Metacritic's 12th Annual Game Publisher Rankings
Which game publishers released the best games in 2021? For the 12th straight year, we sifted through 12 months of data to determine the best and worst game publishers of the year, based solely on the quality of their 2021 releases. Sales and user reviews do not factor into these rankings; only critic reviews (as captured by each game's Metascore) are used to evaluate performance.
Publishers are ranked from worst to best in the gallery above based on a points system, calculated (as in previous years) according to the following four factors:
(1) Average Metascore for all games released in 2021
150 possible points (awarded at 1.5 x the average Metascore)
(2) % of scored products with good reviews (Metascore of at least 75)
100 possible points (ex: 80% good = 80 points)
(3) % of scored products with bad reviews (49 or lower; in this case, a lower % is better)
100 possible points (ex: 20% bad = 80 points)
(4) Number of "great" titles (Metascore of 90 or higher, min. 7 reviews)
Awarded as 5 bonus points for each distinct title with a 90+ score
Note that the Metascore average (the first factor) counts slightly more than the other factors. Only publishers with five or more distinct titles released last year are included in our rankings.
Finally, note that iOS games are excluded from all calculations. All scores in this report are from January 31, 2022, and U.S. release dates and publishers are used for all games except those never released in the U.S.
Previous year's rank: 21
Average Metascore for
2021 releases: 78.3
36 scored products (14 distinct titles): 69% good, 0% bad
"Great" games: 1
Total points: 291.9
Reversing a two-year slide from a #3 ranking to #21, Electronic Arts saw its ranking jump 12 spots while its average Metascore improved by nearly six points compared to a year ago. Helping lead that turnaround was a remastered reissue of the classic Mass Effect trilogy as well as one of 2021's best new IPs (and best games, period), the award-winning co-op action-adventure game It Takes Two. Other EA highlights in the past year include F1 2021—the first title in the racing series to be published by EA Sports following EA's takeover of Codemasters—as well as another new IP, the team-based dodgeball game Knockout City. But EA's Call of Duty competitor Battlefield 2042 proved to be a major disappointment, as did the year's annual Madden installment.