The State of Play headlines went to Wolverine and God of War, as they should. But the games actually topping the 2026 critical charts came from studios you could fit in a single room. If you only follow the showcase circuit, you're missing where the quality lives.
Mewgenics: 13 years, one cat army
Mewgenics is, per multiple year-in-review roundups, the highest-reviewed game of 2026 so far. It comes from Edmund McMillen, the mind behind The Binding of Isaac, and it took roughly thirteen years to make. The premise is deranged in the best way: a tactical legacy roguelite where you breed cats and send them into battle.
That it's the most critically acclaimed thing of the year, over a slate of $70 tentpoles, is the entire argument for the indie shelf. McMillen built a genre cornerstone with Isaac, then disappeared for over a decade to make a turn-based cat-breeding game, and it landed. That's the kind of singular vision the AAA pipeline structurally can't produce.
Mina the Hollower: Shovel Knight's team levels up
Mina the Hollower sits around a 91 average on OpenCritic, among the highest of any 2026 release. It's an 8-bit-styled action-adventure from Yacht Club Games, the Shovel Knight studio, trading retro platforming for a Game Boy-era top-down adventure with a sharper edge.
Yacht Club moving past the franchise that made them, and clearing 90 doing it, is the rare case of a studio escaping its own breakout hit. Plenty of teams never manage that.
The rest of the shelf
The PlayStation Blog itself ran an "11 indie gems" feature for 2026, a tacit admission that Sony knows the indie lineup is doing heavy lifting. Slay the Spire 2 hit Early Access in March and reportedly sold over 3 million copies in its first week. MOUSE: P.I. For Hire, from Poland's Fumi Games, pairs 1930s Fleischer-cartoon visuals with a noir shooter, one of the most distinctive art directions in years.
The takeaway
The culture-first read: a 13-year passion project about cats and a Game Boy homage are beating Sony's marketing budget on the only scoreboard that measures craft. For anyone whose gaming dollar is finite, the smartest spend in 2026 isn't always the one with the State of Play slot. Sometimes it's the one that took thirteen years and breeds cats.

