We’re excited to share that a half-dozen Xbox first-party titles (plus one movie) have been nominated for awards across multiple categories – voting is now open on The Game Awards official site.
You can play many of the nominees announced today with Xbox Game Pass, including top nominee Clair Obscur: Expedition 33,Indiana Jones and the Great Circle, DOOM: The Dark Ages,South of Midnight, and Hollow Knight: Silksong.
Tune into The Game Awards on December 11 to see if your favorite games from 2025 take home an award.
The Game Awards has officially revealed the full list of nominees for the year, and we’re thrilled to see such a wide range of unique titles being recognized for their contributions to gaming. Even better, many of these nominees can be played today across Xbox consoles, Xbox on PC, ROG Xbox Ally handhelds, Cloud, and with Xbox Game Pass!
This year our first-party studios received nominations for Avowed, DOOM: The Dark Ages, Indiana Jones and the Great Circle, Ninja Gaiden 4, South of Midnight, and The Outer Worlds 2. Troy Baker’s pitch-perfect performance as Indiana Jones was recognized with a Best Performance nomination, and ‘A Minecraft Movie’, one of the biggest hits at the box office in 2025, was nominated for Best Adaptation.
We’re also equally excited to see that many of our third-party partners have been nominated across a wide range of categories – many of which can be played with Game Pass. Ball x Pit, Blue Prince, Clair Obscur: Expedition 33, Hollow Knight: Silksong, and Rematch are all up for awards this year, and playable across devices as Xbox Play Anywhere titles. Additionally, Game Pass subscribers receive incredible benefits for nominees League of Legends, Valorant, and – starting tomorrow – Fortnite.
Congratulations to all this year’s amazing nominees – and don’t forget, these nominations join titles on Xbox nominated across the Golden Joysticks, and even the Grammys!
Remember, you can vote for your favorites right now over at TheGameAwards.com. See below for the full list of nominees that you can play today.
Happy November! Let’s kick it off with five games to try with Free Play Days! Kingdom Come: Deliverance II is available this weekend for Xbox Game Pass Ultimate, Premium and Essential members to play from Thursday November 6 until Sunday, November 9.
Crime Boss: Rockay City, Trailmakers and Big Helmet Heroes are free for all Xbox members to try during Free Play Days.
Wild Bastards is free for all Xbox members to try during Free Play Days with a 2-hour timed trial.
How To Start Playing
Scroll down and find and install the games on each of the individual game details pages on Xbox.com. Clicking through will send you to the Microsoft Store, where you must be signed in to see the option to install with your Xbox Game Pass Ultimate, Premium and Essential membership. To download on console, click on the Subscriptions tab in the Xbox Store and navigate down to the Free Play Days collection on your Xbox One or Xbox Series X|S.
Keep The Fun Going
Purchase the game and other editions at a limited time discount and continue playing while keeping your Gamerscore and achievements earned during the event! Please note that discounts, percentages, and title availability may vary by title and region.
Free Play Days (Game Pass Membership Required)
Kingdom Come: Deliverance II
Deep Silver
☆☆☆☆☆ 537
★★★★★
$69.99
Kingdom Come: Deliverance II Optimized for Xbox Series X|S A thrilling story-driven action RPG set in a richly detailed open world of 15th-century Medieval Europe. Experience the ultimate medieval adventure through the eyes of young Henry as you embark on an epic journey.
Free Play Days For All
Crime Boss: Rockay City
505 Games
☆☆☆☆☆ 258
★★★★★
$19.99
$4.99
Crime Boss: Rockay City Optimized for Xbox Series X|S Crime Boss: Rockay City is a 1-4 player co-op FPS heist game with enjoyable stealth and epic killing spree combat. Featuring a solo roguelike campaign that combines FPS and strategy elements with the most hilariously cheesy voice acting that make you laugh.
Trailmakers
Flashbulb Games
☆☆☆☆☆ 344
★★★★★
$29.99
$8.99
PC Game Pass
Xbox Game Pass
Trailmakers Optimized for Xbox Series X|S, Smart Delivery, Xbox Play Anywhere Build the ultimate vehicle and explore a vast open world filled with challenges and adventure. Play solo or team up with friends in multiplayer to conquer the toughest obstacles. With a thrilling campaign mode and endless creative possibilities, Trailmakers is the ultimate sandbox for builders and adventurers alike.
Big Helmet Heroes
Dear Villagers
☆☆☆☆☆ 43
★★★★★
$24.99
$17.49
Big Helmet Heroes Optimized for Xbox Series X|S Throw yourself into an epic 3D beat’em up adventure with adorable knights, full of surprising worlds and situations. Grab your buddy and play in 2 player co-ops to save the princess. Buy now for 30% off and play for free between 6th November – 9th November
Wild Bastards
Maximum Entertainment
☆☆☆☆☆ 84
★★★★★
$34.99
$10.49
Wild Bastards Optimized for Xbox Series X|S Wild Bastards is a roguelike strategy shooter with heart-pounding FPS action, mod management, and a tactical campaign. Saddle up and lead the most notorious outlaws in the galaxy. Try for free during Free Play Days and available for purchase with a 70% discount.
