Tags / sandbox

"sandbox"

30 BuzzVerdicts across PC Games (18), Board Games (2), Mobile Games (10)

Minecraft

4.7

2011 · Sandbox / Survival · PC

Minecraft is the rare game that means something different to every person who plays it. Builder, explorer, engineer, farmer, adventurer, or just someone who wants to dig a hole and see what's at the bottom. Mojang Studios created a space flexible enough to accommodate all of those players and more, and the modding community expanded that space by orders of magnitude. Updates have occasionally frustrated the community, and the vanilla experience can feel thin for players who've seen everything the base game offers. But the core promise of a world made of blocks where anything is possible has proven durable enough to outlast entire console generations. Over 200 million monthly players suggest it's going to outlast a few more.

Terraria

4.7

2011 · Action / Adventure · PC / Steam

Terraria has spent over a decade proving that a 2D sandbox can rival anything in the genre for depth, content, and sheer hours of entertainment. Re-Logic's commitment to free updates turned a modest indie release into something with a staggering amount of things to discover, fight, build, and craft. The early game can be opaque and the combat repetitive before things open up, but pushing past those initial hours reveals a game that keeps expanding in every direction. For the price of a fast-food meal, you get one of the best value propositions in all of gaming.

A Feast for Odin

4.5

2016 · 1-4 Players · ~30-120 min · Worker Placement / Tile Placement

A Feast for Odin is Uwe Rosenberg's most ambitious design, a sprawling sandbox that combines worker placement with polyomino puzzles and resource management into something that feels both enormous and cohesive. The sheer number of options available each turn could easily overwhelm, but the underlying systems are logical enough that experienced players find freedom where newcomers see chaos. It demands table space, time commitment, and willingness to learn through trial and error, and the low player interaction makes it a poor fit for groups that want confrontation with their strategy. For those who want a game that offers genuine freedom to explore different paths across dozens of plays, this is one of the richest experiences in modern board gaming.

Grand Theft Auto V

4.5

2013 · Action-Adventure · PC / Steam

Grand Theft Auto V built one of the most impressive open worlds in gaming and filled it with enough content to keep players engaged for over a decade. The single-player campaign delivers a strong story with three distinct protagonists, and Los Santos remains a technical and design achievement that few games have matched. GTA Online's aggressive monetization and grind-heavy economy tarnish the package, and the story's satire hits unevenly, but the core experience is massive, polished, and endlessly replayable. There's a reason it has sold over 200 million copies and counting.

The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim

4.5

2011 · Action RPG · PC / Steam

Skyrim is the open-world RPG that defined a generation of gaming and still hasn't been replaced. Its combat is shallow, its main questline is forgettable, and its systems have been simplified compared to earlier entries in the series. None of that has stopped millions of players from sinking hundreds of hours into exploring every cave, joining every guild, and installing thousands of mods to make the experience their own. Bethesda built a world that feels like it belongs to whoever plays it, and that sense of ownership is something no amount of technical polish can replicate. More than a decade after release, people are still finding reasons to start a new character.

Minecraft (Mobile)

4.4

2011 · Sandbox / Survival

Minecraft on mobile is the definitive portable version of the most successful game ever made, offering the full Bedrock Edition experience with cross-platform play across consoles, PC, and other mobile devices. Creative mode and Survival mode both translate well to touchscreens, and controller support eliminates the precision gap for players who want it. The Marketplace pushes paid content more aggressively than the community prefers, and touch controls have a ceiling for complex builds and combat, but the core experience of mining, crafting, and building remains as compelling on a phone as it is anywhere else.

Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas

4.3

2004 · Action / Open World · PC / Steam

Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas remains the most ambitious and content-rich GTA ever made, offering an entire state with three distinct cities, countryside, deserts, and mountains to explore alongside a rags-to-riches gang story powered by Samuel L. Jackson's voice performance and a gameplay variety that no open-world game has matched since. The RPG elements, the property ownership, the gang territory system, and the sheer number of activities create a game that feels like three games in one. The mission quality is uneven, the controls have aged badly, and the Definitive Edition remaster was widely criticized, but the original remains a landmark of open-world design.

Terraria (Mobile)

4.3

2013 · Action / Adventure / Sandbox

Terraria on mobile delivers a staggering amount of content for a premium price, with hundreds of hours of mining, building, fighting, and exploring packed into a game that fits in your pocket. The 1.4 Journey's End update brought the mobile version to near-parity with PC, and cross-platform multiplayer with other mobile players adds a social dimension that extends the experience further. Touch controls work better than expected but still can't match the precision of a controller or mouse, making that the one persistent compromise in an otherwise excellent port.

