Series X|S, Handheld, PC)
- Rematch – January 7 (Cloud, PC, Xbox Series X|S)
- Warhammer 40,000: Space Marine – Master Crafted Edition – January 7 (Cloud, PC, Xbox Series X|S)
- Final Fantasy – January 8 (Cloud, Xbox Series X|S, PC)
- Star Wars Outlaws – January 13 (Cloud, PC, Xbox Series X|S)
- My Little Pony: A Zephyr Heights Mystery – January 15 (Cloud, Console, Handheld, PC)
- Resident Evil Village – January 20 (Cloud, Console, PC)
- MIO: Memories in Orbit – January 20 (Cloud, Handheld, PC, Xbox Series X|S)
Leaving Xbox Game Pass on January 15
- Flintlock: The Siege of Dawn (Cloud, Handheld, PC, Xbox Series X|S)
- Neon White (Cloud, Console, Handheld, PC)
- Road 96 (Cloud, Console, Handheld, PC)
- The Ascent (Cloud, Console, Handheld, PC)
- The Grinch Christmas Adventures (Cloud, Console, Handheld, PC)
Note: Games listed with a “Handheld” designation are optimized for handheld play.
A Solid Start to 2026 for Game Pass
This January lineup shows how broad Xbox Game Pass feels right now. You’ve got big, easy picks like Star Wars Outlaws and Resident Evil Village, but they’re not crowding out smaller or stranger games. If you want something familiar, it’s there. If you feel like trying something different, there’s room for that too.
It’s also another reminder of how easy it is to move between screens with Game Pass. Most of these games work across console, PC, and cloud, so you’re not locked into one setup. You can start something on the TV, pick it up somewhere else, and not really think about it. That kind of flexibility is a big reason the service still clicks as the year gets moving.

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