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There will be many open-world games that gamers will be surprised didn’t make this list, such as Grand Theft Auto Vor Fallout 4. Those two games have large world maps, but even they are nothing compared to the games that did make this list. Here are the games with the largest maps for players to explore.
Updated on February 16th, 2021, by Jeff Drake: The average map size in open-world games keeps getting larger and larger as time goes on. Average-sized maps are not the focus of this article though; no, this discussion is all about the biggest of the big open-world game maps. This update adds five additional entries, most of which are newer games. This update will also add a game from an (as yet) unrepresented genre, the flight sim. It makes sense to include at least one flight sim, seeing as how they almost require large maps due to the high speed of travel and the ability to fly over impassable terrain.
19 Assassin’s Creed 4: Black Flag
The sixth major installment of the Assassin’s Creed series brought the player from the mainland into the wild and untamed Caribbean. Set in an alternate 15th century during the age of piracy, players explore the West Indies and command naval ships as pirates fight for independence. The game received plenty of positive reviews for its stunning graphics and naval gameplay.
One of the biggest selling points of the game was just how large it was. Black Flag hosted the wide-open Caribbean spanning 55 square miles.
18 World Of WarCraft
Dungeons & Dragons players flocked to their computers in the late 90s as a new genre of online play launched called massively-multiplayer online role-playing games. Titles such as Meridian 59, the first subscription-based game, paved the way for later games like World of WarCraft. However, when Blizzard Entertainment’s crowning achievement launched, players around the world were astonished by the sheer size of Azeroth.
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As a sequel to the RTS franchise, WarCraft, the MMO launched with two fully-fleshed out continents, Kalimdor and The Eastern Kingdoms. Each continent by itself spanned around 41 square miles from tip to tip. Combined, the total landmass for players to explore totaled nearly 80 square miles, an incredible feat for the genre.
17 Day Z
Bohemia Interactive went for a different approach when designing their open-world game. In 2018, they released their survival horror title known as Day Z. Inspired by a mod built for Arma 2, the game takes place in a zombie-infested, post-Soviet country of Chernarus. Like any horror game, the goal of Day Z was to gather materials and survive as long as possible.
If being lost in a zombie game wasn’t enticing enough, Day Z came with an open-world full of hidden dangers. The fictional country of Chernarus spanned approximately 86 square miles.
16 Arma 3
The goal of Arma 3 was to create a realistic military tactical shooter in an open-world setting. According to the ratings it earned, developer Bohemia Interactive must have succeeded. With over 20 vehicles and 40 weapons to play with, the third installment released with limitless capabilities within its military sandbox.
The events of the game take place in the near future on a series of islands in both the Aegean Sea and South Pacific. Altogether, the photorealistic environments presented in the game spanned nearly 104 square miles, making a perfect sandbox to get lost in.
15 Operation Flashpoint: Dragon Rising
One of the earlier iterations of military-style games in open-worlds was none other than Operation Flashpoint: Dragon Rising. This tactical shooter, developed by Codemasters, threw players into realistic, modern infantry combat in large-scale battles. This installment, in particular, acted as a standalone sequel to Operation Flashpoint: Cold War Crisis.
The game takes place on the fictional island of Skira, off the coast of China. The island offers a whopping 135 square miles of play area from top to bottom, delivering a very realistic island battle map.
14 Xenoblade Chronicles X
This sequel managed to improve upon the original Xenoblade Chronicles in every way, but one of the biggest improvements was to the size of the world map. Xenoblade Chronicles X takes place on the planet of Mira. This planet is the new home for humanity after Earth was destroyed and the colony of New Los Angeles was established there.
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The world map in Xenoblade Chronicles X is 154 sq. miles, and for the most part resembles the mountainous areas of Colorado. This game is unique among the games on this list in that the player can explore the world in a large mechanized battle-suit.
13 Death Stranding
Many gamers play Death Stranding and can’t help but think about how they’ll never get to play the game from the PT Demo. This game feels like the movie Serenity, which finished the Firefly television series. It was well-received but also felt (in a tiny way) like too-little-too-late.
One thing this excellent game has is a gigantic map to explore; the map in Death Stranding is 230 square miles located somewhere in the post-apocalyptic U.S. The map is big, but a fair portion of the map is mountainous terrain. This type of terrain makes for great sweeping views of the game world, but it also makes the map feel smaller.
12 True Crime: Streets of L.A.
True Crime: Streets of L.A. is one of those forgotten open-world games from the PS3 and Xbox 360 era. This game is centered around the Los Angeles area, and the game’s 240 square mile map manages to cover a large portion of the city.
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True Crime: Streets of L.A. was lost in the mix of open-world games that included Fallout 3, GTA 4 & 5, Red Dead Redemption, and Watchdogs. This game may have had a bigger map than those games, but that doesn’t make it better. There are few gamers, who have played all these games, that would probably rank True Crime: Streets of L.A. as the best.
11 Just Cause 3 & 4
The Just Cause series is famous for giving players a huge world to explore, and Just Cause 3 and Just Cause 4 are no exceptions with maps covering approximately 395 sq. miles. Just Cause 3 takes place on an island in the Mediterranean called Medici. Being a Mediterranean island, it has a mostly rocky, mountainous terrain with sparse vegetation and several small picturesque towns.
Just Cause 4 takes place in the fictional country of Solis, which is located in South America. The mountainous terrain allows for some great views, and getting around via parachute in both games is a great game mechanic; though there are also many vehicles the player can use. The vehicle list includes attack helicopters and even a wing-suit that’s jet-powered.
