Technologies
Xbox Game Pass Review: It’s Pricier, but Still a Great Gaming Deal
This service makes PC, cloud and handheld gaming easy for everyone at every price.
Pros
- Cloud streaming brings games to you without a console
- Stream your own games across multiple tiers
- Huge catalog of games
Cons
- Games leave the service monthly
- Day 1 releases only available on two tiers
- Prices have inflated in recent years and could continue to do so
Xbox Game Pass is an all-you-can-play video game subscription service that has evolved beyond its console-bound origins and can now deliver high-profile, so-called AAA titles to you without a console. But after Microsoft raised the prices of some Game Pass tiers in October, you might be wondering whether the service is still worth it.
While Microsoft’s game-streaming service is more expensive than when it first hit the market, even at $30 per month for the top tier, it still offers compelling value. The monthly price of Game Pass still costs less than the price of a new AAA game, while giving you a smorgasbord of titles to play. You can also play on various devices, like your phone, tablet, streaming device or PC, meaning you’re not tethered to a computer or console.
But there are notable caveats: You’ll need a strong internet connection to take full advantage of the service. Day 1 releases (being able to play a new game the day it goes on sale) are restricted to two tiers, and because you don’t actually own any of your games, they could leave the service at any time.
I’ve tested Xbox Game Pass on various devices, scrutinized each plan and streamed games on Wi-Fi as well as over wireless 5G networks to see how well the service performs in different circumstances. Cloud streaming feels as close to on-device gaming as it can, but there are some instances when I wouldn’t recommend it — particularly if your internet speeds struggle.
Still, Xbox Game Pass has something for every gamer — its collection of features and games earns the service as a whole an Editors’ Choice Award.
Xbox Game Pass offers plans for various gamers and budgets
| Game Pass Essential | Game Pass Premium | PC Game Pass | Game Pass Ultimate | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Game library size | 50-plus | 200-plus | 400-plus | 500-plus |
| Console gaming | Yes | Yes | No | Yes |
| Cloud gaming | Yes | Yes | No | Yes |
| PC gaming | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Day 1 releases | No | No | Yes | Yes |
| EA Play | No | No | Yes | Yes |
| Ubisoft Plus Classics | No | No | No | Yes |
| Fortnite Crew | No | No | No | Yes |
| Monthly price | $10 | $15 | $16.49 | $30 |
The four Game Pass plans are Essential, Premium, PC Game Pass and Ultimate. Most tiers share a handful of foundational features. Access to online multiplayer is one of those features, so every subscriber can battle their friends and others online.
Generally, the higher your subscription cost, the more titles a Game Pass plan offers. Only two plans deliver Day 1 releases and EA Play access. Microsoft regularly adds games to each Game Pass plan on a monthly basis, except for the Essential tier.
While PC Game Pass looks like a nice middle-ground plan between Game Pass Premium and Ultimate, as the name implies, it’s only for playing PC titles on Windows PC devices. This plan is unique in its limited device support. Every other plan supports console, PC and cloud gaming.
Otherwise, each Game Pass plan has its own benefits, but most plans include baseline features and games.
What you should know about each Game Pass plan
Game Pass offers something for every kind of gamer, but one plan might be a better fit for you than others depending on your gaming habits. Here’s a breakdown of which plan is likely best for you, based on those habits.
Best for online multiplayer-focused gamers: Game Pass Essential ($10 per month)
Game Pass Essential is likely all you need if you mostly play online multiplayer games, like Halo or Overwatch. You’re paying for access to online multiplayer, but you also get the ability to play games on PC, cloud and console platforms with this plan.
This plan could also be good for you if you own a lot of games outright and want to play them on multiple devices, like your PC or phone, and don’t want to buy a new Xbox console. Microsoft lets you stream some owned games via Xbox Cloud Gaming, so Essential could be a good option for you.
You might not be shocked to learn that Game Pass Essential has a relatively weak library compared to higher tiers. Some standout games on this tier are Fallout 4, Control and Hades. Those games were released in 2015, 2019 and 2020, respectively, so you shouldn’t expect many newer games on this tier.
