19 November 2025

PS5’s First 5 Years of Games VS PS4’s At This Point in Their Lifecycle (and The Clear Winner)

By newsgame


We are approaching the fifth anniversary of the PlayStation 5‘s worldwide launch, prompting many to look back at the console’s performance thus far. As anyone keyed into games media or online gaming forums is likely already aware, sentiment around the PS5 hasn’t been entirely positive: there have been accusations of a poor first-party output, and an ostensibly smaller leap forward in visuals and performance relative to prior console generations.

It’s clear that the PS5 is more powerful than its predecessors—there’s a bevy of cross-generation games that demonstrate this disparity—but that doesn’t matter as much as the actual games that are available, at least for the average consumer. Indeed, at the end of the day, it’s all about what sorts of experiences people can have on the platform, and how those experiences compare to what they may be missing on, say, the Nintendo Switch. So, is there truth to the notion that the “PS5 has no games”? How does it stack up against the first five years of the PS4, a console that’s often considered to have one of the best exclusives lineups of all time?

PS4 vs. PS5: Which Console Had More Compelling Exclusives After Five Years?

With so many PlayStation games coming to PC day-and-date or a few years post-launch, the “Timed Exclusive” columns in the following tables are meant to denote games that have only been ported to other consoles (Xbox, Nintendo Switch) after launch.

Notable Exclusives from the PS4’s First Five Years

Game

OpenCritic Top Critic Average

Timed Exclusive

Single/Multiplayer

Remake/Remaster

Release Year

PSVR

Astro Bot: Rescue Mission

90

No

Single-player

No

2018

Yes

Bloodborne

91

No

Single-player

No

2015

No

Bound

71

No

Single-player

No

2016

No

Detroit: Become Human

79

No

Single-player

No

2018

No

Drawn to Death

56

No

Multiplayer

No

2017

No

Driveclub

71

No

Multiplayer

No

2014

No

God of War

94

No

Single-player

No

2018

No

Gravity Rush 2

81

No

Single-player

No

2017

No

Horizon Zero Dawn

89

No

Single-player

No

2017

No

InFamous: First Light

73

No

Single-player

No

2014

No

InFamous: Second Son

82

No

Single-player

No

2014

No

Killzone: Shadow Fall

73

No

Single-player

No

2013

No

Knack

54

No

Both

No

2013

No

Knack 2

69

No

Both

No

2017

No

MLB: The Show 17

85

Yes

Both

No

2017

No

MLB: The Show 18

82

Yes

Both

No

2018

No

Marvel’s Spider-Man

88

No

Single-player

No

2018

No

Nioh

88

Yes

Single-player

No

2017

No

P.T.

