The Best Xbox 360 games of All Time – The Essentials

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The Best Xbox 360 Games of All Time

The Essentials – Multiplatform Games That Hold Up Today

Best Console Exclusives        Best XBLA Games        Essentials Part 2

The best Xbox 360 multiplatform games transformed how people discovered and played games. With weekly Xbox Live Arcade releases, built-in trials, achievements and party chat, finding new favorites became a regular part of gaming and helped entire genres expand.

In this series I’ll explore the best best Xbox 360 multiplatform games ever released for the console that still hold up well today. The Essentials covers the multiplatform games that shined on the 360. This is not a list of underappreciated, hidden gem titles: for those games click here.

Unlike other lists, this guide tells you which games to skip because better versions exist elsewhere.

The focus is on the best games released for the console that still hold up well today. If a newer version of a game is clearly better than the Xbox 360 release, I leave out the original and mention the improved version at the end, so you can enjoy the best experience today.

To make my list a game needs to demonstrate at least two of the following: genre-defining innovation, outstanding technical excellence, enduring cultural impact, or universal acclaim.

Finally, heads up—I earn a small commission if you buy anything through my links. I only link to games I genuinely recommend. If a remaster or remake is better I tell you, even if it means losing a game sale.

2006

F.E.A.R. (Monolith Productions)

F.E.A.R. best Xbox 360 multiplatform games

F.E.A.R. is the Xbox 360’s best tactical horror shooter. No other game on the platform fuses unnerving psychological scares with firefights this smart. You enemies coordinate like actual squads: they flank, vault cover, and call out your position with what GameSpot called the best AI they’d ever seen in a shooter. Trigger slow-motion and watch bullets shred drywall, sparks fill dim offices, and soldiers crumple under devastating gunplay. Between battles, Alma’s Ring-style hauntings turn every quiet hallway into dread.

The 360 version holds 30 FPS well with occasional hitches during massive explosions, and the aggressive aim assist does take getting used to. But this remains essential for anyone who wants enemies that think and horror that unnerves, not just jump-scares. Two decades on, it remains backward compatible and still holds up for anyone who wants smart enemies and slow‑burn horror wrapped in mid‑2000s shooter grit.

Tom Clancy’s Ghost Recon Advanced Warfighter (Ubisoft)

Xbox 360 game Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon Advanced Warfighter

Tom Clancy’s Ghost Recon Advanced Warfighter proved what Xbox 360 could actually do, a visual showcase that redefined console tactical shooters. The Cross-Com system let Captain Mitchell’s Ghosts coordinate UAV surveillance, squad positioning, and synchronized attacks across a Mexico City coup in ways previous consoles couldn’t touch. GRAW set the standard for console squad tactics, showing that complex military strategy worked beautifully with controllers. The best way to own it is by buying the trilogy, which I’ve linked to above.

The cover system and squad commands turned third-person shooting into battlefield chess: mark enemies with your drone, set up crossfires in plazas and favelas, watch plans execute flawlessly. This wasn’t run-and-gun; GRAW demanded patience, positioning, and battlefield awareness that is still great today. The tactical depth holds up surprisingly well, modern squad shooters simplified what GRAW mastered. It’s one of the 360’s best early releases and a backwards-compatible gem worth experiencing.

Tom Clancy’s Rainbow Six Vegas (Ubisoft)

Xbox 360 game Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six: Vegas

Tom Clancy’s Rainbow Six Vegas revolutionized console tactical shooters with its fluid cover system that switched between first-person aiming and third-person cover; IGN called it the best FPS on the 360 when it came out. Team Rainbow hunts terrorists through neon-lit Las Vegas casinos using D-pad squad commands and context-sensitive mechanics that proved tactical depth also worked beautifully with controllers.

Vegas was one of the first Unreal Engine 3 showcases, establishing the cover-shooter template that dominated the generation. Rappelling while shooting, breaching doors multiple ways, and coordinating squad tactics just felt natural. The tactical systems hold up remarkably well, many modern shooters still borrow from Vegas’ playbook. It remains an essential that shows what console tactical shooters should be. It belongs on this as one of the best Xbox 360 multiplatform games.

I list both Vegas and GRAW because they are distinct: GRAW is the strategic, third-person battlefield commander experience, and Vegas is the first-person close-quarters tactical breacher.