Best for most gamers: Game Pass Premium ($15 per month)
Game Pass Premium is good for gamers who don’t mind waiting a little longer to play some games. You don’t get access to Day 1 releases, but those games are usually added to this tier within a year of their release. If you’re like me, you might not notice this lag because you likely have a backlog of games you want to play — I still haven’t played Blasphemous 2, which came out in 2023.
This is a good option for most gamers, and given my schedule with a young child, I’d choose this plan. I can no longer sit down and play games as soon as they come out, and even if I prioritize those games, it might take me weeks — or months — to finish. At that point, it’s more cost-effective to buy the game outright rather than subscribe to Game Pass Ultimate. But with Premium, I can at least try some newer games first before I decide if I want to own them or not.
While Game Pass Premium doesn’t have as many games as PC Game Pass or Game Pass Ultimate, it has a surprising number of games that were relatively new that I’ve been meaning to play, like Blue Prince and Frostpunk 2.
Best for PC-exclusive gamers: PC Game Pass ($16.49 per month)
Console gamers need not apply. PC Game Pass includes Day 1 releases and EA Play, which bolster this tier’s game library and guarantees there’s always something new to play.
Where this plan falters is that you’ll need to maintain a powerful gaming rig to play new AAA games at their peak. This plan is limited by the power of your PC. If you have a solid gaming desktop or laptop, this is the plan for you. If you don’t have a powerful gaming computer or don’t plan to keep upgrading your machine, you should consider a different plan and stream games to your computer.
Best for voracious gamers: Game Pass Ultimate ($30 per month)
This Game Pass tier gives you the most benefits — but the perks primarily benefit people who enjoy live-service games like Fortnite and who churn through new games at a speedy clip. You get EA Play and Ubisoft Plus Classics, plus over 75 Day 1 releases a year — which averages out to be at least one new game a week — with this plan. With over 500 games in this tier’s library, you can access thousands of hours of gaming. This tier also includes Fortnite Crew, which gives you access to a host of goodies, like the current Battle Pass, Rocket Pass Premium and 1,000 V-Bucks each month.
Despite those benefits, this tier may not be worth it to most people. The people who would get the most value from this plan are folks who have a lot of free time to play different games, or anyone who wants to play all the latest games and plans to burn through them each month. Even if you play just one new $70 game a month, you could save up to $480 a year with this plan. But if you mostly play free-to-play online multiplayer games like Overwatch and don’t really play new games, or it takes you a few months to work through a game like the upcoming Gears of War E-Day, you might be better off subscribing to a cheaper plan or buying the games outright.
Ultimate has over 800 games at the time of this writing. And with over 75 Day 1 games added a year, this library can feel unnecessarily large. If, like me, you don’t have a lot of time to game because of other responsibilities, this game library might seem unwieldy. Between a full-time job, raising a kid and sleeping, I’m struggling now to find the time to play a handful of games, so playing 75 new games a year is just unrealistic for me. I might subscribe to Ultimate for a month or two to play a Day 1 release that I’m really interested in, like the upcoming Halo: Campaign Evolved, but otherwise, this is just way too many games for my schedule.
On paper, Game Pass Ultimate offers the most value since you get 75 Day 1 releases a year, EA Play ($6 a month separately), Ubisoft Plus Classics ($8 a month), Fortnite Crew ($12 a month) and hundreds of other games in the game library. However, if you don’t take advantage of those benefits, I’d recommend subscribing to Game Pass Premium.
Most Game Pass plans provide a lot of useful benefits
Here are the baseline features you can find across Game Pass Essential, Premium, PC Game Pass and Ultimate, unless otherwise noted.
You can game across a variety of devices
Whether you subscribe to Game Pass Essential, Premium or Ultimate, you can game on a console, PC and over the cloud on any number of supported devices. For instance, you can play games on your phone, tablet, smart TV, streaming device and handheld game consoles like the Asus ROG Xbox Ally X. Because of its broad device compatibility, you don’t need an Xbox console to game across any of these Game Pass tiers.
