Last updated on June 23, 2026
June is making it very clear it wants you indoors. The lineup of new games this month is stacked with a variety that is genuinely hard to ignore, whether you gravitate toward long-awaited remakes of beloved classics, fresh takes on survival and crafting, or military simulations that demand real teamwork. PC players, PS5 owners, Xbox fans and Nintendo Switch 2 newcomers all have something to look forward to, and the list below cuts straight to the titles worth your time and your SSD space this month.
Here are the top 10 game releases of June 2026 that deserve your attention.
- Fatekeeper
- Gothic 1 Remake
- Hell Let Loose: Vietnam
- Witchspire
- Killer Bean
- EA Sports UFC 6
- The Adventures of Elliot: The Millennium Tales
- Spacecraft
- Voidling Bound
- Solarpunk
Fatekeeper
Indie studio Paraglacial, publishing under THQ Nordic, brings a raw first-person adventure built entirely around player freedom. You explore hand-crafted ruins at your own pace and assemble your own combat identity by combining relics with elemental spells in ways the game never prescribes. Fatekeeper launches into early access this month, with the development roadmap shaped directly by community feedback over the months ahead. If you enjoy games that hand you the tools and step out of the way, this one is worth watching closely.
Gothic 1 Remake
The old continent of Myrtana is back, rebuilt from scratch in Unreal Engine 5 by Alkimia Interactive. The 2001 RPG classic gets the full visual treatment without losing the grim, lived-in atmosphere of its mining colony setting. You still play as the same nameless prisoner, but the camp AI and creature behavior have been completely rewritten to simulate a genuinely reactive world around you. This is the remake fans of the original have been waiting for, and it looks like the studio has treated the source material with genuine respect.
Hell Let Loose: Vietnam
The hardcore military simulation leaves the trenches of Europe behind and moves into the dense, suffocating jungles of Southeast Asia. This standalone title keeps the series formula of massive 50 versus 50 battles intact while introducing attack helicopters and patrol boats that add an entirely new tactical layer to engagements. Coordination through voice communication remains absolutely essential, especially when ambushes can come from any direction in the thick jungle terrain. If you already know Hell Let Loose, you know what kind of commitment this game demands.
Witchspire
Developed by Envar Games, Witchspire takes the survival-crafting genre and filters it through the lens of a magic apprentice rather than the usual axe-wielding survivalist. You team up with other players to raise magical sanctuaries and push back an ancient corruption spreading through the world. The visual style is genuinely striking, blending resource management with creature taming in a way that feels fresh. It is a cooperative experience that rewards patience and planning over raw combat skill.
Killer Bean
Born from an internet cult animation classic, this third-person shooter commits fully to procedurally generated chaos. You play as an assassin coffee bean, but the story, enemies and level layouts change completely with every new campaign run. The whole thing runs on absurd acrobatics, kung-fu momentum and a dark comedic sensibility that refuses to take itself seriously for a single second. It is exactly as ridiculous as it sounds, and that is entirely the point.
EA Sports UFC 6
Electronic Arts returns to the octagon with Alex Pereira and Max Holloway sharing cover duties this year. The headline feature is a new animation system designed to authentically replicate the individual fighting style of each athlete on the roster, making every matchup feel meaningfully different from the last. The new narrative mode called The Legacy walks you through pivotal career moments drawn from real MMA history. For fans of the sport and series alike, this looks like a significant step forward in how the franchise handles authenticity.
The Adventures of Elliot: The Millennium Tales
Square Enix delivers a charming action RPG in their beloved HD-2D visual style, but this one plays differently from their previous entries in that format. Rather than turn-based combat, the adventure of knight Elliot unfolds in real time with a flow that will feel immediately familiar to anyone who grew up with classic Zelda titles. The central mechanic revolves around an artifact that lets you manipulate time, opening up puzzle solutions and shifting the outcome of battles in ways that keep the gameplay constantly interesting.
Spacecraft
Shiro Games put forward an ambitious online space exploration sandbox where the galaxy itself is the playground. You can travel seamlessly from orbit straight down to planetary surfaces without a single loading screen, extracting resources and building fully automated factories along the way. The backbone of the experience is a player-driven economy shaped by massive corporations formed by the community over time. If you enjoy games where the endgame is whatever you make of it, Spacecraft is built for exactly that kind of player.
Voidling Bound
The community has been describing this one as a strange but compelling fusion of Spore and Warframe, and that comparison is hard to shake once you see it in action. You play as a protector of monsters, building bonds with bizarre creatures called Voidlings in order to fight back a devastating parasite threatening the universe. The genetic modification system lets you evolve your Voidlings over time, unlocking new elemental abilities that reshape how you approach combat encounters. It is a genuinely unusual concept that seems to pull it off.
Solarpunk
For anyone who needs a break from the action this month, Solarpunk drops you onto floating islands above the clouds and asks you to build something sustainable rather than survive something hostile. The core loop centers on harnessing solar and wind energy to automate your eco-friendly farm and craft gadgets that make life on the islands easier. It plays beautifully in co-op at a relaxed pace, and a personal airship gives you the freedom to drift out and explore the horizon whenever the mood strikes. It is the kind of game you load up when you want to unwind, and it does that job exceptionally well.
I’m passionate about books and video games. These two great passions represent, for me, a boundless universe where I can “escape” from reality whenever I need or want to. There are so many stories, worlds, and landscapes where I can instantly teleport that I don’t think a whole lifetime would be enough to explore them all (though it would be my greatest dream to be able to).