Summary
- Indie games on Xbox Game Pass offer innovative and daring experiences that showcase the passion and hard work of small studios.
- Celeste and Goat Simulator are some of the best indie games deserving of your time.
- Inside, Dead Cells, and Stardew Valley are also standout indie games on Xbox Game Pass, providing immersive worlds and captivating gameplay experiences.
The diversity of games available on the Xbox Game Pass library is a true delight for all who subscribe to the service. And while flashy, triple-A titles are major draws, understated indie games should also garner attention from the masses. These titles provide experiences that are innovative and daring, showcasing what a small studio of dedicated developers can do with passion and hard work.
Xbox Game Pass: How To Subscribe And What Games Are Available
Xbox Game Pass packs a lot of value into its subscription model — here are all the details you need to know, from price to recently added games.
It is truly gratifying to see these indie games shine like diamonds within the treasure trove of the Xbox Game Pass collection. Read on if you want to see which are the best indie games most deserving of your time.
Don't yet have Xbox Game Pass?
19 Ball X Pit
BALL x PIT
- Released
- October 15, 2025
You know when a game has sucked over 70 hours of your life away and you didn’t even notice that it deserves to be on a list of the best indie games on Xbox Game Pass. I downloaded Ball X Pit on a lark, unaware of the hype building up around it. But now that I do know about its fantastic reviews, I heartily agree and concur. Ball X Pit is good. Really good. It’s got the replayability and progression of Vampire Survivors and the satisfaction of playing of Peggle.
The character you control goes up against a variety of levels in which you need to break things with your balls. (It makes sense, trust me.) These balls have special abilities. As you keep playing, you can upgrade your character, upgrade your balls, and upgrade the town where your character lives. It’s one of the best new indie games on Game Pass, up there with the likes of Hollow Knight: Silksong and Celeste.
18 Hollow Knight: Silksong
Hollow Knight: Silksong
- Released
- September 4, 2025
Following up on a masterpiece is tough. How do you improve something that already works so well? The folks at Team Cherry were confronted with this conundrum when they decided to turn Silksong into a full-fledged game rather than DLC for the base Hollow Knight game. Silksong, as with its predecessor, is not without its flaws. (The difficulty can be a bit much at times.) But it accomplishes so much without deviating from the roots of what made Hollow Knight so great.
Hornet’s moveset is a lot more agile than the Knight’s and you can feel that with every leap and swipe of her blade. But there is a welcoming familiarity as you make your way through Pharloom, battling enemies and climbing to what you hope is Hornet’s freedom. Sure, you’re in a new place, fighting new foes and meeting new critters on your journey. However, despite the intervening eight years between games, it feels like home. Silksong, as with Hollow Knight before it, is one of the best indie games you could play, demonstrating the skill and passion of the developers behind it every inch of the way.
17 Dredge
Dredge
- Released
- March 31, 2023
- Genre(s)
- Adventure
You’ll frequently see great indie games blend different elements to create amazing new concepts that are rarely seen in the bigger and (usually) safer triple-A spaces. Dredge blends the coziness of a cute fishing simulator with the creeping horror of a Lovecraftian tale. And despite this seeming like an unconventional mix, it works! You play as a fisherman hauling in your catch and distributing it to folks on shore.
However, the later you stay out at sea, the darker the skies become and the blacker the waves, the more ominous things get. And the more likely that you’re going to get got by a nasty, otherworldly creature of the deep. It’s amazing good fun, and describing Dredge’s premise is not doing it justice. However, trust us when we say it’s a fantastic indie game that is well worth checking out. Just make sure you have the stomach for some unnerving horror in your cozy sim.
16 Blue Prince
Blue Prince
- Released
- April 10, 2025
- Genre(s)
- Puzzle, Adventure, Exploration, Strategy
The hallmark of a good indie game is ingenuity. Independent gaming spaces offer more room for experimentation than the bigger budget, more rigid triple-A titles, strangely enough. So when looking for a good indie game, nay, one of the best indie games this year, you need to find that spark of creativity. 2025 has given us Blue Prince. Blue Prince is a phenomenal indie title. Describing its gameplay loop of walking through a manor house, solving puzzles and “creating” rooms as you go along, sounds confusing.
But it’s remarkably straightforward to grasp once you start playing. And the constant stream of trial-and-error and discovery never lets up. You’re always on the verge of revealing a new secret, solving a new puzzle, or uncovering yet another new mystery to unravel. It’s a recent release, but you can just tell when you’re playing Blue Prince that it’s going to be remembered as one of the greats.
15 Balatro
Balatro
- Released
- February 20, 2024
- ESRB
- E10+ For Everyone 10+ // Gambling Themes
- Genre(s)
- Strategy, Digital Card Game, Roguelike
2024 saw the rise of many a great indie game. Mouthwashing was a fantastic narrative horror game; Neva was a gorgeous indie puzzle-platformer. But no indie game took the world by storm in 2024 so much as the roguelike darling Balatro. Inspired by poker (though to be clear, this plays in no way like actual poker), Balatro is a deckbuilding roguelike in which you build “hands,” some of which are based on legit poker hands, to create interesting combos.
This all builds up to beating “boss blinds” in which you hope your hands and collection of Jokers will see you through. It’s tough to explain in words how engaging Balatro can be, especially if you’ve never played a deckbuilder before. But rest assured that the game does a far better job than I do. Picture a mix of Vampire Survivors with Slay the Spire. If that sounds at all intriguing to you, Balatro is the indie game of your dreams.
Fair warning though. Prepare yourself for losing practically all your time as you go on run after run after run after run after run after run after run after…you get the idea.