Some games, like Enter the Gungeon, are optimized to support playing with a touchscreen on handheld devices, so you don’t need a controller. However, you’ll need a compatible controller if you use Game Pass on something like a smart TV or an Amazon Fire TV Stick. If you need a gamepad, there are some great Xbox Game Pass controllers available, including the Backbone One or Pro and the Razer Kishi V3 Pro.
However, PC Game Pass subscribers are limited to playing on desktops, laptops or handheld PCs and can’t stream games to play on other devices.
You can stream games you own
As part of Game Pass’s cloud gaming, Microsoft also allows Essential, Premium and Ultimate subscribers to stream many owned games. So if you bought a game like Baldur’s Gate 3 — which is not currently on any Game Pass tier — you can play it on any compatible device, like your phone or smart TV. However, PC Game Pass subscribers can’t stream their own games because they can’t access cloud gaming.
Because you’re streaming a game via the cloud, you don’t need to have a high-end gaming PC to play graphics-intensive games. But you might run into other issues when streaming games. If your internet speeds are slow or your ping is high, your game’s performance will likely suffer, especially if it’s a graphically complex game. And your game streaming experience will generally vary as your internet bandwidth fluctuates.
I streamed games on my MacBook via Chrome, iPhone 16 Pro and even my Xbox Series S. After a short loading screen, I was able to play Call of Duty, Ball x Pit and more without downloading the game to my device. It felt like I was playing the game locally, even winning a few free-for-all matches in Call of Duty from my iPhone.
But when I tried to stream Cyberpunk 2077 to my MacBook via Chrome while my wife was working on the same Wi-Fi, I didn’t think the game was going to start because I saw a black screen for a few seconds before it launched. Once the game started, it took a beat for some character models to load.
Conversely, when streaming the much less demanding Dead Cells to my iPhone, I didn’t notice any longer load times or latency issues than if I had the game downloaded on my device. I played the game on my home Wi-Fi while my wife was working, and I was also streaming some music in addition to the game.
When I disconnected from my Wi-Fi and played Dead Cells on my 5G network, the game’s quality took a slight dip. Character movements were a little choppy and slow, but I could have played the game if I was determined.
I played Assassin’s Creed Odyssey on my cellular network too, and the game felt like a Xbox 360 port as the network strangled the graphics and frame rate. I feel like if I really concentrated, I could have manually counted how many frames I was seeing per minute.
You can play popular games on all tiers
Some popular but less recent gaming franchises are available across all four tiers of Game Pass. For example, Control, Fallout 4 and Halo 5: Guardians are all playable on every Game Pass tier. So if you want to play — or replay — Control before the sequel arrives this year, you can fire up the original with Game Pass Essential, the cheapest plan.
Game Pass offers in-game benefits and rewards across the board
All Game Pass subscribers can also access in-game benefits for some free-to-play games. For example, subscribers can unlock six hero skins and 30 Mythic Prisms in Overwatch, two operator skins in Call of Duty Warzone and access to every current and future champion in League of Legends.
Subscribers can also redeem Rewards points in the Xbox Store to get games and add-ons, and Premium and Ultimate subscribers get point multipliers and more points per dollar spent than other tiers.
Every Game Pass tier can also get at least 20% off select games from the Game Pass library, while Essential, Premium and Ultimate subscribers can get up to 50% off select games. So if you see one of your favorite Game Pass games is leaving the service soon, or you just really like the game and want to own it, subscribers could buy those games at a discount.
Granted, the in-game benefits aren’t for everyone, since they’re focused on free-to-play, live-service games. If you don’t play those, these benefits mean nothing to you. Not everyone will have the patience to acquire and redeem Rewards points, either, but everyone likes saving money when buying games outright.
Xbox Game Pass isn’t your only gaming service option
Xbox Game Pass, GeForce Now and PlayStation Plus are three popular gaming services. Each offers different benefits, like potential game libraries and cloud streaming capabilities, so here’s who would get the most value from each subscription.
