Multiplayer games are peculiar in that they tend to live on for many years thanks to updates, expansions, DLCs, and whatnot. This means many gamers will continue enjoying what they've been playing in 2020 even in the coming months; even so, there are some brand new multiplayer games worthy of attention coming your way soon.
Also on Wccftech's Most Anticipated Games of 2021: Action, Strategy & Simulation, Sports & Racing, Horror, Indie, Virtual Reality, Adventure, Fighting, Platforming, Shooter
Outriders is now set to launch on April 1st, though a free demo will be available on February 25th.
Following the cancellations of Breakaway and Crucible, the pressure is all on New World to not be the third Amazon failure out of the company's three original game projects. As it stands, what we've played shows an interesting world and solid combat, but it is unclear whether there will be enough content to keep players coming back as they should in a game like this.
Deathloop's main character Colt is an assassin stuck in a time loop, forced to eliminate eight targets before midnight (without being killed himself, of course). However, players will also get the opportunity to play as his antagonist Julianna, essentially invading another player's game in a way akin to what we've seen in the Dark Souls series.
Evil Dead: The Game also sounds a lot like it, to be honest. This one is being made by Saber Interactive, which already found success with a similar formula in World War Z, and promises to feature characters and locations from the IP as well as both co-op and PvP modes (like Back 4 Blood).
Lastly for this horror trio of multiplayer games, there's The Outlast Trials. We don't know much about this one, but it will probably be a bit different than the other two; players are going to be forced to deal with the bizarre and sadistic experiments of the Murkoff Corporation.
With Darktide, Fatshark is going to the futuristic version of Warhammer. This fact alone is also going to skew the gameplay more towards ranged combat rather than the overwhelmingly melee action of Vermintide.
Darktide will be a PC and Xbox Series S|X exclusive at launch, which means PlayStation fans will have to look elsewhere.
For instance, Destruction AllStars is the first PlayStation exclusive in a long time to be fully focused on multiplayer. The vehicular combat game will be included with the PlayStation Plus subscription once it's out next month, which should ensure a meaningful base of potential players.
Of course, there's Halo Infinite's multiplayer mode. We know no real concrete details, but it is expected to be very substantial when the game lands in the Fall season, after a full year of delay.
Then, beyond the obvious new Call of Duty title, Battlefield fans will get a new installment from DICE sometime in the Fall season.
Riders Republic sees Ubisoft once again attempting to do the MMO sports/racing thing, after The Crew and Steep. Up to 50 players will get to partake in the following activities: mountain biking, skiing, snowboarding, wingsuit flying, and rocket wingsuiting.
Elite Dangerous: Odyssey is technically an expansion, but it might as well be a standalone game for the Copernican revolution it's bringing to the game and franchise, allowing spacefarers to land and explore the surface of planets in first-person view at last.
On the MMO front, new expansions will be unveiled soon for both Elder Scrolls Online (titled Gates of Oblivion) and Final Fantasy XIV (currently unknown).
Last but not least, Starbase is a highly ambitious vertex-voxel space MMO where players, taking the role of robots, will find a fully editable (and destructible) galaxy once the title comes out on Steam Early Access (supposedly soon, in the first quarter of 2021).