Gaming’s always been a realm supported by trends. The late 90s and early 2000s were dominated by MMORPGs. The late 2000s, for better or worse, went through a “grunge” phase, wherein every AAA title was painted in pastel earth tones and featured brooding protags. The mid-2010s could be titled the Rise of The Microtransaction. Shame. Now, we’re in the era of hyperrealism. Games look, feel, and play more like life itself than ever before.
Sure, The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion Remastered looks decidedly lifelike, what with its twenty-year-old Gamebryo engine now encapsulated by the king of Godrays and photogrammetric texturing, Unreal Engine 5. But it’s the first-person shooter that primarily delivers the hyper immersive experience. These are the shooters with the most realistic gunplay in 2025.
Escape From Tarkov
You didn’t think we’d save the last for best, did you? Escape From Tarkov is an extraction looter shooter released in 2017. Set in a fictional province of Russia, you’re tasked with waging war cooperatively with other players and NPCs, fighting for one of two rival private military companies, United Security (“USEC”), and Battle Encounter Assault Regiment (“BEAR”).
The story is, of course, threadbare and inconsequential to the gameplay. Jump in, start raiding, and shoot whoever’s on the opposing team. But for its lack of storytelling, Tarkov dominates in the realism department.
For starters, the UI: There is none. Well, technically, you get some basic data on your character’s status—but when it comes to keeping an eye on ammo, it’s up to you to count your rounds based on your trigger pulls. There’s also no reticle to speak of. Dropping enemy players without aiming down the sights is a true endeavor in spraying n’ praying (unless you’ve equipped your rifle or handgun with a laser).
But this is just scratching the surface. Some describe Tarkov as two games in one: The former, an extraction shooter. The latter, arguably one of the most detailed gun builder-simulators. One can – and probably will – spend collective hours at the in-game workbench, piecing together custom tactical rifles in a plethora of calibers, not unlike a real-life AR-15 build kit.
The options for customizing your favorite rifle, shotgun, and pistol are well and truly nearly endless. Pick your ammo, ranging from frangible to hollow points to armor-piercing, to good ole’ full metal jackets. Swap your rifle’s stock, foregrip, handguard, trigger assembly and receivers, pick from dozens of optics specific to that platform, and finish everything off with rail attachments, a suppressor-compatible muzzle device, and IR laser – so long as you’ve got the night vision goggles to pair it with.
The in-game gunsmithing platform’s so detailed, it’s quite easy to find tutorials that’ll show you how to perfectly recreate actual military weaponry, like the famous Mk18 short-barreled rifle, or a nearly perfect clone of a Geissele M4A1, complete with SOCOM RC2 suppressor and Elcan scope.
Back to gameplay: Tarkov gets in-flight ballistics nearly 1:1 accurate, with velocity, time of light, bullet drop, windage, and hit placement all factoring into the equation every time you pull the trigger. Individual rounds’ velocities even vary by a few feet per second, just as any off-the-shelf ammo in real life may perform. For all this, aiming in Tarkov is truly an art – so much so that tutorials exist for improving your ability to lead targets and compensate for distance with specific cartridges with in-game target practice.
All characters are segmented by hit placement, too. Take a round to the knee, and you’ll be forced to limp around. Take a round to the chest or abdomen, though, and you’ll only have a few moments to make your final stand, unless you or a teammate has the requisite medical equipment to perform a quick rescue.
Tarkov’s environments are the icing on the cake when it comes to mil-sim gameplay. Structurs’ materials determine how well – if at all – they provide cover against penetration from enemy rounds. Bullets can ricochet, and dark spaces are unforgivable. If you decide to travel the tunnels, you’d best have a weapon light or goggles.
With such a commitment to realism and an admittedly steep learning curve, we recommend diving into Escape From Tarkov by starting with the offline singleplayer mode. It’s here you’ll get full access to all game features, albeit versing non-player characters that allow you to learn at your own pace.
Ready Or Not
There are mil-sim games like Tarkov, which do a great job of replicating gunplay. Then there are mil-sim games that replicate good gunplay, great teamwork, and the horrifying reality of combat. Enter Ready Or Not, the 2021 SWAT team simulator, replete with truly bone-chilling, gruesome, X-rated missions that range from busting up human trafficking rings to responding to mass shootings.
It’s the small details scattered throughout each mission and map that push Ready Or Not from being merely “great” to “legendary.” Crawl through the detritus and crazed ramblings scrawled on papers in a militiaman’s house, and you’ll be treated to a wonderfully crafted backstory that tells of an anti-government paranoid schizophrenic whose attempts at overthrowing the federal government was interrupted by, well, you.
We led with Ready Or Not’s adherence to great storytelling because it truly outclasses every other mil-sim shooter in this context. But its gameplay is, of course, tier one. Before entering your first real mission, you’ll be treated to a strikingly realistic shoot house, filled with drills meant to familiarize you with rapid target acquisition and command and control of your SWAT team’s squads.
You’ll need to carefully execute different commands for each squad to breach doors, peak corners, and clear rooms while taking care to avoid friendly fire, exercise muzzle awareness in close quarters, and decide in milliseconds whether a non-player character’s a combatant or hostage.
Ready Or Not’s gunsmith bench is simplistic compared to Escape From Tarkov, but it’s no less impressive. You’ll gain immediate access to more than a dozen rifles, shotguns, submachine guns, pistols, and special equipment. You’ll also get to pick your character’s level of threat protection with light or heavy armor and determine your entire kit from the battle belt to the plate carrier’s individual pouches.
Veterans of the original Tom Clancy: Rainbow Six games will be pleased to find Ready Or Not’s pre-mission planning and squad customizations quite familiar.
America’s Army (Arma 3)
Served in the GWOT? Want to recreate the joy of sitting in a HMMVW with your buddies for two hours while you wait for orders to travel to a hill overlooking a specific building, where you’ll wait for yet another hour before being told to dismount and call field artillery a building?
America’s Army, known officially as simply Arma 3, is inarguably the most sim of mil-sims. Matches can last up to eight hours, with individual squads being given specific roles – like indirect fire support specialists, special operations, pilots, radio operators, mechanized infantry, and support personnel – with ranks given to each team member, from lower enlisted to sergeants to officers, and objectives doled out for squads to conquer across each multiple-square-miles-wide map.
Like Tarkov, Arma 3’s ballistic simulation achieves nearly 1:1 realism. Every round you fire is individually rendered and affected by velocity, distance, bullet weight, barrel length, and wind. And, of course, you’ll be treated with no shortage of individual weapons, components, attachments, add-ons, special equipment, armor, uniforms, helmets, goggles, face covers, and all the other tactical kit any real operator dons before a mission.
Arma 3’s commitment to detailed tactics and teamwork does have a tradeoff. In what has reached meme status (“press Shift+L+Ctrl+W to breathe”), the game’s character, weapon, vehicle, cover, and command actions could be described as pedantic. You’ll likely spend your first many hours of gameplay just memorizing hotkeys and various keyboard and mouse shortcuts. This is a game that can literally never be ported to consoles for those controllers’ lack of buttons.
Commit to Arma 3’s occasionally too-serious tones and pedantry, though, and you’ll likely make some genuine friends and memorable moments within your new squad.