Sony has officially confirmed the PlayStation Plus Game Catalog lineup for April 2026, and it’s a sizeable drop. Eight games are landing on 21 April, headlined by Horizon Zero Dawn Remastered, The Crew Motorfest, and Football Manager 26 Console for Extra and Premium subscribers, plus the PS2 cult classic Wild Arms 4 making its way to the Premium-tier Classics catalogue.
It’s a noticeably stronger month than the recent average, with a mix of major first-party content, a competent racing alternative, and a few left-field picks that genre fans have been waiting on. Here’s the full lineup, what each game actually offers, and what you need to know before download day.
Full PS Plus April 2026 Game Catalog Lineup
All eight titles unlock together on 21 April. Seven are available to anyone subscribed at the Extra tier or higher, while Wild Arms 4 sits behind the Premium paywall as part of the Classics catalogue.
| Game | Platforms | Tier Required |
|---|---|---|
| Horizon Zero Dawn Remastered | PS5, PS4* | Extra |
| The Crew Motorfest | PS5, PS4 | Extra |
| Football Manager 26 Console | PS5 | Extra |
| Warriors: Abyss | PS5, PS4 | Extra |
| Squirrel with a Gun | PS5 | Extra |
| The Casting of Frank Stone | PS5 | Extra |
| Monster Train | PS5 | Extra |
| Wild Arms 4 | PS5, PS4 | Premium |
One quirk to flag on Horizon Zero Dawn Remastered: PS5 owners get the proper remastered edition, while PS4 players will be downloading the older Horizon Zero Dawn Complete Edition instead. Same starting point, different versions.
The Headline Additions
Horizon Zero Dawn Remastered
Easily the biggest get of the month. Guerrilla Games’ open-world debut returns with visuals and systems brought up to par with Horizon Forbidden West, which is a substantial overhaul rather than a quick polish. If you’ve never played as Aloy or only made it through the original on PS4, this is the version to commit to. The post-apocalyptic world of tribal hunters and towering machines still holds up, and the remaster removes most of the technical reasons people bounced off it the first time.
The Crew Motorfest
Ubivisoft’s Hawaii-set arcade racer is the closest thing PS5 owners are getting to Forza Horizon for a while, given Forza Horizon 6 isn’t coming to PlayStation at launch next month. Motorfest packs hundreds of vehicles and a festival-style event structure spanning Honolulu’s streets, rainforest trails, mountain passes, and volcanic terrain. It’s not the deepest racing sim on the platform, but as a free addition it slots neatly into the gap.
Football Manager 26 Console
The big one for football fans. This entry marks the first time the Premier League has been fully licensed in the series, which is a genuinely meaningful change for a franchise where authenticity is half the appeal. The console version comes with a rebuilt Match Day presentation, fresh motion capture, and refined controller shortcuts that make tactical tweaks between highlights faster. Worth picking up just for the league licence alone if you’ve been on the fence.
Read More: Xbox Game Pass April 2026 Reveals Hades II, Oblivion Remastered, and Every New Game This Month
The Rest Of The April Lineup
Warriors: Abyss
Koei Tecmo’s roguelite take on the Warriors formula. Over 100 historical heroes are summonable as party members, and the loop centres on running successive trials of hell with combined hero abilities. It’s a niche genre crossover, but the deck-of-warriors mechanic gives it more legs than a straight Musou clone.
Squirrel with a Gun
The title is the pitch. You’re a rodent, you’ve got firearms, and you’re escaping a secret underground facility while collecting golden acorns. It’s a sandbox shooter slash puzzle platformer that leans entirely into its absurdity, and it’s the kind of palate-cleanser that works well as a free download rather than a full-price purchase.
The Casting of Frank Stone
Supermassive Games’ branching-narrative horror, set within the Dead by Daylight universe. Standard Until Dawn-style mechanics where decisions ripple through the story and characters can live or die based on your choices. Sony positioning this on the catalogue ahead of Supermassive’s next title, Directive 8020, releasing next month is no coincidence.
Monster Train
Long-overdue arrival on PlayStation for one of the most respected roguelike deckbuilders of the past few years. The hook is defending three vertical battlegrounds simultaneously, with six monster clans, 25 covenant difficulty levels, and over 280 cards to build around. If you’ve burnt out on Slay the Spire or Balatro, this is the next logical stop.
Wild Arms 4

The Premium-only addition, and the one with the most surprising backstory. Originally released on PS2 in 2005 in Japan and 2006 in the West, Wild Arms 4 was the entry that broke from the series’ western-themed aesthetic and divided fans at launch, though it’s since picked up a cult following. The new release adds up-rendered visuals, quick save, rewind, and custom video filters. It’s also being sold standalone on the PlayStation Store for $14.99 USD if you’d rather not subscribe to Premium.
This addition also means the bulk of the Wild Arms series is now playable on modern PlayStation hardware. Wild Arms 1 through 3 were already available, leaving only Wild Arms 5 and the PSP spinoff Wild Arms XF outside the modern catalogue.
Don’t Forget The Monthly Games Deadline
Separate from the Game Catalog drop, all PS Plus members at any tier can still claim April’s monthly games: Lords of the Fallen, Tomb Raider I-III Remastered, and Sword Art Online Fractured Daydream. The deadline to add them to your library is 4 May, after which they’re gone from the free claim window. Worth grabbing now even if you don’t plan to play them immediately, since they stay in your library permanently as long as your subscription remains active.
What This Lineup Signals For The Months Ahead
April leans heavier on first-party catalogue depth than any month so far in 2026, and the Wild Arms 4 addition hints that more PS2-era classics could be on the way. The Wild Arms series isn’t a Sony-owned property, so its arrival on the Premium Classics tier suggests Sony is still actively brokering deals for legacy JRPGs rather than letting that part of the catalogue stagnate. Wild Arms 5 and Wild Arms XF remain the obvious next candidates if this lands well with subscribers.
