Elijah Gonzalez's Top 10 Games of 2023
Elijah Gonzalez is Paste’s assistant TV editor and a regular contributor to our games section. Today he shares his personal picks for the top 10 games of 2023.
2023 is coming to a close, and in many ways, it feels like another nightmare year in a long procession of nightmare years. Beyond the dire headlines elsewhere, journalism and media criticism continued its financial tailspin in the games sphere, resulting in numerous outlets being gutted or closed down for good. Meanwhile, droves of talented devs were laid off even though we just finished writing all those headlines about how game publishers have been printing money for the last few years. Yes, I understand how ongoing inflation and interest rates work and why the bean counters claim they needed to cull their workforces in response to these forces, but it’s not hard to envision a different videogame landscape where instead of allowing shareholders to gorge on profits until they’ve completely sucked marrow from the bone, some of that money could, you know, be set aside so the developers who brought in those profits don’t need to be fired when there’s mild financial headwinds?
However, while it’s myopic to only look at the quality of game releases to determine how “good” things were for the medium, it’s still very much worth celebrating the great work people did, as this was undeniably a very impressive year for videogame releases. One of the best many have claimed, specifically regarding the marquee titles that managed to unite playing habits across increasingly disparate media diets. We had plenty of sequels that more than delivered on long-building anticipation, unexpected success stories, and an untold number of smaller projects doing interesting things that probably won’t receive the full attention they deserve. I played some of these games. As always, not as many as I would have liked, but still quite a few. Some of them hit on a deep level, immersing me in spell-binding mysteries, horrific hellscapes, or cultural circumstances that came from the heart. In others, I played as a little guy who ran around, which was also very fun and sorely needed. Let’s dive into the games that have me yelling from the rooftops, “Please play this weird little indie and/or large release you probably already know about!”
(Also, congrats to Baldur’s Gate III, which I’ll preemptively name my favorite “2023 Game of 2024.” It’s been in my Steam library for months, but I haven’t gotten a chance to check it out yet. Hopefully, I’ll get to know that vampire elf twink soon enough.)
10. Paranormasight: The Seven Mysteries of Honjo

Considering the overwhelming number of games released every year, there will always be plenty that don’t get the attention they deserve. I’m not exactly sure how well it performed, but the general lack of chatter about Paranormasight: The Seven Mysteries of Honjo makes me worry it falls into this camp. It’s a horror-tinged adventure game/visual novel that uses metatextual tricks and a well-constructed central mystery to subvert expectations. While I’ll avoid specifics, I’ll just say that director Takanari Ishiyami’s previous work on Metal Gear Solid and a long line of detective games is apparent in this one’s clever mechanical and narrative twists. Beyond these cerebral turns, this narrative lands thanks to its ability to convincingly mix tragedy and the macabre with anime-style earnestness, resulting in a unique tonal blend that feels like it was brewed with my personal preferences in mind. If you enjoy horror and visual novels, please check out this dang videogame.
9. A Space for the Unbound

One of the best trends in the modern videogame industry is that it feels like works from all over the world are finally getting their due, allowing developers to tell stories about their own specific cultural experiences. An excellent example is A Space for the Unbound, a narrative-focused adventure game from Mojiken Studio set in ‘90s Indonesia that uses gorgeous pixel art and a cast of sympathetic characters to paint an achingly particular picture of this time and place. We follow Atma and Raya, two high schoolers who uncover a strange phenomenon that threatens their small town. Over the course of this story, it’s hard not to internalize every corner of this neighborhood, from the local arcade full of Street Fighter references to a bridge foregrounded against an impossibly vibrant sky, these backdrops dripping with nostalgic details that make them feel pulled from memory. However, more than just delivering an idealized vision of the past, this well-rendered setting ties us to the emotional journey of its cast, building towards reveals about the dark sentiments lingering in their hearts. It may be a slow burn early on, but it all culminates in a powerful climax that thoughtfully handles depictions of mental health issues like depression, making for one of the most moving finales in recent memory.
8. Xenoblade Chronicles 3: Future Redeemed







