A year after its surprise shadow-drop rocked the RPG world, The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion Remastered is tearing down the last paywall standing between millions of subscribers and the rolling green hills of Cyrodiil. Starting April 16, 2026, the rebuilt classic is available across every Xbox Game Pass tier, including Game Pass Standard and the newly rebranded Game Pass Premium — not just Ultimate and PC Game Pass, which have had it since launch day in April 2025.
The timing is not accidental. Microsoft has been on a mission to bulk up Game Pass value ahead of its summer showcase, and dropping a 93-hour RPG into the laps of lower-tier members is a statement move. Oblivion Remastered is comfortably one of the most critically acclaimed remasters of the past decade, and it still holds a 92 on Metacritic a full year after release.
What the Remaster Changed
For those who missed the wave last year, Oblivion Remastered was developed by Virtuos in collaboration with Bethesda Game Studios. Built in Unreal Engine 5, it is a ground-up visual overhaul of the 2006 Game of the Year that preserves the original quest design, dialogue, and open-ended progression while replacing every texture, character model, lighting pass, and environmental asset. The result is a game that looks like it was made in 2025 but plays with the freeform charm the series was known for before the streamlining of Skyrim.
Every piece of DLC is included: the Shivering Isles expansion, which added the Madgod Sheogorath and an entirely new plane of Oblivion, and the Knights of the Nine questline. Horse armor, thankfully, is also free this time around.
Why This Matters for Game Pass
The move to all tiers is significant for a game of this caliber. When Microsoft restructured Game Pass pricing in 2024, many feared that the best day-one titles would remain locked behind the most expensive subscription. Oblivion Remastered's migration down the tier ladder — even if it took a year — suggests that blockbuster games will eventually trickle to all subscribers. It follows a similar path to Hades II, which joined Game Pass on April 14 with day-one availability across all tiers.
For the estimated 34 million Game Pass subscribers who were on Standard or the old Core plan, this is the first time they can play Oblivion Remastered without buying it outright. Given that the game still retails for $49.99, it is one of the highest-value additions to the lower tiers in months.
Switch 2 Version Still on the Horizon
A Nintendo Switch 2 port was confirmed during the February 2026 Nintendo Direct, though no release date has been pinned down beyond a broad 2026 window. Given that Bethesda took its time getting Skyrim to Switch in 2017, a holiday 2026 launch seems likely. If the Switch 2 hardware delivers on its rumored specs, the portable version could be something special.
Whether you are a returning Champion of Cyrodiil or a first-timer who only knows Tamriel through Skyrim, there has never been a lower barrier to entry for one of the best RPGs ever made. Open up Game Pass, search for Oblivion, and close that first Oblivion gate yourself. You will understand why people will not stop talking about this game.
