ZG
Best Open-World RPGs Worth Losing 100 Hours In
featureFeature

Best Open-World RPGs Worth Losing 100 Hours In

April 22, 2026·7 min read
Dylan Turck
Dylan Turck

These are the worlds that do more than look big on a map. They make wandering, questing, building a character, and getting distracted for three straight hours feel like the same pleasure.

Open-world RPGs are easy to oversell because size is the first thing everyone notices. Big map. Big promise. Big playtime number on the back of the box. The better ones understand that space on its own means very little. What matters is whether the world keeps giving you reasons to care once the novelty wears off, and whether your build, your choices, and your curiosity all feel like part of the same adventure. Recent genre roundups still keep circling the same handful of names for exactly that reason.

I kept this list fairly strict. These are RPGs first, open worlds second, even if some lean harder into combat and others lean harder into story or simulation. The order is not about which game has the biggest landmass. It is about which ones feel richest to actually live in, from the very good games that show a little wear to the absolute monsters that can still eat a long weekend without blinking.

7. The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim Anniversary Edition

There is no point pretending Skyrim is still here on nostalgia alone. It is here because wandering through it still works. Pick a direction, find a cave, get dragged into a guild line, steal something you did not need, stumble onto a dragon, and suddenly the evening is gone. The Anniversary Edition helps by stuffing the game with Creation Club additions, including extra quests, dungeons, bosses, weapons, and spells, which makes an already generous sandbox feel even denser.

It ranks seventh because the age does show. Combat has never been the sharpest thing about it, and plenty of quest writing feels blunter now than it did in 2011. But almost no fantasy RPG has ever understood the simple joy of “go over there and see what happens” as well as this one. That still counts for a lot.
The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim - Anniversary Edition
5/10

The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim - Anniversary Edition

Xbox Series X|SPlayStation 4Nintendo Switch 2

Released

November 11, 2021

Developer

Bethesda Game Studios

Publisher

Bethesda Softworks

Systems
Xbox Series X|S
PlayStation 4
Nintendo Switch 2
PC (Microsoft Windows)
PlayStation 5
Xbox One
Nintendo Switch

6. Dragon’s Dogma 2

This is the unruliest game on the list, which is also why people fall so hard for it. The whole thing is built around the idea that travel should feel a little dangerous and a little inconvenient. You do not just fast-travel your way through the world and hoover up icons. You head out with your pawns, get jumped on the road, get distracted by a cave, end up climbing a griffin in the dark, and realize the trip itself has become the story.

It lands here because that friction cuts both ways. The quests are less memorable than the best games above it, and the rough edges are part of the package whether you want them or not. But as a pure open-world RPG about adventure having teeth, it is one of the most convincing in years. Few games make setting out into the wild feel this uncertain or this alive.
Dragon's Dogma II
4/10

Dragon's Dogma II

Xbox Series X|SPC (Microsoft Windows)PlayStation 5

Released

March 22, 2024

Developer

Capcom Development Division 1

Publisher

Capcom

Systems
Xbox Series X|S
PC (Microsoft Windows)
PlayStation 5

5. Cyberpunk 2077

Night City does a huge amount of the heavy lifting here, but that is fine because Night City is one of the best modern game worlds full stop. The current version of Cyberpunk 2077 feels much closer to the game people hoped it would be in the first place: a story-driven open-world RPG where the city itself has a pulse, and where builds finally support very different versions of V instead of nudging everyone back toward the same broad shape.

That is why it lands in the middle rather than lower. The story is strong, the side jobs often hit harder than expected, and Dogtown gave the larger package a grimy extra district that fits the mood perfectly. It does not climb higher because its role-playing still feels narrower than the top four. But for atmosphere, momentum, and the feeling of living in a city that never really calms down, it is outstanding.
Cyberpunk 2077
5/10

Cyberpunk 2077

Google StadiaXbox Series X|SPlayStation 4

Released

December 10, 2020

Developer

CD Projekt RED

Publisher

CD Projekt

Systems
Google Stadia
Xbox Series X|S
PlayStation 4
Nintendo Switch 2
PC (Microsoft Windows)
PlayStation 5
Mac
Xbox One

4. Fallout: New Vegas

Some open-world RPGs are about freedom in the broadest sense. New Vegas is more specific than that. It is about power, factions, and deciding which bad answer you can live with. That political texture is what keeps it near the top of lists like this all these years later. Even now, very few games are this good at making conversations, allegiances, and reputation feel like they matter as much as the fights.