14 Sifu
Sifu
- Released
- February 8, 2022
- ESRB
- M for Mature: Blood, Drug Reference, Strong Language, Violence
- Genre(s)
- Roguelike, Beat 'Em Up
Difficulty is not a prerequisite to be considered an indie game, but if it were, you can bet that Sifu would make the list. This third-person brawler is one of the toughest games we’ve ever played. In it, you are a person whose family was murdered by a group of assassins. Your job is to take them all out, one by one, before you die of old age. The only problem is every defeat you suffer ages you on the spot. And if you’re too elderly by the time you get to the final boss, don’t expect to win easily.
Sifu’s combat mechanics are merciless, but precise. When an opponent lands a hit on you, it has the potential to end your current run. But if you master the fighting mechanics, there is no other game on Earth that will make you feel like a John Wick. Not even an officially licensed John Wick game.
13 Citizen Sleeper
Citizen Sleeper
- Released
- May 5, 2022
A handful of the games here are remarkable given the creativity behind their game mechanics. The other handful landed on this list due to their incredible narrative, and Citizen Sleeper settles itself solidly in the camp of the latter. The dice-rolling and text-reading that makes up the majority of its gameplay work solidly, but they’re nothing to cry home about. Citizen Sleeper’s story, on the other hand, is just so engrossing, it’s one of those games that will not only keep you up late into the night playing it, but will have you ruminating on its themes and implications long after you’ve finished it.
Without spoiling too much of this seriously awesome story, you play as a “Sleeper” whose body has an impending expiration date that weighs on all of your choices. Every interaction you engage in, every purchase you expend wages on, and every activity that sucks up your precious time, is a hard decision you have to make. And with themes like that, can you blame us for pondering on Citizen Sleeper years after its release?
12 Dead Cells
Dead Cells
- Released
- August 7, 2018
- ESRB
- T For Teen Due To Blood and Gore, Language, Violence
- Genre(s)
- Roguelike
Full disclosure. We should have added Dead Cells to this list ages ago. But it was one of the many superb indie games that was always on our “to-play” list, never our “have-played” list. But now, we can finally say, at the time of this update, Dead Cells is under our belts and on this list.
Dead Cells is a roguelite platformer that sees you take control of a sentient pile of goop that goes on runs through decrepit dungeons, shadow-filled sewers, and grim graveyards. There’s a loose story behind your runs; a decaying kingdom under siege from some sort of “malaise” and an Alchemist who ran numerous experiments on living beings. But the star of Dead Cells is its combat.
As you go through the game over and over again to varying degrees of success depending on what weapons you pick up, what permanent upgrades you’ve managed to apply, and your knowledge of enemy movesets, you’ll gain a mastery over Dead Cells’ rewarding combat system. You’ll learn which weapons suit your playstyle and which boosts fit these weapons. You’ll learn the timing of when to parry or dodge for each monster. And, most importantly, you’ll learn what the game expects of you.
Another part of Dead Cells that shouldn’t go unmentioned is its humor. There is an understated sense of humor throughout the title that’s perfectly embodied by your little-pile-of-goop-inhabiting-a-body character, who shrugs and shakes their head when they come across something mystifying. So as you play through Dead Cells, wondering why on earth you hadn’t played it earlier, it's this exact motion that’s your answer.
11 Superhot: Mind Control Delete
Superhot: Mind Control Delete
Display card community and brand rating widget Display card open critics widget Display card main info widget- Released
- December 7, 2017
- ESRB
- t
- Genre(s)
- Action, First-Person Shooter
Indies are where the creativity and ingenuity of games really shine, and a perfect example of this is Superhot. It takes a relatively oversaturated genre (the first-person shooter) and turns it into something truly unique. The slogan for Superhot: Mind Control Delete is that time only moves when you do. So when you’re placed into various scenarios of geometric-looking enemies approaching, even though your first impulse will be to rush in guns blazing, stopping to take stock of your environment is what will win you the encounter.
In that sense, Superho t almost feels more like a puzzle game than an FPS game. You have to look around, plan where you’ll move, anticipate where bullets will be flying past you as your opponents open fire, and fight back accordingly. As you start out, it’s a bit of a trial-and-error style of play. At least that’s how it was for me.
But as you get used to the measured flow of combat, you'll soon find yourself mowing through encounters like there’s no tomorrow. And the cherry on top is getting to rewatch the action in real-time clips afterwards. Makes you feel like a total badass. And there’s no other game that accomplishes this quite like Superhot.
10 Firewatch
Firewatch
- Released
- February 9, 2016
- ESRB
- M For Mature 17+ due to Suggestive Themes, Nudity, Drug and Alcohol Reference, Strong Language
- Genre(s)
- Adventure
Firewatch is a first-person 3D narrative experience — that’s walking simulator, if you’re less into verbose nomenclature — that has the player filling the shoes of Henry, who has taken a job as a fire lookout to get a bit of distance from his home life after it takes a series of heartwrenchingly tragic turns. Shortly after arriving at his solitary lookout tower in the middle of the expansive Shoshone National Forest, Henry is contacted by his supervisor, Delilah, via his handheld walkie-talkie. She’s stationed in another tower, but you never really conventionally “meet” other characters in-person, save for a few odd encounters.
Focusing most of the game’s narrative and plot development into such a remote form of communication helps reinforce the game’s contemplative, solitary thematic elements — and it proves quite effective as events around the forest become increasingly unnerving and uncanny. Firewatch is a delightfully off-beat indie experience altogether, and though most of the core “mechanics” simply revolve around choice-based dialogue tree interactions, it never fails to keep you immersed with its flair for visual design and excellent character writing.