By Vlad Mazanko
Over decades of evolution, open-world games have come a long way, from text-based adventures and early simulators to interactive 3D sandboxes that realistically react to each player’s actions. Ever since GTA 3 marked the birth of modern 3D open-world sandbox games, many titles that followed have tried to push boundaries in various areas, be it map scale, player freedom, world interactivity, procedural generation, simulation depth, or emergent gameplay, often influencing countless successors in the process.
Today, we are looking at some of the most important milestones in the open-world genre from the past 25 years, since its 3D era, ranking them by historical influence. Every game below is known as a masterpiece and a technological marvel, widely regarded as a landmark for the genre that redefines the formula in one way or another, pioneering gameplay mechanics and becoming a new benchmark for open-world games as we know them.
The Elder Scrolls 5: Skyrim
A Cultural Icon And A Modding Phenomenon
Even if Skyrim lacks the impact of the earlier Elder Scrolls installments, it definitely represents a mainstream RPG phenomenon and the pinnacle of Bethesda’s formula to this day. A true cultural icon released on almost every platform imaginable since 2011, Skyrim sold tens of millions of copies, created a true modding explosion with the most mods released ever, and sparked another open-world fantasy boom, prompting many studios to return to a genre that had started to feel stale.
Like Morrowind and Oblivion before it, Skyrim values freedom above all else. Its world is filled with countless locations meant to be discovered through natural exploration, engaging side activities to lose track of time with, reactive NPCs to meet, and radiant quests to play for hundreds of hours. While not exactly pioneering the formula, Skyrim has perfected it, and ever since, Bethesda hasn’t replicated its own peak.
Red Dead Redemption 2
So Ambitious, It’s In A League Of Its Own
As the years go by, more and more players find it strange that Red Dead Redemption 2 didn't actually win Game of the Year back in 2018, as its legacy today is truly indisputable. The most impressive and ambitious open-world game ever made, RDR 2 is the simulation pinnacle, offering a convincing Wild West filled with the most believable NPCs ever created, essentially redefining the cliché term of “living world” anew in a way that no other competitor has been able to match in the eight years since.
Red Dead Redemption 2’s dedication to authenticity and immersive gameplay remains virtually unparalleled, as the title becomes more and more valued by players who rediscover its strengths years later. The game’s technical and artistic achievements can be listed endlessly, starting with its reactive world, fitting survival elements and the subtle mechanics surrounding them, incredible attention to detail across the board, the most realistic horses and wildlife simulation in the genre to date, and so on. It’s a handcrafted masterpiece that seemingly only Rockstar Games will be capable of topping (hopefully) with the upcoming GTA 6.
The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt
Perfecting Deep RPG Narratives In An Open-World Game
While Red Dead Redemption 2 stands in a league of its own, with arguably no one even attempting to make a stab at it, The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt all but redefined the open-world genre in 2015, and almost every open-world game since has looked to it for inspiration. A true modern blueprint, The Witcher 3 perfected the classic exploration driven through points of interest (POIs) scattered on a vast, detailed map, at exactly the right distances to drive players forward.
It’s not just an open-world game; it’s an RPG of the highest caliber, shining through with its narrative heights situated near-flawlessly in the open world, proving that even with a high degree of freedom and impactful player choices, the best titles in the genre can rival linear stories in their depth. Over a decade later, very few open-world RPGs have come close to The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt’s storytelling and its handcrafted quests, each with its own memorable twist and unexpected resolution.
Elden Ring
Going Against The Tide
Elden Ring might still be too recent to rank that high by historical influence, but it’s a really special open-world game whose impact is undeniable. It’s a game that deliberately subverts a decade of the genre’s design evolution, unafraid to ignore modern trends and big studio influences and instead carving its own path unlike anything players grew used to over the years. A truly seamless RPG experience set in a richly layered, interconnected world, Elden Ring amazes with its vastness and breakaway freedom, where players determine their own story in an indifferent world.
Despite many fears of merging Soulslike combat with open-world environments, Elden Ring singlehandedly established the new subgenre with a bang, while also bringing the still niche genre to the mass market, becoming a colossal hit to outshine everything that came before and introducing FromSoft’s signature formula to millions of newcomers. Ever since, the game stands as an all-new benchmark for both open-world games and Soulslike experiences.
The Elder Scrolls 3: Morrowind
At The Dawn Of Open-World RPG Freedom
After fully switching to 3D, The Elder Scrolls 3: Morrowind blew everyone away, pioneering truly unguided RPG freedom. The game’s massive world is open from the start, featuring no quest markers or apparent guidance, emphasizing discovery and player agency above all else. For many, it was too much even back in the day, as players weren’t familiar with this kind of freedom in gaming.
Morrowind essentially defined Bethesda’s template of exploring and discovering, with every game from Oblivion to Fallout 4 sticking to the same patterns. Even beyond Bethesda’s recognizable formula, Morrowind established many elements that became a standard for the genre, including location-based enemy scaling to somewhat gate player progression. On top of that, Morrowind’s setting remains one of the most unique and original in the genre, granting unexpected discoveries and a truly weird world that demands players learn its rules.
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This article originally appeared on GameRant and is republished here with permission.