- Game Pass: Most gamers. Because of Xbox Game Pass’s hardware agnosticism, and each plan’s library of games — especially the larger libraries included with Game Pass Premium and Ultimate — it’s easy to recommend Game Pass to every gamer. You can play games on your home console, a laptop, smartphone and many other devices, like smart TVs.
- PS Plus: Playstation power users. PlayStation Plus has plenty of games to offer subscribers, as long as those subscribers are in PlayStation’s ecosystem. If you are, you can access over 600 games as of the time of this writing, with new games added to the service every month. However, you don’t get as many Day 1 releases as Game Pass, and options for streaming games to play on other devices are more limited.
- GeForce Now: PC gamers who want to play on other devices. If you have a PC Game Pass subscription — or have a large library of PC games you want to stream to other devices — GeForce Now lets you stream PC games from Game Pass or your own collection to other devices. The subscription limits you to 100 hours of game streaming per month, but you can buy additional playtime if needed.
Game Pass is a great value for all gamers
Paying for a few months of Xbox Game Pass is cheaper than buying a game outright in many instances, making it an excellent value. Chances are, you can play on devices you already have — like your PC, phone, tablet or streaming device, meaning you may not need to invest in expensive hardware up front.
While Ultimate may not be the best value like it used to be, it’s hard to beat the cost-effectiveness of Game Pass overall. In some cases, the monthly subscription to Game Pass Premium costs significantly less than certain games offered on that tier, like Cyberpunk 2077, making it a better value.
Microsoft’s Xbox Game Pass service is still a great value for gamers, regardless of whether your Xbox is a console, or you’re using a phone, streaming device or another gadget to play.
Technologies
I Tried Every Item From McDonald’s KPop Demon Hunters Meals: Here’s What to Order
There’s a Spicy Saja McMuffin, Derpy McFlurry, Ramyeon McShaker fries and two new dipping sauces — one in a bright purple.
KPop Demon Hunters fans, get to McDonald’s fast. Starting Tuesday, you can nab a meal that might seem like an April Fool’s Day joke, but isn’t. Participating McDonald’s restaurants are offering both the HUNTR/X meal, named for the girl group from Netflix’s Oscar-winning animated film, KPop Demon Hunters, and the Saja Boys Breakfast Meal, named for the movie’s boy band.
I beat a path to McDonald’s on the first day the new meals were out so I could try everything.
And the KPop Demon Hunters items are surprisingly pretty good! Be warned: Once word gets around, they might be hard to get. The McDonald’s holiday Grinch Meal sold out quickly at some locations (too bad if you wanted a pair of the adorable Grinch-themed socks that came with it), so don’t wait on this limited-edition menu.
Shake up the fries, skip the Demon sauce
The HUNTR/X Meal, named for the K-pop girl group in KPop Demon Hunters, is a 10-piece chicken McNuggets meal that includes a medium drink and three special menu items.
Ramyeon McShaker fries come with a small bag of soy, garlic, sesame and spice seasoning, along with regular McDonald’s fries. You sprinkle the seasoning into the provided bag, dump in the fries, shake it all up and eat.
My take: McDonald’s fries are legendary, and honestly, I didn’t want to season them and risk wrecking the taste. Here’s the shocker: I loved it. They give you a ton of seasoning, and the fries become thickly coated, which I thought would be a nightmare. But they were a salty, tasty delight. There’s no meat in the seasoning, but it reminded me of a fried-chicken coating — tasty and rich.
The meal includes two new sauces for the fries and nuggets. Hunter sauce is a sweet chili sauce mixing notes of chili, garlic and pepper. If you’re familiar with McDonald’s longtime sweet-and-sour sauce, this reminded me of that, with just a touch of heat.
The other new sauce is Demon sauce, a mustard sauce with some heat and a bold purple color. There’s just not enough dark purple food out there. But while the color was cool, I ended up scraping the Hunter sauce cup almost empty, leaving most of the purple Demon sauce behind. I appreciated the almost-but-not-quite wasabi flavor of the mustard, but I wouldn’t order this sauce again.
