Pixels in Space
newsApril 9, 20265 min read
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April 2026 Gaming Calendar: Starfield PS5, Pragmata, Diablo IV Expansion, BAFTA Awards, and More

April 2026 is one of gaming's most packed months in years — Starfield PS5 launches now, Pragmata finally arrives April 16, Diablo IV expands April 28, and the BAFTA Game Awards, London Games Festival, and FFXIV Fan Festival round out an extraordinary calendar.

April 2026 Gaming Calendar: Starfield PS5, Pragmata, Diablo IV Expansion, BAFTA Awards, and More

April 2026 is shaping up to be one of the most consequential months in gaming in recent memory. Between major AAA releases, anticipated indie launches, a packed showcase calendar, and several high-profile industry events, there is an argument to be made that no single month in the past three years has offered as much variety and quality simultaneously. Whether you play on PC, console, or mobile — and whether your tastes run toward sprawling RPGs, tight action games, or competitive titles — April has something aimed directly at you. Here is everything worth knowing about the month ahead.

Starfield PS5 — one of the biggest releases of April 2026

Releases Already Live

Starfield (PS5) — Out Now: Bethesda's space RPG has finally made its PlayStation debut, bringing with it the free Free Lanes major update, the Terran Armada expansion, exceptional DualSense integration, and all the accumulated improvements from two and a half years of post-launch support. It is the most complete version of a divisive but fascinating game, and the right time for PS5 players to discover what all the conversation has been about.

Coming This Month

Pragmata (April 16) — PC, PS5, Xbox Series X/S: Capcom's long-delayed sci-fi action game is finally here, set aboard a deteriorating lunar research station where the boundaries between human consciousness and digital reality are becoming disturbingly unclear. Preview coverage has been consistently enthusiastic, particularly about the game's hacking mechanics, which allow players to manipulate the physical environment through a secondary layer of digital reality that overlays the station's architecture. After years in development and a release date that seemed to recede whenever you looked at it directly, Pragmata appears ready to deliver.

Mouse: P.I. For Hire (April 16) — PC: The stylised noir indie that has been turning heads at every festival appearance it has made over the past two years arrives in full on April 16th. Mouse is a point-and-click adventure game set in a 1940s city inhabited entirely by anthropomorphic rodents, following a hard-boiled private detective navigating a case that goes well beyond its initial parameters. The visual style — black and white with selective colour, reminiscent of classic noir cinema — is among the most distinctive in indie gaming, and the writing has been praised universally by those who have played preview builds.

BAFTA Game Awards (April 17): The British Academy of Film and Television Arts hosts its annual Game Awards on April 17th, recognising the best games released in the past twelve months. The ceremony is one of the most prestigious in the industry, with a judging process that prioritises critical assessment over commercial metrics. This year's nominees include a strong field of both AAA and independent titles, and the ceremony is always worth watching for the speeches, which tend to be significantly more thoughtful than their counterparts at other awards shows.

London Games Festival (April 13-26): The London Games Festival spans most of April, with events across the city celebrating games as culture, art, and industry. The festival includes public exhibitions, developer talks, networking events, and several smaller showcases from studios based in the UK and across Europe. It is one of the most interesting annual gatherings in the industry for players who care about games as a medium rather than purely as entertainment products.

Diablo IV: Lord of Hatred (April 28) — PC, PS5, Xbox Series X/S: Blizzard Entertainment's second major expansion for Diablo IV arrives at the end of the month, bringing a new act, a new class, new zones in Sanctuary, and what Blizzard is describing as the most significant overhaul to the game's endgame systems since launch. Lord of Hatred picks up narrative threads left dangling since the base game's conclusion and is expected to run considerably longer than the Vessel of Hatred expansion from late 2024.

Final Fantasy XIV Fan Festival 2026 (April 24): Square Enix's annual Fan Festival for Final Fantasy XIV arrives on April 24th, and it is expected to include the first major announcement about the MMO's next expansion. Fan Festival announcements have historically been the occasion for the reveals that shape the game's next two to three years of development, and the community is anticipating major news about new jobs, new zones, and the narrative direction of the post-Dawntrail era.

Why This Month Matters

What makes April 2026 remarkable is not just the volume of releases but the range of the audience they serve. The BAFTA Awards and London Games Festival speak to games as culture. Pragmata and Diablo IV serve the core gamer market that has always been the industry's backbone. Mouse: P.I. For Hire represents the kind of auteur indie work that has defined the last decade of gaming. Starfield's PS5 launch brings one of the most debated games of the past few years to an entirely new audience. And the Pokemon Champions and Game of Thrones: Dragonfire announcements signal that both the competitive gaming space and the mobile market are heading into equally eventful territory. It is, by any measure, a remarkable month to be a games player. Keep your backlog in check and your calendar clear.

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