Best Xbox Games to Start With

High-confidence Xbox picks for players who want one strong place to start, whether that means a giant RPG, a co-op favorite, or one long-term game to keep installed.

2026-04-07 4 693 words
in X f wa
IBBOB Score

If you play on Xbox and want one strong answer fast, start with the game that best matches how you actually use the console: solo deep dives, couch or online co-op, or one forever-game you keep returning to.

Quick Picks  

  • Best overall place to start: Elden Ring
  • Best if you want to play with someone right away: It Takes Two
  • Best if you want one game to keep installed for months: Minecraft

Who This List Is For  

This page is for Xbox players who do not want to browse endlessly by genre and would rather start with a short list of high-confidence picks that each solve a different need well.

It is less useful if you already know you want something extremely specific, like only sports games, only racing games, or only Game Pass-first picks. This list is about strong all-around answers from the current live IBBOB game pages.

The Best Games  

Elden Ring  

  • Why it stands out: It is the strongest all-around Xbox answer if you want a game that feels huge, challenging, and unforgettable from the first hours to the last.
  • Best for: Players who want exploration, boss mastery, and a world that rewards curiosity.
  • Watch out for: It is demanding and not built to hold your hand.

Baldur’s Gate 3  

  • Why it stands out: It is the best Xbox pick if your ideal game is a giant story-led RPG with real choice, party drama, and room to get lost in systems.
  • Best for: Players who want narrative depth and role-playing freedom more than twitch combat.
  • Watch out for: It is long, dense, and asks for real attention.

It Takes Two  

  • Why it stands out: It is still the easiest premium co-op recommendation on Xbox when you want something polished, varied, and immediately fun for two people.
  • Best for: Couples, friends, or family members who want a shared campaign instead of a grind.
  • Watch out for: It is two-player only, so it is useless if you are playing solo.

Monster Hunter: World  

  • Why it stands out: It is the best Xbox hobby-game pick when your group wants progression, mastery, and a reason to keep coming back every week.
  • Best for: Players who enjoy studying enemies, building loadouts, and repeating hunts for visible improvement.
  • Watch out for: It starts slower and asks more from you than a casual co-op game.

Minecraft  

  • Why it stands out: It is the broadest Xbox answer if you want freedom, creativity, and a game that works just as well for solo comfort as it does for hanging out with other people.
  • Best for: Players who want a long-tail sandbox with almost no pressure to play the “right” way.
  • Watch out for: It gives you structure only if you build that structure for yourself.

Fortnite Battle Royale  

  • Why it stands out: It is the cleanest Xbox pick if what you want is one free online game with constant updates, easy squad energy, and almost no barrier to getting started.
  • Best for: Groups who want a social live-service game with broad appeal and regular refreshes.
  • Watch out for: It is an ongoing platform more than a contained game, so churn is part of the package.

How We Picked These Games  

We prioritized Xbox games that answer one of the most common starting needs especially well:

  • one giant solo game worth the time commitment
  • one strong co-op or social recommendation
  • one long-tail game you can keep installed
  • one free or low-friction online option

Where to Go Next  

Final Recommendation  

  • Pick Elden Ring if you want the strongest single-game recommendation on Xbox right now.
  • Pick It Takes Two if you are buying for two people, not one.
  • Pick Minecraft if you want the safest long-term answer for solo play, family play, or group hangouts.
Follow me

I work on everything coding and tweet developer memes