Home / Tech News / Featured Tech News / Final Fantasy 7 Reunion, Remnant 2 and more announced for PS Plus

Final Fantasy 7 Reunion, Remnant 2 and more announced for PS Plus

Sony has now announced the next batch of games for PS Plus subscribers. If you are on one of the higher Extra or Premium tiers, you can expect a new batch of titles available to download, including the likes of Remnant 2 and Crisis Core: Final Fantasy VII Reunion.

Following on from a leak earlier this week, Sony has today officially announced the next batch of games for PS Plus Extra subscribers, including:

  • Remnant 2
  • Crisis Core – Final Fantasy VII – Reunion
  • Mount & Blade 2: Bannerlord
  • The Jackbox Party Pack 9
  • Pathfinder: Wrath of the Righteous
  • No More Heroes 3
  • Travis Strikes Again: No More Heroes Complete Edition
  • Deadcraft
  • Steep

As far as the Classics library goes for PS Plus Premium subscribers, you'll get three more games, including:

  • Summoner
  • Ratchet and Clank: Size Matters
  • Jeanne d'Arc

As an extra bonus, PS Plus Premium subscribers will also get access to Job Simulator for PlayStation VR2.

Discuss on our Facebook page, HERE.

KitGuru Says: I've been holding off on Crisis Core until it hits a much deeper discount, but with it being included on PS Plus now, I'll finally get to give it a real shot. Will you be downloading any of this month's PS Plus titles?

Become a Patron!

Check Also

DLSS 5 NVIDIA

KitGuru Games: DLSS 5 misses the point

It would be hard to argue that NVIDIA’s DLSS technologies haven’t been a net positive to the PC space, with the machine-learning based upscaler successfully translating lower resolution inputs into a final image which is perceivably sharper while hogging fewer resources. Though somewhat more contentious, the next evolution of DLSS came in the form of Frame Generation, using ML in order to generate additional frames for high-refresh rate gaming. Both techniques can have their issues, but generally speaking they’ve allowed for more people to experience higher-end titles at increased frame rates. DLSS 5, however, takes a sharp pivot, with a very different end goal in mind than the performance-boosting versions that came before.