Hope you all are safe and staying home. We all know this is a hard situation for all of us around the world. Due to this Coronavirus pandemic, most of the cities and countries are completely lockdown. So, peoples are at home for 24 hours. And this is the best thing to do to be safe from this evil COVID-19 virus. However, staying home for a long time is completely boring. Finding a way to spend time like in this situation is also too hard and we never had faced a situation like this before. There are many ways to spend your time while in this a quarantine. And one of the best ways is to spending time playing games. This is one of the best time killers. So, I have collected you some games to play during your quarantine.

In here we are going to suggest you both PC and MOBILE games. Many people use PC or mobiles to play games, so I should treat both groups. Furthermore, In the Mobile section, it is noted in the beginning whether the game is Android IOS compatibility and also the system requirements are given for each PC games at the bottom.

At first, let me suggest you some PC games. Most gamers will choose PC over mobile because of its over-roll high performance. So, let’s select some PC games to play while quarantine.

Call of Duty: Warzone

Call of Duty: Warzone is one of the best high-end games that you can play on your PC. And that’s why it’s on the top of our list today. COD Warzone was released in 2020 January. So, it is a new game with the latest graphic and performance technology It leads much-needed new ideas to the style, chief among them the strength to respawn. The first time you die throughout one of its 150-player rounds, you’ll face an extra dead opponent in a 1v1 gunfight. And if you win you’ll parachute back falling to earth. It means less immediate ends to rounds and more time to pay to fight beside team-mates. There are other twists on the now-familiar formula. You can start deals that give you intentions within around, for example – but we’ll let you find them out for yourself. It’s free and constantly developing.

Download it now:

Battle.net

The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt

The first two Witcher games showed flashes of brilliance in their believable, gritty characters and low-fantasy setting, but lacked polish. The Witcher 3 pairs CD Projekt Red’s excellent writing with compelling gameplay. And one of the most expansive, beautiful worlds ever created. As the Witcher TV Series can out, most of the gamers would love to play these games during their quarantine.

The Northern Kingdoms, inspired by European mythology, are populated by fascinating creatures and, more importantly, multi-dimensional characters. They’re all flawed, not least protagonist Geralt of Rivia, but whatever you feel about them. You can’t help but become invested in their fates. Speaking to any of them might launch a five-hour side quest that takes you across mountain and bog, vineyard and dusty city. Perhaps you’re hunting a mythical creature, or simply trying to solve a lovers quarrel: either way. You’ll care about what you’re doing, and you’ll visit some stunning locales while doing it.

Play it now:

Steam

Humble Store

GOG

Black Mesa

If you’ve never played the original Half-Life but fancy seeing what all the fuss was about: play Black Mesa instead. It’s a fan-made, Valve-approved remake that’s bigger and better in almost every way. The visuals are spruced up, the combat and physics brought up to modern standards, largely by replicating Half-Life 2. And new puzzles are added. There are enough tweaks in each expanded level to give fans of the old game a reason to return. The biggest improvement is Xen, the alien world that frames the game’s climax. In Half-Life, it was the worst portion – here, it’s one of the best. It’s the strange, colorful, dramatic conclusion that the original deserved, but never got.

Buy it now:

Steam

The Sims 4

The best life sim on the PC never stops improving. The DLC is pricey, but always adds something new to the life of your Sims, such as magic spells. A tropical island world or a piece of themed furniture set for your grumpy teenager’s bedroom. We never tire of the way it can generate dynamic storylines – family dramas, love triangles or personal struggles. And those tales keep us coming back, year after year, expansion after expansion. It’s more than five years old. But, with EA showing no signs of slowing down new content, it’s still got plenty of life in it yet. However, this is also a kind of game that most of girls and boys like to play while spending quarantine time.

Play it now:

Origin

Bloodroots

Bloodroots drops you into an arena and asks you to murder everything in sight with a one-hit kill. So far, so Hotline Miami. But what sets it apart, aside from the colorful wilderness around you, is the imagination developer Paper Cult Games has poured into your weapons. Every object, from a fence post to a carrot pulled from a farmer’s field, is deadly in Mr. Wolf’s skilled hands. Chaining attacks together within a generous combo window while switching weapons feels glorious: chop one enemy in half with an axe. Stick a plunger on another’s head, use a rowing paddle to vault up to higher ground and rain down hell with a Gatling gun. The revenge-driven story is hardly gripping, but the ridiculous combat, and beautiful cartoon levels, sure are.

Buy it now

Epic Games Store

Murder By Numbers

Murder by Numbers mixes visual novel and Picross puzzles into a twisting story about robots, drag queens, and detective TV series. And somehow gets away with it. If you’ve never played a Picross puzzle, then don’t worry: you’ll get the hang of it quickly. Besides, the puzzles are just the connective tissue between story beats, where you. A TV detective called Honor must investigate a real-life murder by questioning witnesses. You don’t actually use powers of deduction to find the culprit. But the story and characters you meet are believable and distinct enough to keep you puzzling through to the end.

