Xbox Game Pass
Xbox Game Pass Ultimate
If there’s one service on this list that truly earns the title of “Netflix for video games,” it’s Xbox Game Pass (starting at $9.99 per month). Microsoft’s subscription lets you play dozens of exciting games on Xbox and PC, including major first-party releases like Forza Horizon and Halo on their launch days. With cloud streaming (available via the $14.99-per-month Xbox Game Pass Ultimate tier), you can play your favorite Xbox titles on a phone.
Nintendo Switch Online
Nintendo has never been known for its robust online services. That said, alongside online multiplayer and cloud saves, a Nintendo Switch Online membership (starting at $3.99 per month) lets you enjoy an exciting library of NES, SNES, and Game Boy games. When it comes to old-school gaming, this is the cream of the crop. The Expansion Pack (starting at $49.99 per month) throws in Game Boy Advance, Sega Genesis, and Nintendo 64 games.
PlayStation Plus
PlayStation Plus Essential (12-Month Subscription)
Navigating the various tiers for the revamped PlayStation Plus (starting at $9.99 per month) can be a little tricky. However, you can play new PlayStation games every month no matter what plan you choose. Higher tiers increase the number of available games, open retro libraries (PS2, PSP), and let you cloud stream games to a PlayStation console or PC.
Apple Arcade
Despite all the exploitative free-to-play trash, the mobile app marketplace still has the potential to be a great and thriving video game platform. An Apple Arcade subscription (starting at $6.99 per month) will remind you of how many truly great games you can play on your phone, with ambitious creative titles from well-known developers and indie darlings. Plus, the games lack microtransactions!
EA Play
EA is one of the biggest video game publishers around, with Dead Space, Dragon Age, and licensed sports games in its library. An EA Play subscription (starting at $4.99 per month) includes unlimited access to EA games on consoles or PC, and it comes included with Xbox Game Pass Ultimate. Subscribers can even play some games before their official release dates.
GameClub
For a different type of mobile game subscription, consider GameClub (starting at $4.99 per month). This service rescues retro mobile games, titles that were beloved during the early days of the App Store but have since grown out of date (Skulls of the Shogun, Toki Tori). With a subscription, you can play awesome games and support digital game preservation.
Humble Bundle
Humble Bundle (starting at $11.99 per month) gives you many ways to buy games and support charities in the process. If you’re overwhelmed by the options, let Humble decide for you with the Humble Choice subscription. This membership gives you select, monthly PC games that you’ll own even after your subscription ends. You also get discounts and other curated perks to go along with it.
(Editors' Note: Humble Bundle is owned by Ziff Davis, PCMag's parent company.)
Prime Gaming
Among its other entertainment subscriptions, Amazon also sells Prime Gaming. This service gives you free PC games, and lets you unlock content in other titles. It also helps you financially support your favorite Twitch streamers, seeing as Amazon also owns that massive video game live streaming service. A standalone Prime Gaming subscription costs $8.99 per month, but it also comes included with an Amazon Prime or Prime Video sub.
Ubisoft+
Ubisoft
Say what you will about Ubisoft, but the European publisher regularly releases a healthy number of games in multiple genres. See for yourself with Ubisoft+ (starting at $17.99 per month), which offers more than 100 new and classic games from throughout Ubisoft’s history, from Assassin’s Creed to Splinter Cell. Currently, this is a PC-based service with cloud gaming add-ons, but console versions are on the way.