2007

BioShock (2K)

Xbox 360 game BioShock

BioShock dominated like few games have, sweeping several major awards in 2007. You play Jack, who survives a plane crash and discovers Rapture, an Art Deco underwater dystopia that’s drowning in its own Objectivist ambition. The genius is how plasmids, hacking, and moral choices let you tackle problems your own way while the story delivers gut-punch moments like “Would you kindly?”—a twist that weaponized player choice itself.

The New York Times declared BioShock “can hold its head high among the best games ever made,” and they weren’t wrong. It didn’t just raise the bar for narrative shooters, it changed what gaming could achieve when developers treat players like thinking adults. It stands as essential gaming, one of Xbox 360’s most important releases, and remains on every greatest games of all time list for a reason.

Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare (Infinity Ward)

Xbox 360 gamed Call of Duty 4 Modern Warfare

Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare also dominated 2007, tying with BioShock for most awards of the year. It redefined the entire FPS genre by proving modern warfare crushed endless WWII retreads. You hunt a Russian arms dealer whose nuclear weapon just incinerated 30,000 Marines, racing to stop ICBM launches aimed at America. Missions like “All Ghillied Up” felt like blockbuster cinema, but the real revolution was multiplayer. Killstreaks, Create-a-Class, and Prestige ranks created the progression loop every FPS spent the next decade copying.

Critics called it one of the best war-based shooters ever made, and it’s true. CoD4 fundamentally shifted gaming, proving console shooters could match PC depth while creating the multiplayer formula that prints money to this day. The campaign still delivers the intense moments modern shooters chase, making it essential playing.

The Orange Box (Valve)

Xbox 360 game The Orange Box

I normally don’t include compilations but I made an exception here. The Orange Box was gaming’s most insane deal ever: five full games for $60 that won over 100 awards, including Computer Game of the Year, and became the highest-scoring Xbox 360 game ever released. Valve packed Half-Life 2’s trilogy, Portal’s puzzles, and Team Fortress 2’s class-based mayhem into one disc and basically invented the concept that became Game Pass. How could I not list it as one of the best Xbox 360 multiplatform games?

Portal alone is one of the greatest puzzle games ever made, Half-Life 2 redefined FPS storytelling, and TF2 perfected team-based multiplayer. Getting all three franchises for one price was unprecedented value that proved compilations could be more than lazy cash-grabs. It still holds up great today and remains one of Xbox 360’s most essential purchases, a masterpiece bundle that changed how the industry thought about value.

skate. (EA Black Box)

Xbox 360 game Skate

Skate made skateboarding feel real, ditching button combos for the right‑stick Flickit system and physics that make every line earned, not canned. San Vanelona is your playground: drop into Freeskate, tune traffic and pedestrians, set a session marker, and work a spot until the trick book feels second nature. The control magic is simple—left stick for body, right stick for board—so ollies, flips, and shuvits flow from intuitive flicks that translate deck feel to a thumbstick without dumbing it down.

A built-in Replay Editor lets you film, cut, and upload clips, turning sessions into shareable content straight from the console. Skate didn’t just play better; it shifted the culture, replacing arcade excess with a low-angle, skate-video style and realism that dethroned Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater. It holds up because flow is king; the physics and spot‑driven city keep “one more try” timeless. Skate 2 and 3 took it even further, but Skate changed everything and is essential.

2008

Burnout Paradise (Criterion Games)

Xbox 360 game Burnout Paradise

Burnout Paradise revolutionized arcade racing by ditching menus entirely and making Paradise City one big playground. Every intersection triggers instant events—races, Road Rage takedowns, Marked Man escapes—all at 60fps with spectacular slow-mo crashes. The genius is total freedom: pick any route to the finish, discover shortcuts mid-race, and jump into online Freeburn where the entire city becomes a shared stunt park.

The Ultimate Box adds bikes, legendary cars, and Party Pack multiplayer for couch competition. Paradise proved open-world racing could work without sacrificing speed or chaos, influencing everything from Forza Horizon to The Crew. It’s just as fun to play today, making it one of the greatest arcade racers ever made.

