Microsoft has revealed its list of March 2026 titles for Xbox Game Pass, and this one feels unusually stacked. Amongst other titles, the lineup includes Cyberpunk 2077, EA Sports F1 25, and Hollow Knight: Silksong, three highly acclaimed games across wildly different genres.

This isn’t a quiet content refresh. It’s a momentum play. Game Pass has always leaned on variety, but March’s opening wave signals something sharper: recognisable, conversation-driving titles landing at once. For subscribers, that translates into immediate installs instead of “maybe later” downloads.

Three big wins, three different audiences

Starting with Cyberpunk 2077, what was once one of the industry’s most controversial launches has quietly turned into one of gaming’s strongest redemption arcs. Years of updates and performance fixes have transformed the open-world RPG into a far more polished, content-rich experience. Its arrival on Game Pass lowers the barrier for anyone who skipped Night City the first time, especially with access to the Phantom Liberty expansion included. That said, there’s one caveat: Cyberpunk 2077 is available to Cloud and Console subscribers, but not PC players.

Then there’s EA Sports F1 25. Codemasters’ latest official Formula 1 entry, since F1 26 won’t be launching at all, brings updated teams, cars, and circuits from the 2025 FIA season, along with refined handling and deeper career progression. And finally, Hollow Knight: Silksong. Few indie sequels have carried this level of anticipation. Building on the original’s atmospheric world design, tight combat, and demanding progression, Silksong has earned critical praise and strong player buzz.

Beyond those headline grabbers, the wave also includes Final Fantasy III and Kingdom Come: Deliverance II arriving today, with to a T, Planet of Lana II, Construction Simulator, and DreamWorks Gabby’s Dollhouse joining later in the month. Taken together, the March 2026 update shows how Xbox Game Pass continues to evolve. It’s no longer just about maintaining a massive catalogue, but also about stacking individual months with games that drive conversation across RPG, racing, and indie communities all at once.

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