Crusader Kings III

4.3

2020 · Grand Strategy / RPG · PC / Steam

Crusader Kings III is the rare strategy game that makes you care less about winning and more about the stories your dynasty creates along the way. It balances accessibility with staggering depth, letting newcomers find their footing while veterans lose themselves in centuries of scheming and succession crises. The DLC pricing model asks a lot of loyal players, and the late game can lose momentum, but the core experience remains one of the most compelling sandboxes on PC. Five years after launch, it's still generating the kind of stories people can't stop telling each other.

Hitman: World of Assassination

4.3

2021 · Stealth · PC / Steam

Hitman: World of Assassination is the definitive stealth sandbox, combining three games' worth of meticulously designed levels into a single package with staggering replay value. Every map is a puzzle box with dozens of solutions, and the joy of discovering new approaches keeps missions fresh long after the first completion. The always-online requirement and confusing purchase history are real problems that shouldn't exist in a game this good, but they don't diminish what IO Interactive achieved with the actual content. If you've ever wanted a game that rewards patience, observation, and creative problem-solving, this is the peak of the genre.

Noita

4.3

2020 · Action Roguelite · PC / Steam

Noita is a game built on a single wild idea, that every pixel on screen should be physically simulated, and it follows that idea to its logical extreme. The wand-crafting system offers some of the deepest build customization in the roguelite genre, and the interactions between spells, materials, and environments create moments no other game can replicate. It asks for patience and a willingness to fail over and over before the pieces click into place, and lots of players never make it past that wall. Those who do find one of the most rewarding and creative sandboxes in modern gaming.

Kenshi

4.2

2018 · Open World RPG / Sandbox · PC / Steam

Kenshi is one of the most singular games on PC, a brutally uncompromising sandbox that drops you into a hostile world and expects you to figure everything out on your own. It looks dated, runs rough, and does absolutely nothing to ease you in. None of that matters once it clicks. The emergent stories that come from struggling, failing, and slowly clawing your way toward competence are unlike anything else in gaming. If you can stomach the learning curve and embrace the suffering, Kenshi will reward you with hundreds of hours of stories no designer scripted. It's not for everyone, but for the right player, it's irreplaceable.

Kerbal Space Program

4.2

2015 · Space Simulation / Sandbox · PC / Steam

Kerbal Space Program turns the staggering complexity of spaceflight into something playful without ever dumbing it down. You'll fail constantly, lose count of how many rockets you've destroyed, and occasionally scream at orbital mechanics that refuse to cooperate. Then you'll land on another planet for the first time and understand why people have been playing this for over a decade. The learning curve is real, the graphics are dated, and the tutorials won't save you. But nothing else in gaming captures the triumph of figuring out something truly difficult and seeing it work.

Planet Crafter

4.1

2024 · Survival / Sandbox · PC / Steam

Planet Crafter takes the survival crafting formula and builds it around one of the most satisfying progression loops in the genre: watching a barren, lifeless planet slowly transform into a living world because of your actions. The terraforming is the star, and the visible environmental changes as you raise oxygen, heat, and pressure create a feedback loop that makes hours disappear. Late-game content thins out and the story is minimal, but the core experience of building something from nothing on an alien world is deeply compelling.

Fortnite Mobile

4.0

2018 · Battle Royale

Fortnite Mobile is the most feature-complete battle royale experience available on a phone, offering full cross-platform play, constant content updates, and an ever-expanding set of modes that extend well beyond the core battle royale formula. Aggressive monetization and high device requirements keep it from being a perfect recommendation, but the sheer amount of free content and the quality of the cross-play implementation make it hard to argue against at least trying it.

Caverna: The Cave Farmers

4.0

2013 · 1-7 Players · ~30-210 min · Competitive

Caverna is a sprawling sandbox of a worker placement game that gives players enormous freedom in how they build their farms and caverns. It trades the punishing tension of its predecessor for a more relaxed, exploratory experience that rewards creative strategy over survival. That trade-off loses some players and wins others, but the sheer breadth of options and the satisfaction of building something unique keep it firmly among the top tier of heavy Euro games.

Cities: Skylines

4.0

2015 · City Builder / Simulation · PC / Steam

Cities: Skylines rescued the city-building genre from years of stagnation and gave players the tool set they'd been asking for. Traffic management alone will consume hours of problem-solving, the modding community has created one of the deepest pools of custom content in PC gaming, and the core loop of zoning, building, and watching your city grow remains deeply satisfying. The base game feels thin without DLC, and the traffic AI will test your patience, but this is still the city builder that everything else gets measured against. It earned that reputation.

Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain

4.0

2015 · Action Adventure · PC / Steam

Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain has some of the best stealth gameplay ever built, with a sandbox that encourages creativity and rewards experimentation across dozens of hours. The buddy system, base management, and sheer number of tactical options give it a flexibility that few games in the genre have matched. Its story, however, trails off rather than concluding, leaving many players with a sense that something is missing from the final act. That tension between outstanding gameplay and unsatisfying narrative defines the whole experience. If you play games primarily for how they feel moment to moment, this one is exceptional. If you need a story to stick the landing, prepare for frustration.

