Last updated on January 25, 2026
In 2026, survival games on PS5 feel sharper and more absorbing than ever, because they turn everyday choices into consequences you actually have to live with. A “quick” run for supplies becomes a chain of problems: weather shifts, tools break, your inventory fills with the wrong things, and suddenly the safest decision is the one you did not plan for. That is the hook these PS5 survival titles nail when they are at their best, not the monsters or the crafting menus, but the pressure of making do, learning the map the hard way, and earning progress inch by inch.
So here is the top 10 survival games for ps5 in 2026 selected by us.
- Dying Light: The Beast
- Subnautica: Below Zero
- Green Hell
- Pacific Drive
- Dead Island 2
- No Man’s Sky
- Grounded
- FrostPunk 2
- ARK: Survival Ascended
- Forever Skies
Dying Light: The Beast
Techland’s standalone 2025 entry drops you into Castor Woods, a rural resort area in the Western Alps that has gone completely sideways after the outbreak. You still get the series’ signature parkour and day night danger swing, but the twist is Kyle Crane’s “Beast Mode”, which turns survival into something more feral when you choose to lean into it.
Subnautica: Below Zero
Set in Sector Zero on planet 4546B, Below Zero trades the open lonely sprawl of the original for a colder, more focused survival story. You are still scraping together tools and oxygen from whatever you can scavenge, but this time there’s a clearer personal thread pulling you forward as you dig into what happened to your sister, with blizzards and unfamiliar waters making every trip feel like a gamble.
Green Hell
In Green Hell, the rainforest is the main enemy. The game focuses on day-to-day survival problems that don’t look dramatic on paper but feel brutal in practice, keeping yourself fed, staying healthy, and handling injuries before they turn into a bigger mess.
Pacific Drive
A survival game where your best friend and biggest responsibility is a station wagon, and the road itself is the problem. You drive through a warped version of Washington’s Olympic Peninsula, dodging anomalies, scavenging what you can, then limping back to the garage to patch the car up for the next run.
Dead Island 2
Set in a quarantined Los Angeles, this sequel leans into action RPG pacing: different playable “Slayers,” lots of weapon chaos, and a zombie outbreak that never stops being up close and messy. It is less about quiet endurance and more about surviving by staying aggressive.
No Man’s Sky
Hello Games’ space survival sandbox is built around exploration and resource management across a procedurally generated universe with a mind bending number of planets. Survive long enough, and it turns into a personal sci fi routine: fixing ships, scanning wildlife, building bases, trading, then picking a direction and seeing what you find.
Grounded
Obsidian’s backyard survival game is simple to pitch and surprisingly intense to play: you are shrunk to ant size and everything in the grass becomes a threat, especially the spiders. It mixes crafty progression with that constant childlike dread of being too small in a world that does not notice you.
FrostPunk 2
A city builder that treats survival like politics with consequences, set decades after the first game’s catastrophe. The harder part isn’t keeping the city warm, it’s keeping it together — factions pull in different directions, and every compromise has a cost.
ARK: Survival Ascended
Built in Unreal Engine 5, Survival Ascended is a modern rebuild of ARK’s original loop: waking up with nothing, scraping together tools, and eventually turning chaos into an empire — assuming the island doesn’t humble you first.
Forever Skies
This is a first person survival game on a ruined Earth, where you live out of a high tech airship, upgrading it as your mobile home while you drop to the surface to scavenge and push deeper into the mystery. It is survival with a workshop vibe, part exploration, part “keep the ship running or you are done.”
I write for Need4Games, mostly keeping track of what’s coming next. I cover showcases and release updates, put together quick lists when you just want the highlights, and I’ll post Steam deal roundups when the sales get wild. I play a lot of games, so I tend to look at games through that lens. No overthinking, just: what it is, why it’s interesting, and if it’s actually worth your time. I also stream now and then on Twitch.