Buy it now:

Steam

GOG

Humble

Monster Hunter: World

Monster Hunter: World is an elaborate, extravagant game about slaying huge beasts and turning their tails into axes. Its gorgeous maps – from the bright, enchanted Coral Highlands to the toxic clouds of the shrouded underbelly of the Rotted Vale – are fitting backdrops for some properly brilliant fights. The monsters are huge yet elegant. And both learning and countering their moveset makes it feel more like a fighting game than a button-mashing hack-and-slash.

With 14 weapon types and hundreds of items to craft, climbing the gear tree can feel overwhelming. But it’s still the most accessible Monster Hunter to date. A generous loot system means that, even when you’re grinding for a particular armour set, you’re constantly picking up useful items you didn’t know you wanted. Plus, finding clues about monsters will automatically lead you to their location. Meaning you can travel between its excellent fights faster than ever. Happy hunting.

January’s Iceborne update, which adds new monsters, regions, and mechanics, is aimed at veteran players, with a whole new engaging endgame to explore. So if you thought you’d had your fill of Monster Hunter: World, think again. However, play this game if you want to kill your quarantine time: this is my recommendations.

Play it now:

Steam

Humble Store

Resident Evil 2

When Capcom renewed one of the best survival horror games of all era, they did more than just binding it with HD graphics. They kept the foundations of what made the 1996 original so tense but made tweaks all over the labyrinthine Raccoon City Police Department: the pulled-in camera makes you dread every corridor, zombies are now certain, horrifying obstructions, and new locations offer additional head-scratching puzzles.

But it’s the enemies that are the stars of Resident Evil 2. Everywhere you turn you find shambling towers of flesh inching towards you, mouths agape, skin peeling, bones shining through flesh. Some take several bullets to down for good, putting you in constant danger of an ammo shortage. And with every gunshot you risk attracting Tyrant, aka Mr X, a giant of a mutant in a fancy hat who walks slowly towards you, expressionless, unbothered by your bullets. He’ll haunt your dreams. When you’ve finished it as Leon, play through as Claire for a completely different puzzle set.

Play it now:

Steam

Humble Store

Cities: Skylines

Didn’t found a game to play in your quarantine, so try this one out. Maxis and EA’s 2013’s SimCity was one of the biggest disappointments of the last decade. But in a way, we’re glad it flopped. Without its failure, Paradox wouldn’t have greenlit Cities. Skylines, and we wouldn’t have the best city builder of the modern age. The genre has always been a staple of PC gaming. And even if you don’t think Skylines is the best ever, it’s certainly the one that’s the most fun to play today. Its building tools are intuitive and streamlined. And yet complex enough for you to construct the wildest intersections you can imagine. Each time you start a campaign you’ll be stuck with a different vision for how you want your city to look, feel, smell. And it means that no two playthroughs follow the same path.

The controls are responsive, the UI easier to navigate than you might assume, and a handy zoning tool lets you paint your settlement green (residential), blue (commercial) and yellow (industrial) in an instant, taking you from a patch of grass to a burgeoning metropolis in record time. There’s no campaign. But tooltips, and a long list of heatmaps, help you ensure your citizens always have enough water, electricity, and access to healthcare. You’ll gradually ramp up the complexity and density of your creation until. Eventually, you’re seeing skyscrapers rise, planes fly between airports, and tourists flock to marvel at your latest monument.

I was brilliant at launch, and it’s even better now. A thriving mod community constantly adds building tools, graphical tweaks and building reskins. And developer Colossal Order pumps out meaty official expansions, such as Green Cities, which lets you build eco-friendly towns, and Mass Transit, which adds realistic transport systems. Simply put: even after you’ve built your 50th city. You’ll still find a reason to put your shovel in the dirt once more.

Buy it now:

Steam

Humble Store

Total War: Three Kingdoms

Any number of Whole War games could’ve made this list. Warhammer 2 was a close second – but 2019’s Three Kingdoms appears like a tremendous step ahead in many ways. It still has the epic, dense campaigns fans of the series are looking for. But the way it makes diplomacy completely transparent, telling you exactly what it will take to strike a deal, makes dealing with other factions more streamlined. New temporary, multi-faction companies called factions to add another necessary groove to your bow.

You could debate that other Total War games gain certain parts of the series better. Warhammer 2’s factions are more exotic, and Shogun 2’s Japanese themes more coherent. But, Three Kingdoms is strong in every area, and its multiple, complex campaigns feel very different depending on which leader you pick to try and unify China. If you want the most complete Total War experience, Three Kingdoms is your best bet.