You can try both sauces without an extra charge. I ordered via the app and just selected one of each of the two new sauces.
There’s also a new dessert, the Derpy McFlurry, which blends creamy vanilla soft serve with berry-flavored popping boba pearls and a swirl of wild berry sauce. McDonald’s named it for the supernatural feline, Derpy Tiger, from the KPop Demon Hunters movie.
You know all the jokes about how McDonald’s ice-cream machine is always broken? I tried to order the Derpy McFlurry at my local McDonald’s, but the app said it wasn’t available. I don’t know if that location’s ice cream machine was actually broken or if they didn’t get their shipment of popping pearls, but this is America: There was another McDonald’s less than a mile away that had the dessert.
And I’m glad they did! Although I’m not a berries-in-ice-cream fan, the thick soft-serve and wildberry sauce (blueberry? raspberry? both? I couldn’t tell) were a smooth, sweet mash-up. The boba pearls were fun to pop inside my mouth, too, though beware, they kind of leave behind a little… boba skin?
If breakfast is your bag, the new morning meal is the Saja Boys Breakfast Meal.
It includes a Spicy Saja McMuffin sandwich, which is a sausage McMuffin with egg and a spicy Saja sauce, hash browns and a small drink. I hadn’t had the chance to tell my husband what was in the sandwich when he swooped through the kitchen while talking on a work call and nabbed a bite. He widened his eyes and waved at his mouth in the universal signal for «HOT!»
At first, I thought he was exaggerating, but then I had a second bite, and the orangish, peppery sauce is hot. It’s also too sweet for my taste, and I wouldn’t reorder this. Without the sauce, the breakfast is just an Egg McMuffin.
Both meals come with a photocard for one of the bands and a Derpy card. My breakfast meal included a photo card of Jinu, and my lunch meal featured one of Zoey. Each meal also had a Derpy card with a picture of Derpy Tiger and a QR code that, for some reason, I found incredibly difficult to scan. When I finally did, it took me to the McDonald’s app on my phone and asked for the code on the card. Then it didn’t really do anything.
A McDonald’s rep told me that’s by design: Entering the code means I will unlock content that won’t appear until April 26 and will reveal «the winner of McDonald’s ultimate battle for the fans.» So, I got that goin’ for me.
The full KPop Demon Hunters menu should be available at participating McDonald’s locations now, and while I nudged McDonald’s reps for an exact ending date, it’s just «while supplies last.»
My final take: KPop Demon Hunters fans will get a kick out of the meals, though if they are kids, they may wish for a smaller Happy Meal-style option. Ten McNuggets and fries are a lot, and a spicy Egg McMuffin probably isn’t for everybody. I tried to order a mini version of the Derpy McFlurry, but it was grayed out in my app, and the regular one was enormous.
If you do want to try the meals, I highly recommend the fries with the Ramyeon seasoning, the Hunter sauce and the Derpy McFlurry with its satisfying popping boba (share it with a friend if you have a small appetite or if, like me, you’re slogging through the full KPop Demon Hunter menu). I’d give a pass to the Demon sauce and the Spicy Saja McMuffin.
It’s also a bit of a bummer that the only extras in the meals (besides the colorful themed Happy Meal-style boxes) were glittery holographic photo cards and a code for online content that’s still a month away. No collectible figurines or even patterned socks a la the Grinch? That hit a bit of a sour note in this musical munch-fest.
Technologies
Google Hints at a New Fitness Health Wearable, Hidden in a Steph Curry Video
Looks like Google’s Fitbit and Pixel smartwatches might be getting a new sibling.
In a 15-second clip posted on Tuesday by NBA star and Google performance advisor Steph Curry, there’s an Easter egg hinting at what could be a notable new wearable launch from Google. The paid partnership shows Curry dribbling and shooting a basketball, followed by the Google logo, but it’s the band on his wrist that caught my eye.
