Edge magazine celebrates the games that make us feel better, in a special issue featuring Animal Crossing: New Horizons, Jet Set Radio, and more

(Image credit: Future)

What a strange month it’s been. How are you doing? We at Edge are in good health right now, and we hope you are too. But even if you’re managing to stay safe and well indoors, things haven’t been easy for anybody as of late. With the world and the game industry in lockdown, everybody’s felt the squeeze – including us.

When we sat down together as a team – well, in a manner of speaking – and thought about what this issue would be, with kids under our feet, partners absent and health concerns at the forefront of our minds, we decided ‘business as usual’ wasn’t going to cut it. And then a friend messaged us asking for recommendations for games that might soothe the anxiety they were currently feeling. Suddenly, we realised how Edge might be most useful this month.

  • Get your first five issues of Edge, print or digital, for just £5/$5

Edge 345 spotlights and celebrates videogames that serve one crucial purpose: they make you feel better. Most are non-violent. Many celebrate the healing power of coming together as a community. Others offer distraction, or escape, or messages of hope. Whether it’s the joy of the open ocean in The Legend Of Zelda: The Wind Waker, the laugh-a-minute action of Jazzpunk, the anti-establishment thrills to be found in Jet Set Radio or the endless encouragement of Dragon Quest Builders 2, we hope everyone is able to find their particular tonic amongst our carefully curated recommendations.

(Image credit: Future)

The above wraparound cover, featuring many of these games’ characters self-isolating in style, was brought to life by our regular contributing artist Emmanuel Pajon, and was a real day-brightener when it landed in the Edge inbox.

True colours

We’ve also continued the theme inside, with a contents page that might look familiar to those of you making as many Zoom calls as we are nowadays – plus a colourful layout design that forms a rainbow when you fan out the pages. Some things, only print can do. We hope that brings you as much joy as it does us.

(Image credit: Future)

(Image credit: Future)

Subscribe today

Subscribers have been reading since the weekend (if you are one of the many who’ve sent us kind messages about this unusual issue, we thank you, although rather embarrassingly our loved ones are starting to become suspicious of our “allergies”). As of today, Edge 345 is now on general sale for everybody – and although you won’t find it on shop shelves, you can grab your print copy as usual via MyFavouriteMagazines, and have it delivered safely to your doorstep.

To make sure you never miss an issue, you can check the latest Edge subscription offers, including one that gets you your first five issues for £5/$5. And if you’d rather read digitally, you can sign up today and start your subscription with our Feel Better special issue.

Edge Staff

Edge magazine was launched in 1993 with a mission to dig deep into the inner workings of the international videogame industry, quickly building a reputation for next-level analysis, features, interviews and reviews that holds fast nearly 30 years on. 

Latest in Adventure
Screenshot of Herdling, showing the weird yaks heading toward a sunset horizon.
With 18,000 glowing Steam reviews on their lovely debut game, this indie team's game about leading cute fantasy yaks up a mountain is instantly one to watch
The two characters in Split Fiction holding their hands up in surrender in a futuristic city
Split Fiction, the new game from the It Takes Two devs, launches to Overwhelmingly Positive reviews on Steam and is the highest rated game on Metacritic this year
Exploring and fighting in Blades of Fire
Blades of Fire plays like a lost Xbox 360-era mashup between God of War and Soulslikes, and it's coming from the studio behind Metroid Dread
Pokemon Legends: Z-A screenshot
Pokemon Legends: Z-A looks to finally bring my anime-inspired dreams of truly active combat to life
Zoomed in art of the Sudowoodo illustration rare card in Pokemon TCG Pocket.
Pokemon's literal god of the universe is almost unstoppable in TCG Pocket – the only thing that can save us is a smiley tree and a concussed dinosaur
Charizard in the Pokemon anime.
Pokemon fans prove they'll buy anything as a Cheeto shaped like a Charizard sells for almost $90k
Latest in News
Lego Mario & Standard Kart being held by a person sat at a table
The new Lego Mario Kart set is so much better than I was expecting it to be
a titanium watch with grey and orange features on the arms and face
You can look like Solid Snake with this Death Stranding 2 watch, but it'll cost you over $1,500
Daniel Craig in No Time to Die
James Bond will reportedly remain male and British under new Amazon management, as Pierce Brosnan says it's "a given" that the next actor must not be American
Monster Hunter Wilds trailer screenshot showing a young woman with long blonde hair tied back into a ponytail smiling slightly, pumping her left fist in the air
Monster Hunter Wilds' Gemma actor requests "tips for beginners" from fans of Capcom's action RPG as it's the "first MH game that I've ever played"
Doom: The Dark Ages screenshot
Doom director claims The Dark Ages can be beaten without using a gun, but "the game's not necessarily built to do that"
Giancarlo Esposito in The Electric State
The Electric State may be the Russo brothers' most challenging VFX project yet, but stars Stanley Tucci and Giancarlo Esposito say it's one of the easiest films they’ve ever done