It stops at four because you can feel the age in the shooting, the animations, and parts of the world design. But the writing still bites, the Mojave still has a dusty personality of its own, and the role-playing remains some of the best the genre has produced. If you like your open worlds a little uglier and a lot smarter, this is still a hard game to top.
Fallout: New Vegas
5/10

Fallout: New Vegas

PlayStation 3PC (Microsoft Windows)Xbox 360

Released

October 19, 2010

Developer

Obsidian Entertainment

Publisher

Bandai Namco Entertainment

Systems
PlayStation 3
PC (Microsoft Windows)
Xbox 360

3. Kingdom Come: Deliverance II

This is the grounded one, the game that refuses to solve every problem with magic bloodlines or destiny talk. You are still Henry, still a blacksmith’s son, and the world around him still treats status, skill, and reputation like things that have to be earned. That gives the whole adventure a texture fantasy RPGs often lose. The historical setting is not just wallpaper. It shapes how people speak to you, what they expect from you, and how much trouble a bad decision can cause.

What pushes it this high is the way its systems reinforce the setting. Quests are open-ended, the world feels believable rather than decorative, and the RPG side of the experience runs deeper than it first appears. You can fight your way through trouble, talk your way around it, or make life harder for yourself by being thoughtless in public. It misses the top two only because those games have even more pull once you are fully lost inside them.
Kingdom Come: Deliverance II
4/10

Kingdom Come: Deliverance II

Xbox Series X|SPC (Microsoft Windows)PlayStation 5

Released

February 4, 2025

Developer

Warhorse Studios

Publisher

Deep Silver

Systems
Xbox Series X|S
PC (Microsoft Windows)
PlayStation 5

2. The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt

If you only judge open-world RPGs by how good their side content is, this could still be number one. The main plot is strong, but the real magic is in the smaller stories: contracts that turn sour, villages with bad secrets, personal messes that feel too human to be quest-log filler. That is why the world still feels so full. It is not just big. It is busy with lives, grudges, and consequences.

It stays just short of the top because the combat, while improved over the years, is not the thing people remember most fondly. What they remember is the writing, the atmosphere, and the sense that even a detour might become the best story you see that night. Add in two major expansions that genuinely deepen the package rather than just pad it, and it remains one of the fullest recommendations in the genre.
The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt
5/10

The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt

Xbox Series X|SPlayStation 4PC (Microsoft Windows)

Released

May 19, 2015

Developer

CD Projekt RED

Publisher

WB Games

Systems
Xbox Series X|S
PlayStation 4
PC (Microsoft Windows)
PlayStation 5
Xbox One
Nintendo Switch

1. Elden Ring

This still feels like the peak because it understands the one thing open worlds too often forget: mystery is content. The Lands Between do not keep pushing you toward the next icon. They let the horizon do the work. You see something strange, ride toward it, and that small decision opens into a dungeon, a boss, a weapon, a secret route, or a disaster you were not ready for. Very few games trust curiosity this much, and even fewer reward it this consistently.

It also helps that the RPG side is strong enough to support all that exploration. Different starting classes, weapons, spells, stealth, summons, and build paths mean the world does not just look wide. It plays wide. You can approach the same region like a duelist, a battlemage, a bow user, a brute, or something much stranger. That flexibility, paired with the best sense of discovery in the genre, is why it takes the top spot. 
Elden Ring
5/10

Elden Ring

Xbox Series X|SPlayStation 4Nintendo Switch 2

Released

February 25, 2022

Developer

FromSoftware

Publisher

Bandai Namco Entertainment

Systems
Xbox Series X|S
PlayStation 4
Nintendo Switch 2
PC (Microsoft Windows)
PlayStation 5
Xbox One