Game publisher Sony has released on Tuesday the official lineup of games this year which will be released exclusively for PS4. The company's lineup features the most awaited AAA projects which include "The Last Guardian," "Uncharted 4: A Thief's End," "Firewatch" and "What Remains of Edith Finch," a report from Gamespot said.
"The separated the assortment of games into two lists. The first is for first-party games, meaning that in all likelihood they will be permanently fixed to PlayStation consoles. The second list features more elaborate and ambiguous business arrangements between Sony and third-party studios, meaning the games listed could either be console exclusives (also shipping on PC), or timed exclusives (coming to Xbox One at a later date), or potentially outright exclusives that have yet to be clarified as such," the report said.
Listed below are Sony's lineup for PS4, according to the report.
First-Party Exclusives
- Horizon: Zero Dawn
- Uncharted 4
- The Last Guardian
- Gran Turismo Sport
- Gravity Rush 2
- Ratchet and Clank
- The Tomorrow Children
- Drawn to Death
- Dreams
Console or Timed Exclusives
- Street Fighter 5
- Firewatch
- What Remains of Edith Finch
- Shadow of the Beast
- Boundless
- Nier Automata
- Alienation
- Hellblade
- Paragon
- The Witness
- No Man's Sky
"Yoshida discussed the future of the console and Sony's plans to further the already dominant sales success of the PS4, a gaming system that is widely considered to be the de facto best choice for console gamers based on its support and exclusive titles. Yoshida believes that it will be the combination of an impressive exclusive games lineup for 2016 paired with the long-awaited release of PlayStation VR that will finally sway those who have remained unconvinced regarding purchasing a Sony system," Gamerant said.
"The major innovation in 2016, however, will likely stem from PlayStation VR, formerly known as Project Morpheus. Sony's reveal of the exciting new technology at GDC 2015 explained how the VR technology functions by connecting into an external processing unit that then connects to the console itself, although it remains unclear to what extent the technology will be compatible with each individual game release in the future," the report said.