Fallout 3 (Bethesda)

Xbox 360 game Fallout 3

Fallout 3 was the best game of 2008, winning 69 Game of the Year awards (more than GTA IV and LittleBigPlanet combined). Bethesda completely reinvented Fallout by transforming it into a fully 3D open world. The Capitol Wasteland is still one of gaming’s most haunted worlds, where every bombed-out landmark tells civilization’s story. VATS brilliantly preserved Fallout’s tactical roots with cinematic limb-targeting while letting you fight in real-time.

The main conflict centers on the Brotherhood of Steel versus The Enclave (a militaristic faction led by President Eden). Moral choices like Megaton’s fate genuinely matter, creating hundreds of possible endings. Fallout 3 proved the Elder Scrolls formula could work beyond fantasy settings and became one of the greatest RPGs ever made. It still holds up great thanks to its incredible world-building and remains one of the generation’s most important releases, let alone one of the best Xbox 360 multiplatform games.

FIFA Soccer 09 (EA Canada)

Xbox 360 game FIFA Soccer 09

FIFA Soccer 09 revolutionized console soccer with over 250 gameplay improvements that made everything feel responsive and real—better collision physics based on player weight, smarter AI, and better shooting mechanics. The game won 25 international awards and saw 141 million games played online. EA pushed innovation hard: groundbreaking 10v10 Clubs let 20 players battle in stadium-scale matches with genuine team tactics.

Then came the Ultimate Team DLC: the card-collecting mode that created a multi-billion dollar phenomenon that changed sports gaming forever. FIFA 09 refined on-field gameplay while simultaneously inventing the monetization model that every sports game copied for the next 15 years. One of the most influential and important sports titles ever. FIFA 12 was the pinnacle of refined play on the console, but FIFA 09 changed everything and remains essential for understanding how modern sports games evolved.

GRID (Codemasters)

Xbox 360 game Grid

GRID didn’t just modernize console racers; it quietly saved the whole racing genre by proving that real tension could coexist with a rewind button. The Flashback mechanic turned potential rage‑quits into limited second chances, lowering the barrier for newcomers without letting experts brute‑force things. That balance became the template Codemasters refined and competitors like Forza quietly copied. It still hits the rare sim‑arcade sweet spot where heavy touring cars can dance and every wreck explodes into a choreographed stunt reel. Career mode hurls you through Japanese drift nights, Detroit demolition derbies, European open‑wheel grids and condensed Le Mans showdowns as you grind from disposable hired gun to running your own team.

The EGO engine’s deforming metal, vicious AI, and scrub‑back replays keep every learning loop fast, fair, and spectacular—the exact cocktail later racers keep diluting. Officially delisted yet easily resurrected on PC and legacy hardware, it still holds up as the rare racer that made the whole genre more welcoming without sanding off its teeth.

Grand Theft Auto IV (Rockstar North)

Xbox 360 game Grand Theft Auto GTA IV

Grand Theft Auto IV scored 98/100 on Metacritic, the third highest-rated game ever and Metacritic’s Xbox 360 Game of the Year. Rockstar’s gritty reimagining of Liberty City won 39 GOTY awards and proved open-world games could deliver narrative sophistication rivaling film and literature. War-torn immigrant Niko Bellic’s pursuit of the American Dream introduced moral complexity, with revenge versus mercy decisions that actually mattered.

Revolutionary physics made every car crash visceral, while the cover system evolved combat into strategic firefights. The Complete Edition adds The Lost and Damned and Ballad of Gay Tony expansions for the definitive experience. GTA IV’s mature storytelling and grounded tone still feel refreshing compared to the over-the-top chaos of GTA V, making it essential playing for anyone seeking a more serious crime drama. One of the greatest games ever made, certainly deserving of being on any list of the best Xbox 360 multiplatform games.

Mirror’s Edge (Dice)

Xbox 360 game Mirror's Edge

Mirror’s Edge revolutionized first-person gameplay by ditching guns for parkour. DICE invented an entire genre of momentum-based traversal that directly influenced Titanfall 2, Dying Light, Ghostrunner, and Neon White. Courier Faith Connors runs through a surveillance state to clear her sister’s name, chaining rooftop moves where hundreds of first-person animations create immersion no third-person platformer could match.