Stellaris

4.0

2016 · Grand Strategy · PC / Steam

Stellaris is the most accessible grand strategy game Paradox has made, and it uses that accessibility to let you build, manage, and wage war across a galaxy filled with more variety than any single playthrough can contain. The early game delivers on the fantasy of space exploration and empire building better than almost any competitor. Performance degradation in the late game and a DLC model that adds up fast are real drawbacks that affect how much of the experience you can comfortably access. But for players who've ever stared at the stars and wanted to build something among them, this is the best option on PC.

Astroneer

3.9

2019 · Sandbox / Adventure · PC / Steam

Astroneer is a colorful, low-stress space sandbox that shines brightest when you're exploring alien planets with friends. The terrain deformation system is endlessly fun, the visual style is charming, and the sense of discovery across multiple worlds keeps pulling you forward. Solo play can feel aimless without a narrative thread, and the late game loses some of its magic once exploration gives way to repetitive resource chains. But as a co-op adventure for players who want to build, explore, and mess around on alien worlds, few games match its vibe.

No Man's Sky

3.8

2016 · Action-Adventure Survival · PC / Steam

No Man's Sky represents one of gaming's most remarkable turnarounds, transformed through years of free updates from a hollow disappointment into a sprawling space exploration game with genuine depth. The scale remains staggering, the community is welcoming, and Hello Games' dedication to improvement without charging a penny extra deserves recognition. A core gameplay loop that still leans toward repetitive gathering and crafting prevents it from reaching the heights its ambition suggests, and the sheer breadth of content can feel unfocused. But as a space sandbox where you can explore, build, trade, and discover across a functionally infinite universe with friends, nothing else comes close to what it offers.

Saints Row: The Third

3.8

2011 · Action / Open World · PC / Steam

Saints Row: The Third is the entry where the franchise fully committed to absurdist comedy, delivering an open-world sandbox where you fight with dildo bats, call in airstrikes during gang wars, and participate in a Japanese game show that involves mascot combat. The commitment to escalating ridiculousness creates genuine joy, the co-op multiplies the chaos delightfully, and the game never pretends to be anything other than interactive entertainment. The humor won't land for everyone, the city is forgettable, and the moment-to-moment gameplay is competent rather than excellent.

Toca Life World

3.8

2018 · Sandbox

Toca Life World is a sprawling digital sandbox that gives kids an incredible amount of creative freedom to build stories, design characters, and explore dozens of themed locations. The free content is generous, and the open-ended play encourages imagination in ways few mobile games manage. Paid content packs add up quickly, and persistent bugs around data loss and cross-device transfers frustrate parents and kids alike. If you can live with the upselling and back up your progress, it remains one of the best creative play apps for children.

Roblox

3.7

2012 · Sandbox / Social Platform

Roblox on mobile is less a single game and more an entire gaming platform in your pocket, offering access to millions of user-created experiences spanning every genre imaginable. The best games within Roblox rival standalone mobile titles in quality, and cross-platform play with PC and console players keeps lobbies active. The experience is wildly inconsistent because anyone can publish content, and the Robux economy raises legitimate concerns about monetization pressure on younger players. But as a free gateway to an almost unlimited variety of games, nothing else on mobile comes close to what Roblox offers.

RuneScape (Mobile)

3.5

2018 · MMORPG

RuneScape on mobile is a genuine technical achievement, delivering a full-scale MMO with cross-platform progression to your phone. The depth of content is staggering, with thousands of hours of questing, skilling, and bossing available in a single app. Aggressive monetization and rising subscription costs cast a long shadow over the experience, and the mobile interface struggles with the complexity of a game designed for mouse and keyboard. Players who already love RuneScape will appreciate having it in their pocket, and newcomers with patience for a learning curve will find one of the deepest MMOs ever made, but the cost of entry keeps climbing in ways that frustrate even devoted fans.

Albion Online (Mobile)

3.5

2021 · Sandbox MMORPG

Albion Online on mobile puts a full sandbox MMORPG in your pocket with the same servers, economy, and full-loot PvP as the PC version. The player-driven economy and classless gear system create something impressively ambitious for mobile. But touch controls put you at a real disadvantage in PvP, the grind is substantial, and the game assumes you already know what you're doing. It's best treated as a companion to the PC experience rather than a standalone mobile game.

Old School RuneScape

3.5

2018 · MMORPG

Old School RuneScape on mobile is one of the most faithful MMO ports ever released, giving players the full desktop experience on their phone with cross-platform progression that actually works. The community-driven development model keeps the game evolving in directions players actively choose, and the sandbox freedom is hard to match. But the grind is legendary for a reason, the small screen creates real usability problems, and the free-to-play restrictions make the free version feel more like an extended demo than a complete game. For existing players, the mobile version is a revelation. For newcomers, it's a hard sell without a strong tolerance for old-school design.