Play it now:

Steam

Doom Eternal

(Image credit: Flicker)

With new weapons, a more agile Doomguy, and a fresh emphasis on resource management. (Yes, you read that correctly), Doom Eternal somehow 1UPs Doom 2016, which was already deserving of a spot on this list. It’s an over-the-top celebration of guts and gore in which you chainsaw enemies in half, rip eyeballs from sockets and stomp on demon’s faces with a giant boot. But, at times, it’s also about restraint. Enemies have weak points to target and weapons that you can disable. So sometimes it’s worth finding a spare half-second in the heat of battle to pause, aim, and hit your shot because it will save you a lot of pain later. Some enemies are even invulnerable to damage unless you perform a specific counter at a specific time. Which is something you don’t expect in a Doom game?

Fights are still, for the most part, unbearably tense and hectic. You’ll scramble and double jump to avoid packs of enemies, using the super shotgun’s meat hook to grapple to far-off enemies before turning them into red mist. You have to plan two steps ahead to avoid being overrun. And a new resource system makes firefights feel more strategic, less random. Ripping an enemy in half with a chainsaw net your armour, while lighting them on fire before sending them to an early grave gets you armour. It turns minions into health packs, and you’ll want to keep a few of them alive for when you really need them. We knew Doom Eternal would be this ballsy – but we didn’t expect it to be clever, too.

Buy it now:

Steam

Humble Store

Portal 2

(Image credit: Flicker)

Portal 2 is nearly a decade old, but it remains our favourite co-op puzzler on PC, and the single-player is amazing too. This is Valve’s writing at its brightest. Every line of dialogue hums with humour and charm, particularly when Steven Merchant’s Wheatley is on-screen, and it gives you lots of ways to interact with your co-op partner, whether you’re high-fiving them or laughing behind their back. So, this will be kind of game you would love to play while your quarantine for some peoples.

Most importantly, the puzzles are outlandishly clever. Just like the first Portal, the game is about placing an orange portal on a surface, a blue portal on another surface and leaping through. But if the original set the table, Portal 2 brings the banquet. New mechanics such as gels that can increase your speed or bounce you high in the air make the puzzles even more fiendish. And more satisfying to solve. We love returning to it with a friend every few years to savour it all over again.

Play it now:

Steam

Alien Isolation

(Image credit: Creative Assembly)

Beep, beep, beep. Alien: Isolation’s motion tracker is a blessing and a curse: a terrifying sign that the beast is near. And even the thought of the sound puts our hair on edge. But we daren’t put it away in case we turn a corner and, bam, the alien is on top of us, and it’s game over, and we have to leave our PC to go outside for a long, slow walk. So we clutch the tracker close, hiding under a chrome desk in the hope the alien leaves us alone.

Isolation’s tech helps create a sense of place — the flickering monitors and clunky computers are straight out of ‘70s sci-fi films. And then there’s the alien itself, one of the greatest video game monsters ever spawned. Intelligent, crafty and horrifying, it’s always stalking you, always searching. Grab your tracker and hide for your life.

Play it now:

Steam

Humble Store

Rocket League

(Image credit: GameTrex)

Football, but with cars: it’s that simple, and that complicated. Rocket League is, to the beginner, a fast arcade sport where vehicles slam into each other at 100 mph and occasionally bundle the ball into the net. But as you get to grips with the controls. It turns into an aerial acrobatic show with front flip assists, mid-air twirls and last-second winners. The great thing about Rocket League is that it’s fun at both of these levels.

You can gather some friends on a sofa and set up a casual 1v1 tournament. With bonus scores for the flashiest goals. You can team up with a squad and really dive into the tactics, rotating goalkeepers and trying to score the perfect team goal. If you want, you can switch it entirely to a game of hockey, with a puck instead of a ball. Each time you play you can feel yourself improving, and your first properly good goal. Not one where you’ve accidentally tapped it in with your bumper – is a memorable moment.

Play it now:

Steam

Humble Store

Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice

(Image credit: Game Informer)

Dark Souls remains a series you shouldn’t miss, but if you’re only going to play only one From Software game right now: we reckon it should be Sekiro. This samurai slasher has the greatest sword battles you’ll find on PC, and its lush, branching world is full of blows and eccentric qualities, which make it a delight to explore.

Its fighting system relies on precise timing to parry enemy attacks; it’s hard to master, and you’ll die countless times to its huge bosses, but it’s satisfying to feel yourself slowly improving. When you finally learn an enemy’s attack pattern and follow up a perfect counter by plunging your sword into their neck; you know you’ve become a melee god. The stealth is shoddy, but the snappy, lethal combat more than makes up for it. So, there were many games on this list to choose to play during your quarantine, hope you found one.