Don’t miss out on these exciting Free Play Days for Xbox Game Pass Ultimate, Premium and Essential members! Learn more about Free Play Days here and stay tuned to Xbox Wire to find out about future Free Play Days and all the latest Xbox gaming news.
Legacy of the Forge builds on Kingdom Come: Deliverance II’s blacksmithing profession with new recipes, assistants and a customisable forge and homestead.
Learn how the upcoming DLC uses authentic medieval history for inspiration, drawing on historical records, archaeology, and guild traditions.
A new Blacksmith Prestige stat helps players expand and personalise their new home and workshop.
Legacy of the Forge is the next slice of DLC lined up for this year’s bestselling medieval RPG, Kingdom Come: Deliverance II. With its focus on blacksmithing, the update’s been designed to not only add a host of satisfying new gameplay features, but also give players fresh new avenues for customisation and roleplaying.
As with all things at Warhorse Studios, the process of building on this intriguing world begins with a deep understanding of life in the real medieval Europe. Thankfully, the team is well-resourced when it comes to looking back through time.
“We have historians here in Warhorse and it’s part of their job to study all of the papers and the books from this time,” says Jan Zeman, Narrative & Gameplay Designer, when asked about the process of building out Legacy of the Forge’s historical foundations.“We also have old tax documents which state how much you might pay to a baker, or a blacksmith. In the Old Town of Prague, for example, we know that there were a certain number of people working in a certain kind of job.
“Then we have the archaeological evidence – even a proper forge! Or we’ll find a document that describes the tax list of burghers in Prague at the time. It tells us that a Mr Turnowsky had a mill located on this part of the riverbank.”
“We have information from all around the Czech Republic, and from looking further around Europe too because this information is so rare. You need to read all of them and then think: ‘How might this look in Kuttenberg at this time?
“We may not have the evidence to say exactly where the forges in Kuttenberg were, but it’s an industrial town in a medieval time so there’s going to be one. It’s a game, and we need to put it somewhere!”
As you develop your own forge in the new update, you’ll eventually entice a pair of assistants to work alongside you. These workshop companions not only provide you with useful wares as you go about your own blacksmithing business, but are essential helpers when it comes to crafting some of the new recipes you’ll discover in Legacy of the Forge.
While the assistants in the DLC are older and more experienced than the apprentices who would have served a 15th Century Bohemian blacksmith, the inspiration for their presence here is clear enough.
“In Legacy of the Forge these guys are more like your colleagues, rather than apprentices,” says Zeman. “The more important point is that in medieval times there were only a few places for workshops.
“Let’s say there were three blacksmith workshops in the area, as dictated by the guild. That means you could only have three proper blacksmiths, and if you wanted to do more work you needed some apprentices to help you. If they grew enough in skill, they could perhaps go on to open their own workshop. “
It would not have been easy for these apprentices to set up shop wherever they pleased, however. This was an intensely political world, after all, and blacksmiths were an essential (not to mention highly-trusted) component of a functioning feudal society.
“It was seriously strict. It was very hard in medieval times to have your own workshop in the town as a stranger. You could be the son of the blacksmith, you could marry into family, or you could be the stranger – but that last way is hard.
“No-one wants strangers getting into these positions because of the politics involved. You wouldn’t want to elevate outsiders to a high position of influence. In this DLC, the workshop is empty and available to Henry for a reason!”
Another example where the past is used as just a gentle pointer for development can be found in the new Blacksmith Prestige stat. As you increase the level of your Prestige, you’ll gain access to new colour options for your house, new furniture and new structures for your garden like bee hives and an alchemy lab.
“Historically if you wanted to repair your house, you needed a permit from the town council. The guild not only owned the house but controlled the number of workshops and apprentices in the area, as well as the technology any given blacksmith could use. You didn’t have to pay rent to the guild, but you did have to take care of the place.”
“We needed something easy for our players to understand though, rather than some complicated political interactions about changing your house’s appearance. It’s not fun to do paperwork in the game, and so we have a Prestige stat you can raise through activities, and then buy things from there.”
These are just a handful of the clever ways Warhorse has taken inspiration from the past, without sacrificing gameplay for the sake of historical accuracy. As for your own personal workshop, you’ll be able to open for business when Legacy of the Forge lands on September 9.
Legacy of the Forge
Deep Silver
☆☆☆☆☆ 9
★★★★★
$13.99
Return to Kuttenberg and put your blacksmithing skills to the test to acquire and repair a legendary burned-down forge, where your father, Martin, spent his youth as an apprentice. Establish your own home in the heart of Kuttenberg, designing the forge itself as well as its surroundings and your very own private quarters, with the ability to customize and furnish to aid your gameplay.
Venture down memory lane and learn of your father’s legacy as a blacksmith, revealing a part of his life that has remained hidden—until now. Uncover the mystery of an ambitious masterpiece your father once worked on and follow in his footsteps to complete it. Become a forge master and build upon your new blacksmith prestige, helping the people of Kuttenberg with sword crafting, and some more quirky requests.
In addition to new daily quests, Henry will unlock the ability to earn cash, enabling a brand-new home customization system with over 100 million combinations to personalize your forge, private quarters, and its surroundings. Once decked out, your forge becomes a place to return to and call home.
Legacy of the Forge is the second story expansion for Kingdom Come: Deliverance II and is included for Expansion Pass and Gold Edition owners.