N/A

No

Single-player

No

2014

No

Ratchet & Clank

85

No

Single-player

No

2016

No

Shadow of the Beast

64

No

Single-player

Yes

2016

No

Shadow of the Colossus

91

No

Single-player

Yes

2018

No

The Last Guardian

81

No

Single-player

No

2016

No

The Last of Us Remastered

94

No

Both

Yes

2014

No

The Order: 1886

63

No

Single-player

No

2015

No

Uncharted 4: A Thief’s End

93

No

Both

No

2016

No

Uncharted: The Lost Legacy

85

No

Both

No

2017

No

Until Dawn

79

No

Single-player

No

2015

No

Until Dawn: Rush of Blood

72

No

Single-player

No

2016

Yes

Yakuza 6: The Song of Life

83

Yes

Single-player

No

2018

No

Notable Exclusives from the PS5’s First Five Years

Game

OpenCritic Top Critic Average

Timed Exclusive

Single/Multiplayer

Remake/Remaster

Release Year

PSVR

Cross-Generation

Astro Bot

95

No

Single-player

No

2024

No

No

Astro’s PlayRoom

84

No

Single-player

No

2020

No

No

Days Gone Remastered

81

No

Single-player

Yes

2025

No

No

Death Stranding 2: On the Beach

90

No

Single-player

No

2025

No

No

Death Stranding Director’s Cut

86

Yes

Single-player

Yes

2021

No

No

Demon’s Souls

92

No

Both

Yes

2020

No

No

Destruction AllStars

62

No

Multiplayer

No

2021

No

No

Fantavision 202X

N/A

No

Both

Yes

2023

Yes

No

Final Fantasy 16

87

Yes

Single-player

No

2023

No

No

Final Fantasy 7 Rebirth

92

Yes

Single-player

Yes

2024

No

No

Ghost of Tsushima: Director’s Cut

87

No

Single-player

Yes

2021

No

Yes

Ghost of Yotei

87

No

Single-player

No

2025

No

No

God of War Ragnarok

92

No

Single-player

No

2023

No

Yes

Gran Turismo 7

87

No

Both

No

2022

Yes

Yes

Helldivers 2

83

Yes

Multiplayer

No

2024

No

No

Horizon Call of the Mountain

80

No

Single-player

No

2023

Yes

No

Horizon Forbidden West

88

No

Single-player

No

2022

No

Yes

Horizon Zero Dawn Remastered

84

No

Single-player

Yes

2024

No

No

Lost Soul Aside

63

No

Single-player

No

2025

No

No

Marvel’s Spider-Man 2

88

No

Single-player

No

2024

No

No

Marvel’s Spider-Man: Miles Morales

85

No

Single-player

No

2020

No

Yes

Ratchet & Clank: Rift Apart

88

No

Single-player

No

2021

No

No

Returnal

86

No

Single-player

No

2021

No

No

Rise of the Ronin

77

Yes

Both

No

2024

No

No

Sackboy: A Big Adventure

80

No

Both

No

2020

No

Yes

Silent Hill 2

87

Yes

Single-player

Yes

2024

No

No

Silent Hill: The Short Message

55

No

Single-player

No

2024

No

No

Stellar Blade

81

Yes

Single-player

No

2024

No

No

Sword of the Sea

87

No

Single-player

No

2025

No

No

Synapse

78

No

Single-player

No

2023

Yes

No

The Last of Us Part 1

82

No

Single-player

Yes

2022

No

No

The Last of Us Part 2 Remastered

89

No

Single-player

Yes

2024

No

No

Until Dawn

69

No

Single-player

Yes

2024

No

No

The PS5 Holds Its Own, but the PS4’s First Five Years Were Clearly Better

Before making this list, I had expected the PlayStation 4 to clear the PlayStation 5’s exclusives lineup with no problem, but the PS5 isn’t actually as far behind as I had anticipated. The obvious highlights of the newer console’s exclusives are Ghost of Yotei, Death Stranding 2: On the Beach, and Astro Bot, which all push the hardware to its limits and provide experiences that would be hard to find on older consoles (DS2 has especially great graphics, with some gamers jokingly calling it “the first PS5 game”). Other notable PS5 exclusives from the past half-decade include Marvel’s Spider-Man 2, Returnal, and Ratchet & Clank: Rift Apart.

Astro in front of the Big Papa Tree - Astro Bot

But those are essentially the only major, “true” exclusives the PS5 has to its name: several of the console’s other claims to fame, like Horizon Forbidden West and God of War Ragnarok, are also available on the PS4, albeit with lower resolutions, lower FPS limits, longer load times, et cetera. Additionally, many of the PS5’s biggest exclusives up to this point have either been timed exclusives, releasing on other platforms after a year or so, or remakes; the console even launched alongside Demon’s Souls, a shot-for-shot remake of the 2009 classic.

Compare this to the PlayStation 4’s exclusives lineup at the five-year mark, which is composed of far more ambitious and genre-defining projects like Horizon Zero Dawn, Bloodborne, and God of War. Crucially, these are games that weren’t released on the PS3, and probably wouldn’t have been able to run on those platforms, period: these games felt more like true “next-gen” experiences, fully leveraging the leap in hardware prowess from the previous hardware line. We are just now starting to see obvious, immediate differences between PS5 and PS4 games, whereas the differences between, say, Uncharted 4 and Uncharted 3 were remarkable and undeniable. Maybe history will look more kindly upon the PS5’s lifelong exclusives catalog, but for now, it seems obvious that the PS4’s first five years were more exciting, envelope-pushing, and technologically significant.