After talking for so long about Disco Elysium: The Final Cut coming to PlayStation 5 and PS4, it's now finally time to see it in action. The lucky lot over at PlayStation Access have gotten their mittens on the game well ahead of time, providing us with nine minutes of PS5 gameplay.
Steam Detective Fest 2026 runs January 12–19, featuring mystery and detective games like Disco Elysium, Return of the Obra Dinn, and more.
A Disco Elysium mobile adaptation is coming, with the original devs reimagining the gloomy RPG to create pockets of compelling storytelling.
Disco Elysium is a genuine masterpiece, I'm happy if more people can play it regardless of whether it's PC, console or mobile.

TNS: "While it's easy to agree that Dragon Age and Disco Elysium have something to say, every game has its own politics. That's a good thing."
Really?
My favorite game is Microsoft Flight Simulator. Stop basing your headlines on shaky assumptions for effect.
Dragon Age: The Veilguard's politics are not the problem. Throw all the politics you want at me. I don't mind at all. Quite the opposite. I appreciate it. They give depth to storytelling when they're well written and well integrated within the world building of a franchise. There are tons of shining examples of that and Veilguard isn't one.
Dragon Age: The Veilguard's problem is that its writing is extremely bad, childish, and feels like a bad fanfiction written by someone who isn't a fan. Disney has more edge than this.
That kind of writing is pretty literally insulting not only to the franchise and its fans, but to the politics it presents and the people they're supposed to represent.
Yes. Most games that tell a story are political, and that's great. But the politics can be supported and enhanced by good writing, or weighed down by bad writing, throwing immersion out of the window. Veilguard is the latter.
One of my favorite games of all time is Tetris and it is not political. However I would have to agree that many great games in the industry do carry a political undertone or some form of social critique like Resident Evil, Mass Effect, Final Fantasy and Fire Emblem.
I agree but a lot of people who said this only subscribe to this notion until something actually challenges their views, then it's problematic, outdated, need to be fixed...
"Everything is political" is one of the most emptyheaded statements I've seen in recent years. Not every story has a political message. Not everything needs one either. Let art be art and stop placing demands on creators to cater to your political needs.
Veilguard's worst problem is not politics, it's the HORRENDOUS writing and dialogue. It's a high fantasy game where characters say "Eat sh*t" and "This goes hard!" or one of the companions saying "Uh...this blight...is weiiird!" . I mean, what the actual ****...
No ray tracing?
Saaaaaallltttyyyy. I loved this game until I found out I was sold an unfinished game and to get the complete experience I have to pay twice. Imagine paying $40 to hear immediately after, "if you want the good version you will need to buy it again." It seems like gamers are supposed to wait a couple of years after the release of a game to be sure when they buy it they are getting the complete experience.
Does anyone want to buy an unfinished table now for the price of a finished table and then pay again for another table with a coat of paint for the same price? If so then hit me up, I got those all day.