PS Plus Games and Classics Catalog Update for October 2023 Led by Gotham Knights
/Sony Interactive Entertainment has revealed the games coming to PlayStation Plus Game and Classics Catalog for October 2023 with 15 games for subscribers to play with the right tier. This batch comes with Gotham Knights leading the pack, Disco Elysium, and The Dark Pictures Anthology: House of Ashes, to name a few.
Have a look at the full list below as these games will be available in the service starting October 17.
October 2023 Game Catalog Lineup
Gotham Knights (PS5)
Disco Elysium (PS4,PS5)
The Dark Pictures Anthology: House of Ashes (PS4, PS5)
Alien: Isolation (PS4)
Dead Island Definitive Edition (PS4)
Outlast 2 (PS4)
Elite Dangerous (PS4)
Far: Changingg Tides (PS4/PS5)
Gungrave G.O.R.E. (platform not confirmed)
Eldest Souls (PS4, PS5)
Röki (PS4, PS5)
October 2023 Classics Catalog Lineup
Tekken 6(PS4, PS5)
Soulcalibur: Broken Destiny (PS4, PS5)
Ape Esace Academy (PS4, PS5)
IQ Final (PS4, PS5)
Leaker Billbil-kun in his report days before this official announcement turned out to be true as he revealed that eight games including Gotham Knights would be part of the lineup this month, and the leak turned out to be accurate.
This is again separate from the Monthly Games offer for October which included the survival horror game The Callisto Protocol, Farming Simulator 2022, and Weird West being given to all PS Plus subscribers. Only Extra and Premium/Deluxe members get access to the Game Catalogue while the Premium/Deluxe members get access to the Classics Catalogue, which mostly consists of games in the PS1, PS2, and PS3 eras as well as remasters/remakes.
In case you missed it, the PlayStation Plus Monthly Games for September 2023 as those subscribed to any of the tiers available in PS Plus can add and play the Saints Row reboot, Generation Zero, and MMORPG Black Desert. Subscribers have until October 2 to add them to their account.
Life is Strange: Double Exposure brings back Max Caulfield with new time-manipulation powers, but struggles to capture the original’s emotional weight. While the dual-timeline mechanic is engaging, the story’s weak twists, forgettable characters, and technical issues hold it back. A nostalgic revisit, but not a standout entry in the series.