Immersion in video games is a tall mountain—many attempt to climb it, but only a few truly reach the summit. For players, immersion is often a major factor in their decision to buy in a game, especially single-player titles. This becomes even more the case in open-world games, where a captivating environment can make all the difference.

Broadly, open-world games can be divided into two categories: those set in urban landscapes, whether futuristic or present-day, and those that transport players back to nature, often in medieval or fantasy worlds. In the latter, a return to nature—forests, trees, and a simpler way of life—forms the heart of the immersive experience. Forests, in particular, have a way of transporting players someplace else, grounding them in the game world in a way few other things can.

6 Red Dead Redemption 2

Immersive, Realistic Forests

Red Dead Redemption 2
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Released
October 26, 2018
Developer(s)
Rockstar Games
Platform(s)
PS4, Xbox One, PC, Stadia
Genre(s)
Action, Adventure

One of Rockstar's biggest achievements with Red Dead Redemption 2 is the way they managed to make it so incredibly realistic as to nearly pass muster as a live-action movie in certain places. While forests are not nearly as ubiquitous in RDR2 as they are in some other titles on this list, that only makes them more immersive when Arthur does come across them in his adventures.

Kenshi, Stalker, Fallout 4
5 Open-World Games Where The Terrain Is Your Enemy

Open-world games can be home to many dangers. Here are some great titles that feature threatening environments.

The mountains around Strawberry are filled with natural-looking trees, dirt roads, and the occasional wild animal attack, which makes players feel like they are standing on the edge of where civilization ends and nature retakes control. On the other hand, the swampy forests near St. Denis, where crocodiles are lying in ambush in the marshes and crazies live in huts in deep swamps is an entirely different type of forest.

5 Horizon: Forbidden West

A Blend Of Futurism And Nature

Horizon Forbidden West Complete Edition
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Action-Adventure
Open-World
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Released
March 21, 2024
Developer(s)
Guerrilla Games, Nixxes
Platform(s)
PS5, PC
Genre(s)
Action-Adventure, Open-World

The sequel to Horizon: Zero Dawn, Horizon: Forbidden West is set in a post-apocalyptic world where humanity has all but regressed to the Iron Age, but the remnants of technology from the old era are still present and usable. This makes for a unique mish-mash of genres that is quite unlike anything else out there. Horizon's world is almost completely taken over by nature, with forests taking up a majority of the game world. Not all forests are the same, either.

While much of Horizon's gameplay is frantic sprints from one place to the next, players who can take the time to appreciate the scenery along the way end up enjoying the game much more than those who don't. It behooves everyone who owns the game to turn off the HUD, enter Explorer Mode, and just… enjoy the visual masterpiece before them at least once.

4 Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon Wildlands

Hyper-Realistic Diverse Biomes

Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon Wildlands (dupe)
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Tactical
Shooter
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Released
March 7, 2017
Developer(s)
Ubisoft Paris, Ubisoft Milan
Platform(s)
PC, PS4, Xbox One
Genre(s)
Tactical, Shooter

Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon Wildlands takes players to a hyper-realistic open-world tactical shooter game that has all of the hallmarks of the Tom Clancy formula but viewed through the lens of a vast open world. Realism is a core tenet of Ghost Recon Wildlands, and it shows.

Fable, Assassin's Creed Valhalla Eivor, Borderlands 3
5 Open World Games Worth Playing Just For Their Weapons

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Much of Ghost Recon Wildlands is spent patiently waiting just outside the perimeter of an enemy base, assessing threats, finding objectives, and the like. As the name suggests, there is a lot of recon and stealth in this game, which naturally results in players having to stop, breathe, and take in the scenery. The map is massive, and there are different biomes like the flat plains and deserts, but it's the forests that take up most of the real estate. Crawling through the mud, lining up the perfect shot while waiting under the cover of trees goes allows players to immerse themselves in the world they're in. Even outside combat situations, just going from point A to point B involves a lot of trekking through the woods that aids in this regard.

3 Ghost of Tsushima

Japanese-Style Forests

Ghost of Tsushima Director's Cut
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Released
August 20, 2021
Developer(s)
Sucker Punch
Platform(s)
PC, PS5, PS4
Genre(s)
Action-Adventure, Open-World

Ghost of Tsushima is an incredible samurai action RPG set in the fictional island of Tsushima amidst the Mongol Invasion. There are tons of reasons to fall in love with this game: great combat, excellent storytelling, and an authentic setting, but the one that takes the cake is the visuals. Every mountain, river, building, and rock bleeds character, and the forests are no different.

Forests in Ghost of Tsushima come in different flavors. Most of the map is covered in highly realistic, true-to-life trees with green grass and the occasional bamboo, but that's not all there is. There are forests bathed in gold, bamboo thickets to get lost in, and even blood-red trees in certain locations. GoT is visual eye-candy in every sense of the word, especially now that it can be experienced on the PC with the Director's Cut.

2 Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora

Lush, Vibrant, And Everpresent

Avatar: Frontiers Of Pandora
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Released
December 7, 2023
Developer(s)
Massive Entertainment
Genre(s)
Action-Adventure

While there is much players may find wanting in Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora, one place where it doesn't fall short is the impeccable world design. Lush, vibrant, and filled with color, it's James Cameron's vision brought to life in a video game setting. In terms of foliage variety and visual excellence, there are very few things that compare.

Where other titles tend to include variety in their open-worlds in the form of different biomes to keep things from getting stale, Avatar's take on it is to just add more variance in their foliage, change up the types of trees that make up their forests, and repeat. The game world is split into three distinct areas, with each having a different identity. The first area consists almost entirely of forests and rivers, with trunks of gigantic trees serving as walkways and alien-looking plants filling up the landscape. Running on the fallen tree trunks just as the sun is rising, the music is reaching its crescendo, and with nothing for company other than the steady thump-thump-thump of the protagonist's footfalls is one of the most immersive experiences there are in gaming.

1 Kingdom Come: Deliverance

Low-Fantasy Medieval Wilderness

Kingdom Come: Deliverance
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Released
February 13, 2018
Developer(s)
Warhorse Studios
Platform(s)
PS4, Xbox One, PC, Switch
Genre(s)
RPG

Kingdom Come: Deliverance is a single-player low-fantasy open-world RPG with an extremely strict adherence to realism. Set in medieval Bohemia, it puts players in the shoes of a would-be blacksmith apprentice, Henry, and sets him on the path for vengeance. During the course of this journey, Henry will become a soldier in the army, find damsels in distress, uphold the public order, participate in wars, and everything in between.

Immersion-wise, there are very few games that can challenge Kingdom Come: Deliverance. As soon as Henry steps out of his hamlet into the world, he's presented with an absolutely gigantic map completely filled with forests, a rudimentary map that's nearly useless for navigation, and little else. Getting lost in the woods at night is a very real possibility in the game because objectives often don't have a quest marker, especially treasure hunts. There is even a day/night cycle where the night gets incredibly dark, and seeing anything more than two feet becomes impossible, even with a torch out. Combine this with realistic forests where every tree looks nearly identical, and it's easy to see why KCD wears the crown in terms of immersion.