10 Final Fantasy 15
The Final Fantasy games have always featured unique fantasy worlds. With the fifteenth game Square gave us an enormous world to explore. The game world in Final Fantasy 15 is approximately 750 sq. miles in size; however, many areas of the map are separated from other areas with impassable terrain such as mountains.
Although this game has a large world map, it is very sparsely populated and is mostly flat terrain. Still, the world is beautifully designed and contains varied ecosystems ranging from harsh deserts to dense forests. Overall, it provides some nice scenery for a road trip.
9 Ghost Recon: Breakpoint
Ghost Recon: Breakpoint is set in the fictional South Pacific island of Aurora. This is a huge island with a lot of open wildernesses containing numerous biomes; such as mountains, deserts, swamps, and forested areas. There are populated areas of the island as well. All of this can be explored; however, with a map size of 781 square miles, it’s going to take a while.
In Ghost Recon: Breakpoint’s case, more is not better. The map has humongous sections of land that are completely empty of anything with which to interact. In that regard, it’s pretty accurate, but that doesn’t make it fun. To be fair, the Ghost Recon series is not the first example to come to mind when asked about open-world games.
8 The Crew
This ambitious online-only game uses the continental U.S. for its world map – all of it. That being said the map is scaled down quite a bit, but still large enough that to drive from coast-to-coast takes about 45 minutes.
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The map is roughly 1900 sq. miles in size and even has most of the major cities to drive through (they are also scaled down in size though). The sequel, The Crew 2, has a map that is roughly the same size, but allows the player to travel by plane. However, traveling by plane definitely makes the game world seem a lot smaller.
7 Fuel
Fuel is the second and last driving game to make this list; with a map that is somewhere between 5560 - 7000 sq. miles in size (the size of the map varies wildly depending on the source). This enormous map is also procedurally generated as well, so the terrain will vary on different playthroughs. This game truly has one of the biggest game maps to explore.
Fuel has approximately 10,000 miles worth of roads to explore and can take as long as three hours to drive across the map. To put the size of the map into perspective, it is roughly the size of the state of Connecticut.
6 The Elder Scrolls 2: Daggerfall
If players thought the map in Skyrim was huge they should give Daggerfall a try, because the map in Daggerfall dwarfs the one in Skyrim. The map in Daggerfall is over 63,000 sq. miles in size; which makes it larger than England, or roughly the size of the state of Florida. That is an absolutely enormous area to explore, and there are so many secrets hidden in the countryside that completionists will be playing for hundreds of hours.
If players can get past the very dated graphics they should give Daggerfall a playthrough, especially if they enjoyed Oblivion and Skyrim. Daggerfall can still be downloaded for free on the official Elder Scrolls website. It may be old, but it still has one of the biggest game maps.
5 Microsoft Flight Simulator (2020)
Flight sims need huge maps. Anyone who has played GTA 5 knows this. It takes forever to drive from Los Santos to Sandy Shores, but by plane, the travel time seems almost immediate. This game has one of the largest game worlds; the map in Microsoft Flight Simulator is the planet Earth, all of it.
The player can fly over millions of cities and towns and land at 37,000 airports that actually exist. Microsoft Flight Simulator also reproduces the flora and fauna of the area. In addition to that, the game can make the weather in the game mirror the actual weather outside. Since the game’s map is the world map of Earth, that would put the game map at 197 million square miles.
4 Minecraft
Minecraft has the largest land-based open-world to explore out of any game in this list – by far. The world of Minecraft is approximately 1.5 billion sq. miles. The surface area of the Earth is only 197 million sq. miles; making the world in Minecraft about eight times larger.
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With a surface area that big, it is a bit surprising that players ever encounter each other. At any given time there are about one million people playing Minecraft. This means that on average there are about 1500 sq. miles per player. In other words, there is plenty of room if players want to make their fortress a little bigger.
3 Star Control 2: The Ur-Quan Masters
The “word map” in Star Control 2 is the Milky Way Galaxy; however, despite having such a large area there are about 500 stars and 3800 planets to explore. Scattered around this large map are many alien species to encounter. Some of these aliens will be hostile, but there are also many that players can recruit to their cause.
This is perhaps the most underrated game of all time and has something that even some modern titles don’t have – excellent voice-acting. Star Control 2 is so beloved that even though it is almost thirty years old there are still people who devote their time to improve the game’s graphics and sound.
2 Spore
Spore was one of those games that failed to live up to the hype, but what it did deliver on was an enormous open-world to explore. The planets in Spore are fairly large, but once a player’s species develops a ship capable of interstellar travel the player might be a little overwhelmed by the sheer enormity of the galaxy they now have to explore.
The average galaxy in Spore has about 45,000 stars, with as many as 120,000 planets rotating around them. If a player explored ten planets a day it would take over thirty-five years to explore them all (that’s real world years). Fortunately, it is not necessary to explore the entire galaxy to complete the game. But who in their right mind would turn down the chance to explore this galaxy?
1 No Man’s Sky
The developers of No Man’s Sky weren’t content to give the players a single galaxy to explore, so they included 255 galaxies. There are so many planets to explore in the procedurally generated galaxies that if a player were to visit one planet per second it would take almost 600 billion years to visit them all.
That gives an area to explore for the players that is so vast that it staggers one’s imagination. Granted, there isn’t much to do beyond visiting the numerous planets, but for players that have a desire to explore the unknown, this game will certainly sate their wanderlust. This is possibly the biggest open-world video game.
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