Summary
- Open-world games use America as a backdrop for satire, mocking gun-ho exceptionalism and consumerism.
- Games like Fallout 4 and Dead Rising exaggerate American culture, including patriotism and consumerism.
- Titles like Far Cry 5 and Saints Row 4 delve into American myths and values through interactive media.
America is no stranger to being the star of the show, especially when that show is filled with absurd, over-the-top action, and riddled with bullet holes, hyperconsumerism, or fast food mascots-turned-cult leaders. Open-world games often use the sprawling and diverse North American country as a backdrop for their stories, but also to roast the ol' United States good, like a steak in a red-hot Texas barbecue.
7 Best Games Set In Washington D.C.
From Fallout 3 to The Division 2, there are many unique games set in the iconic city of Washington D.C.
From nuclear wastelands filled with crumbling patriotism to McCarthy-era alien invasions with all the flavor of 1950s suburbia, these games exaggerate and mock everything, from gun-ho American exceptionalism to Wall Street greed and trailer park Americana. Whether through slapstick humor or biting social commentary, these games pull back the curtain on American myths and values while putting players at the center of the show in a way that only interactive media can.
6 Fallout 4
Atomic Stars And Radiation Burn Stripes
Fallout 4
- Released
- November 10, 2015
The Fallout series might technically take place in a post-America wasteland, but its ruins are practically built on exaggerated remnants of pre-war patriotism, jingoism, and consumer excess. Fallout 4 in particular leans hard into this, as it makes clear with one of its early levels being a rampage through the Museum of Freedom to rescue a self-styled "Minute Man" from bloodthirsty raiders.
From the retrofuturistic commercials that glamorize nuclear war to the crumbling monuments of Boston's Freedom Trail, Fallout 4 paints a world where the American Dream didn’t die but just mutated after the bombs fell. The stars and stripes may have burned away long ago, but the culture the flag represented, which collapsed under its own contradictions long before the super mutants and radroaches claimed the land, still crawls on.
5 Destroy All Humans!
A Postcard Parody Of Mid-Century Americana
Destroy All Humans!
- Released
- July 28, 2020
The 1950s in America were a time of paranoia, particularly over two things: reds and aliens. Destroy All Humans! Takes all the tropes from the Cold War era and flips them on their head, putting the player in control of a "green" on a mission to harvest human brain stems for their DNA, starting with the unfortunate residents of Tunipseed Farm.
10 Best Open-World Games With a Focus on Absurdity, Ranked
Video games are always fun when they don't take themselves too seriously. These open-world games will give you that silliness you're looking for.
As Crypto the alien, players work through caricatures of the era, including suspicious housewives, square-jawed soldiers, and bumbling federal agents, until they make their way to the highest office in the land, along the way offering a satirical take on everything from suburban conformity and red-baiting hysteria to greasy diners and government conspiracies.
4 Dead Rising
Embrace Mall Consumerism Or Be Consumed (By Zombies)
Dead Rising
- Released
- August 8, 2006
- Genre(s)
- Action-Adventure, Survival Horror
American mall culture is arguably international now, but placing a one-shop temple full of consumable items is distinctly an American invention, as was the association between the walking dead and consumerism, thanks to Romero’s Dawn of the Dead. Capcom's Dead Rising honors that metaphor while wearing a Servbot helmet, wielding a garden rake, and mowing down a horde of zombies with a lawnmower.
Set in the fictional Willamette Parkview Mall, the game casts players as all-American photojournalist Frank West, who’s "covered wars," but now must survive an undead outbreak while surrounded by an overwhelming abundance of shops, signage, and ironic jingles. The satire is baked into the design: food courts, sale banners, and weaponized consumer goods become tools of survival in a setting where both zombies and people lose their humanity in pursuit of "consumption."
3 Far Cry 5
First-Amendment-Protected Made-For-TV Cults
Far Cry 5
- Released
- March 27, 2018
- ESRB
- M for Mature: Blood and Gore, Intense Violence, Sexual Themes, Strong Language, Use of Drugs and Alcohol
- Genre(s)
- FPS, Open-World
Set in the fictional Hope County, Montana, Far Cry 5 leans hard into the American frontier mythos, filtered through a funhouse hall of mirrors lens of paranoia, patriotism, and private militias. It presents a version of the U.S. Where everyone is either armed to the teeth, deep into conspiracy theories, deeply divided politically, or with one foot in their homemade doomsday bunker.
