El Xbox Game Pass catalog it keeps increasing month by month, and we have already reached a point where users have it quite difficult to choose the game to play. Blessed problem. Well, that is what the user who decided to give life to this peculiar website seemed to think, since it is a very complete database that will try to make life easy for those who want to discover their next victim within the Xbox Game Pass catalog.
The best Xbox Game Pass database
With the name of Game Pass Port, this virtual library collects all the games that currently exist on the service and catalogs and labels them following a wide variety of filters. For example, we will be able to sort the games in alphabetical order, by best score obtained by critics, best user score, games with the longest or shortest playing time, and by release date.
But the thing does not end there, since in addition to this order of appearance, we can also create very specific filters with which to select games with a certain category, define whether or not they belong to a collection (from Bethesda, from EA Play or from Xbox). Game Studios) or set a specific review score, release year, and a host of other features.
Gaming at 120hz? Easy
Now that many players begin to have TVs with HDMI 2.1 and rate of refresh at 120 Hz, many will probably start to be interested in finding games that support this rate of images per second. Well, all we have to do is select the 120 Hz graphics option so that the list of games is updated immediately and shows us all those games that are currently on the service and run at that speed.
The definitive catalog to discover great games
The site gamepassport it's an amazing tool. Its magnificent interface and its easy operation will now make it an essential tool for all those subscribers to the service. Per asking you, we would have liked to find the official trailer for each game, although that probably requires manual work, and something tells us that the entire web is perfectly automated reading information from the Microsoft website and obtaining data from websites like Metacritic y HowLongToBeat.
Of course, it is important to clarify that the list of games is based on the catalog available in the United States, so you could find some absence or difference compared to what you find on your console when you review the Xbox Game Pass catalog.
Should Microsoft do something similar?
The official Xbox Game Pass website shows a list of games identical to that of this homemade project. What's more, all the filters are extracted directly from there (that's why we said that it's all automated), and its creator has taken the license to include Metacritic data for the scores and HowLongToBeat for the duration of the games. The aesthetics and interface of the web also help, so those details are what make this homemade project slightly superior to Microsoft's own official website. We'll see if Microsoft takes note and decides to improve its official catalog with these small details that make a difference.