A gray wristband with neon orange piping and a strap adjuster sits on Curry’s wrist. There’s no screen, reminding us of the Whoop wrist-based wearable, which announced on Tuesday that it raised $575 million in funding, bringing its valuation to $10.1 billion.
If it is similar to Whoop, the new Google wearable may be able to monitor sleep, stress, recovery and overall health by tracking wrist-based metrics such as skin temperature, heart rate, blood oxygen levels and daily behaviors.
«I’m excited for what this is going to mean for the world, for health and wellness. It’s the first of its kind, in a way,» Curry says in a voiceover. «I won’t spoil it. You’re going to have to see it for yourself.» The video’s text adds, «A new relationship with your health. Coming soon.»
When asked about the potential new launch, a Google representative responded, «Our performance advisor has been working with the team to cook up something special 👀. More to share soon.»
Aside from not having a screen, it will be interesting to see how Google differentiates this new device from its current line of wearables, which includes Pixel smartwatches and five Fitbit models.
In a comment on the video, the account for Fitbit, Google’s current wearable fitness tracker, responded with the eyes emoji.
Why Curry?
In August 2025, at the Made by Google event, the company announced a long-term partnership with Curry, who signed on as Google’s performance advisor across Google Health, Google Pixel and Google Cloud. As part of his role, Curry assists Google in training its algorithm and designing new products and features.
In the announcement post, Google mentioned that Curry uses AI from Google Cloud insights and the AI basketball coach to improve his game. Curry says this helps him analyze his shot quality and optimize his workout strategy. Based on this — and the fact that basically every new tech product now uses AI — we bet that Google’s upcoming wearable incorporates AI in some form.
Technologies
Here’s Our First Look at Overwatch’s Next Hero (The Rumors Are Probably True)
The new artwork supports theories that the game’s next hero will be Frankie, a member of Ashe’s Deadlock Gang.
Overwatch’s five new heroes are about to be old news. The game dropped its first look at the upcoming hero 51, and a few details in the new artwork seem to be in line with expectations that she’s an ally of damage hero Ashe.
Respectfully… y’all aren’t ready for this one 😮💨🔥
Join us Apr 8 at 9am PT for the premiere of our latest Hero Trailer as we kick off the next chapter in the Reign of Talon 💪 pic.twitter.com/1Etxn68tax— Overwatch (@PlayOverwatch) March 31, 2026
Hero 51’s appearance is defined by a pretty long rifle and an even longer, pink-braided ponytail. Seriously, how does she not trip over that thing constantly? She’s also accompanied by some sort of drone that appears to have a camera or lens on the front.
Even before the art was revealed, fans had started to speculate that Overwatch’s season 2 hero would be Frankie, a member of Ashe’s Deadlock Gang. She appeared in the Deadlock Rebels novel by Lyndsay Ely, which follows Ashe and the hero now known as Cassidy early in their outlaw careers. In the book, Frankie makes contact with the two characters by sending them a tiny fly-like drone — perhaps a smaller version of the drone in hero 51’s character art.
Frankie is also described as having curly lavender hair. In the book, it’s short hair, but the story is also set a couple of decades before the present time of Overwatch, so maybe she’s just been growing it out since then.
Alec Dawson, Overwatch’s associate game director, said in February that the next hero would be another damage hero with a «really satisfying skill shot,» which does seem to be in line with the rifle in the new artwork. While I do love a good skillshot, I also feel like the game has been struggling with damage hero releases over the past year — particularly heroes who have the ability to quickly eliminate someone out of nowhere.
The newest damage heroes Anran and Emre didn’t have this problem, but Freja and Vendetta were consistently banned after release because of their quick time to kill, combined with their ability to consistently surprise enemies. I’m hoping hero 51’s skillshot is less bursty.
The game’s Reign of Talon season 1 is wrapping up in the next couple of weeks. The current season kicked off the year-long storyline about Vendetta taking over Talon and also introduced five new heroes into the roster. Devs have promised another new hero each season during the storyline, and today’s artwork reveal is the first glimpse we’ve gotten of the rest.
We’ll get more details in a hero trailer on April 8.
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