8 Open-World Games Where You Can Ruin People's Lives
In these games, players can choose to make decisions that ruin the lives of other characters around them.
The game’s central antagonist, Joseph Seed, is a televangelist-style cult leader who weaponizes religious freedom, ultra-individualism, and distrust of the government to create his own theocratic empire. While an extremist figure like Seed could emerge on any corner of the planet, it is the uniquely permissive power of the First Amendment (free speech and religious protection) that allows Seed to take root and blossom beyond reproach.
2 Saints Row 4
America, As Imagined By Aliens Buzzed Up On Energy Drinks
Saints Row 4
Display card community and brand rating widget Display card open critics widget-
OpenCritic Reviews
- Top Critic Avg: 75 /100 Critics Rec: 56%
- Released
- August 20, 2013
- ESRB
- M for Mature: Blood, Intense Violence, Partial Nudity, Sexual Content, Strong Language, Use of Drugs
- Developer(s)
- Volition
- Publisher(s)
- Deep Silver
- Genre(s)
- Third-Person Shooter, Open-World
The Saints Row games were already a parody of a parody, but Saints Row 4 takes place in another dimension of satire altogether. After the player's avatar, the Boss, becomes the President of the United States (after stopping a nuclear missile mid-air to the tune of Aerosmith), aliens arrive to take over the world, and Saints 4 devolves gloriously into a chaotic fever dream of red-white-and-blue freedom fire.
From a synthetic mind-prison built from 1950s sitcom tropes to Matrix-style cityscapes of extra-terrestrial oppression, the game gleefully skewers manifest destiny exceptionalism, video game power fantasies, and all-American action movie clichés in a blur of dubstep gunshots, garish character outfit options, and a machine gun of snarky one-liners.
1 Grand Theft Auto 5
Cars, Guns, And The Great American Crime Spree
Grand Theft Auto 5
Display card community and brand rating widget Display card open critics widget Display card main info widget- Released
- September 17, 2013





- ESRB
- M For Mature 17+ due to Blood and Gore, Intense Violence, Mature Humor, Nudity, Strong Language, Strong Sexual Content, Use of Drugs and Alcohol
- Genre(s)
- Open-World, Action
While the series had always been a fond mockery of the U.S.A. Way of life, Grand Theft Auto 5 drives full-throttle into a world where every billboard, talk radio host, and lifestyle choice drips with post-2008 financial crash American cynicism. Los Santos represents a darker, crazier mirror of Los Angeles, California, or America as a feverish loop of greed, crime, vanity, and grandly delusional self-importance.
28 Best Open-World Games With Third-Person Shooter Gameplay, Ranked
Open-world games are inescapable, but which are the best titles that also have third-person shooter gameplay?
Each of the game’s three protagonists represents a fractured slice of the American dream: Michael lives in gated luxury but feels existentially bankrupt. Franklin is young and ambitious, trying to climb the social ladder in a system rigged against him. Trevor is pure id; a nihilistic, hyper-violent redneck who might be GTA's most chaotic character. What makes the parody sting is that it doesn’t need to stretch the truth far, as the parody feels just plausible enough to be real and familiar.
Honorable Mention: Showa American Story
Showa American Story
Display card community and brand rating widget Display card open critics widget Display card main info widget- Released
- 2026
Set in a Japan-occupied United States in a wacky alternative timeline, Showa American Story presents an absurd parade of American stereotypes from a Japanese perspective, as described by an 80s school kid after realizing they forgot to put together a Foreign Cultural Studies presentation and have three minutes to turn it in.
Set to release in late 2025 , Showa American Story is about a girl traveling a country of Katana-wielding greasers, torii-dotted deserts infested with zombies, ruled by an anime-obsessed president. Hilariously, the game has neither American nor Japanese developers, but is the product of a Chinese studio with a seemingly frail grasp on both cultures.
10 Games That Let You Play as the President of the United States
These games provide players with the opportunity and the challenge to be the President of the United States, whether it's against aliens or taxes.