The momentum system rewards flow, while those primary colors and red Runner Vision cues remain instantly iconic. Mirror’s Edge proved games didn’t need shooting to deliver adrenaline-pumping action. Its movement mechanics still represent the gold standard that modern first-person platformers chase, and it remains essential for anyone who wants to experience parkour gameplay at its purest.

NHL 09 (EA Canada)

Xbox 360 game NHL 09

NHL 09 changed how players experience sports careers by introducing Be A Pro mode, where you start in the AHL and grind through coach evaluations and ice time to reach NHL stardom. This progression became the blueprint that Madden, NBA 2K, and other EA Sports titles adopted. EASHL’s 6v6 online clubs pioneered competitive team-based sports gaming with over 35,000 teams competing annually.

The refined Skill Stick offered unprecedented control, making every goal feel earned through hockey IQ rather than button mashing. NHL 09 proved innovation beats iteration, establishing the career mode structure that sports games still use today. NHL Legacy Edition refined the formula into the 360’s best hockey experience, but NHL 09 deserves recognition as the game that invented the career mode every sports fan now takes for granted.

Sid Meier’s Civilization Revolution (Firaxis Games)

Xbox 360 Playstation PS3 game Sid Meier's Civilization Revolution

Sid Meier’s Civilization Revolution is the console’s best strategy game: a streamlined 4X empire-builder that transforms Sid’s PC masterpiece into addictive living-room sessions, where every tech tree choice and city placement feels consequential. You start as one of sixteen historical leaders, guiding your people from ancient huts to modern wonders. Victory comes through conquest, culture, science, or economics, whether by dominating capitals, launching a spaceship, filling the world with great persons, or amassing 20,000 gold.

Controller-optimized from the ground up, it solves genre console woes with intuitive radial menus, quick-build actions, and shortened eras that are suited short bursts over marathon PC marathons. Xbox Live multiplayer and achievements add replay value, earning it the 2008 Strategy Game of the Year from Official Xbox Magazine. Retrospectives praise it as the definitive console Civ, with backward compatibility keeping its approachable empire-building accessible for new strategists today. It’s certainly of the best Xbox 360 multiplatform games.

2009

Assassin’s Creed II (Ubisoft Montreal)

Xbox 360 game Assassin's Creed II

Assassin’s Creed II completely fixed everything wrong with the first game and became the franchise-defining masterpiece. Winning Spike TV’s Best Action Adventure Game and earning 6 BAFTA nominations, Ubisoft transformed repetitive missions into varied gameplay across Renaissance Italy. Ezio Auditore became one of gaming’s more beloved protagonists, proving the series could deliver compelling characters alongside parkour action.

The additions were massive: villa economy systems, hidden tomb platforming, dual hidden blades, smoke bombs, poison, and diverse assassination missions. Ezio’s decades-spanning journey through Florence and Venice with Leonardo da Vinci elevated the franchise beyond parkour sandboxes. AC2 established the formula every subsequent Assassin’s Creed followed and still holds up as one of Xbox 360’s greatest open-world adventures; widely considered the best AC game ever made.

This is just the first third of the best Xbox 360 multiplatform games, which means plenty more are coming. If you’ve enjoyed the ride so far, expect nothing less than the very best the Xbox 360 had to offer in the next installment. Agree, disagree, or have your own picks? Drop them in the comments, I’d love to hear them.

Part 2 is here

Games That Were Not Included

Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion (2006). Oblivion Remastered rebuilds the entire game in Unreal Engine 5 with overhauled combat animations, improved leveling systems, and expanded quest content.

Mass Effect (2007). The Legendary Edition comprehensively overhauls the original’s combat system, vehicle handling, and technical performance while adding hundreds of bug fixes. It has the whole trilogy and everything you could possibly want.

Dead Space (2008). The 2023 remake completely rebuilds the game from the ground up with modern graphics, enhanced audio design, and expanded story content. Play that.

Devil May Cry 4 (2008). The Special Edition adds three new playable characters with completely redone cutscenes and expanded gameplay systems.

Ninja Gaiden II (2008). This is replaced by Ninja Gaiden II Black in 2025, that’s the version to play.

Street Fighter IV (2008). Read Part 3.

Dragon Age: Origins (2009). The PC version’s hugely improved system combat and camera advantages meant the best way to play was on the PC, even back in 2009.

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