Home TechnologyPlayStation Plus April 2026 lineup leaves users underwhelmed despite variety of PS5 and PS4 titles

PlayStation Plus April 2026 lineup leaves users underwhelmed despite variety of PS5 and PS4 titles

by archytele
PlayStation Plus April 2026 lineup leaves users underwhelmed despite variety of PS5 and PS4 titles

PlayStation Plus subscribers logging in on April 21st found a familiar tension: the service’s latest lineup offered both recognizable anchors and curious left-field picks, yet left many feeling underwhelmed despite the variety.

According to a Push Square poll of nearly 750 users conducted over the weekend, the largest bloc described the April selection as “just okay,” outpacing the 22% who said they were “mostly happy” and the 20% who called it a “disappointing” lineup. The poll arrived as Sony rolled out the full slate of additions, which went live at the start of the day.

Engadget’s breakdown confirmed the headline acts: The Crew Motorfest, Horizon Zero Dawn Remastered, and Football Manager 26 Console headline the month’s offerings, joined by Warriors: Abyss, Squirrel with a Gun, The Casting of Frank Stone, and Monster Train. Wild Arms 4 appears exclusively for Premium tier subscribers, a detail that creates a tiered access point within the service itself.

Platform availability splits the catalog unevenly. The Crew Motorfest, Horizon Zero Dawn Remastered, Warriors: Abyss, and Wild Arms 4 will run on both PS4 and PS5. The remaining titles — Football Manager 26 Console, Squirrel with a Gun, The Casting of Frank Stone, and Monster Train — are PS5-only. For Horizon, PS4 recipients receive the Complete Edition rather than the PS5-specific remaster, a distinction that matters for those tracking performance or visual fidelity.

The deeper cuts reveal a service attempting to balance breadth with discovery. Warriors: Abyss positions itself as a hectic hack-and-slash roguelite from Koei Tecmo, leaning into fast-paced, repeatable runs. Squirrel with a Gun, by contrast, arrives from a two-person indie team as a self-aware third-person shooter where firearms meet rodent antics. Monster Train, a demonic deckbuilder from Shiny Shoe and Good Shepherd Entertainment, carries a cult following into the fold. Wild Arms 4 represents a reach into the PS2 era, courtesy of Media.Vision, offering a nostalgic pull for those who remember the early 2000s JRPG scene.

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Perhaps the most narratively loaded entry is The Casting of Frank Stone. Developed by Supermassive Games — known for Until Dawn and The Quarry — it crosses over with Dead by Daylight, the asymmetric horror multiplayer title. For subscribers who may have overlooked it amid crowded backlogs, its inclusion functions as a forced rediscovery, a nudge toward a title that blends Supermassive’s cinematic tension with Dead by Daylight’s multiplayer DNA.

Engadget’s characterization of the month as “a little bit spooky, a tad sporty and extra squirrelly” captures the tonal whiplash: from the simulated realism of Football Manager to the campy horror of Frank Stone, and the absurdist charm of a gun-wielding squirrel. Yet the Push Square data suggests this variety isn’t translating into enthusiasm; the “just okay” plurality indicates a perception of adequacy rather than excitement.

That ambivalence may reflect broader pressures on subscription services. As libraries grow, the challenge shifts from mere access to curation and perception — ensuring subscribers feel they’re getting both value and surprise. The April drop, while technically robust, appears to have landed in a zone where familiarity and novelty cancel each other out for a significant portion of the audience.

Subscriber sentiment Nearly half of surveyed PlayStation Plus users described April’s lineup as either disappointing or merely okay, highlighting a gap between content volume and perceived value.

Why did some Horizon players acquire a different version?

PS4 recipients receive Horizon Zero Dawn Complete Edition rather than the PS5 remaster due to platform-specific licensing and performance considerations, ensuring compatibility across older hardware.

What makes Wild Arms 4 exclusive to Premium?

Sony reserves certain legacy or niche titles for the higher tier to differentiate Premium from Extra, using deep-cut classics as incentive for the upgrade.

PlayStation Plus Extra and Premium – April 2026 (PS+)

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