
Rockstar’s Kortz Center heist DLC is landing in July, and the fan response has followed the pattern of the last several updates: interesting new setup, cool location, and a grind that quietly pushes players toward Shark Cards to buy the equipment. After more than a decade, GTA Online alternatives on desktop are less about running away from GTA V and more about finding something to do while we wait for GTA VI’s next-gen online mode to shape up.
We tested seven GTA Online alternatives on Windows and Steam Deck that fit the same “sprawling open world, cinematic crime, drop-in multiplayer or co-op” itch. Each one solves it a different way, and none of them ask for a Shark Card. Pick by what specifically we love about GTA Online — the friends running a heist together, the cars, the character build, or the crime-movie tone — and match the alternative to that.
Why people are looking past GTA Online in 2026
GTA Online is still one of the biggest online worlds on PC, but the pain points that pushed players away over the last two years are still there:
- The grind rewards paying money, not playing. New vehicles, new properties, new heist gear — each release cycle nudges the market up. Free earn rates have not kept pace, and Rockstar is unapologetic about that.
- Griefing and cheating in public lobbies. Even on next-gen PC builds, a menu user in a public session can wreck a night. Rockstar’s ban waves help, but the underlying architecture has not changed.
- Enhanced Edition PC never landed. The console generation moved on. The PC build is still the older engine, and the community has been asking for the Enhanced treatment for two years.
- Content cadence has slowed. Heists were seasonal events. In the last year, the beats between major drops have stretched. The Kortz Center DLC is welcome, but the schedule is thinner than 2020’s.
- Rockstar’s focus is on GTA VI. That is the right decision for the studio and the right reason for players to explore what else is out there in the meantime.
None of this makes GTA Online bad. It is still the reason many of us keep GTA V installed. But the alternatives below are all doing something GTA Online is not, right now.
Quick comparison
| Game | Best for | Free plan | Starting price | Standout feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Red Dead Online | Open-world crime with a slower, prettier world | Available as a standalone purchase | Modest one-time price | The world Rockstar treats like art |
| Saints Row (2022) | Absurd, over-the-top gang building | Trials via subscription services | Modest one-time price, often on sale | Player-built Boss and district takeovers |
| Watch Dogs Legion | Recruit-anyone open-world London heists | Trials via Ubisoft+ | Modest one-time price | Play as any NPC on the map |
| Cyberpunk 2077 | Cinematic crime in a next-gen city | Trials available | Modest one-time price for Ultimate Edition | RPG systems on top of an open city |
| PayDay 3 | Focused heist co-op | Available via Game Pass sometimes | Modest one-time price | Four-player masked-crew heists |
| Just Cause 4 | Physics-driven mayhem in a huge sandbox | Trials via subscription services | Frequently deep-discounted | Grapple hook and destruction toolkit |
| Sleeping Dogs Definitive Edition | Hand-to-hand crime driving in Hong Kong | None | Modest one-time price | Melee combat that GTA never quite nailed |
The 7 best GTA Online alternatives for desktop
Red Dead Online — best world, slower pace
Red Dead Online is the closest thing on PC to what GTA Online is trying to be, from the same studio, in a world that has aged better than Los Santos. The PC build looks stunning at 4K, the horse-and-carriage economy is friendlier than Shark Cards, and Rockstar sells Red Dead Online as a standalone purchase without needing the base singleplayer. Free-roam sessions with a posse cover the “run heists with friends” itch cleanly, and the frontier is the correct scale for a real open world.
Where it falls short: Rockstar has publicly slowed new content for Red Dead Online. Anyone chasing a monthly update cycle will find the well drier than GTA Online’s. Cross-play with consoles is not offered.
Pricing:
- Free: none
- Paid: Red Dead Online standalone or the full Red Dead Redemption 2 on Steam
- vs GTA Online: no Shark Cards, but the content pipeline is slower
Download: Steam
Bottom line: the pick if we love the Rockstar open-world formula and the western tone.
Saints Row (2022) — best absurd sandbox
Saints Row (the 2022 reboot) walked into a rough launch and improved through a year of patches. In 2026 it is a competent, ridiculous take on the “build your own gang and take over a city” fantasy that GTA Online only touches obliquely. The character creator is the deepest on the list, the criminal ventures (drug fronts, weapons trafficking, an insurance-fraud minigame) turn map takeover into a persistent progression loop, and co-op runs the whole story from start to finish.
Where it falls short: the tone is broad and cartoony, on purpose. Anyone who wants the crime-drama feel of GTA V’s story missions will bounce off. Multiplayer is co-op-only rather than session-shared like GTA Online.
Pricing:
- Free: trials via PS Plus / Ubisoft+ / EA Play depending on the region
- Paid: modest one-time price, deep discounts common
- vs GTA Online: buy-once model, co-op story instead of MMO-lite lobbies
Download: Steam
Bottom line: the alternative for anyone who wanted GTA V to lean harder into the ridiculous.
Watch Dogs Legion — best “play as anyone” open-world London
Watch Dogs Legion is a heist game dressed as a spy game. Its central hook — recruit any NPC in London and play as them — is unlike anything Rockstar has shipped, and the four-player online mode lets a crew stack roles (drone operator, hacker, brawler, spy) for cooperative jobs across the city. The map is a scale replica of London and holds up as a place to walk around, drive around, and clear objectives in.
Where it falls short: the single-player campaign leans on the recruit-anyone system to a point that thins the writing. Ubisoft’s online population has faded as the game aged.
Pricing:
- Free: trials via Ubisoft+
- Paid: modest one-time price
- vs GTA Online: less persistent world, but a co-op loop that rewards experimentation
Download: Steam
Bottom line: the pick if the “steal the city” fantasy is the appeal.
Cyberpunk 2077 — best cinematic single-city crime
Cyberpunk 2077 in its 2.13 state is not the game that launched. Night City is a dense, layered open world that rewards exploration, the driving is close enough to GTA V that GTA players adapt quickly, and the Phantom Liberty expansion adds a spy-thriller heist chapter that GTA Online has never matched narratively. It has no online mode, but the world is so lived-in that a solo run scratches the “sprawling city crime” itch differently.
Where it falls short: no multiplayer. CDPR’s promised online mode was cancelled and folded into the sequel work. If we specifically want to run heists with friends, this is not the pick.
Pricing:
- Free: trials on some subscription services
- Paid: modest one-time price for the Ultimate Edition, which bundles Phantom Liberty
- vs GTA Online: single-player only, but the density and writing beat GTA V’s story world
Download: Steam
Bottom line: the alternative for anyone who wanted GTA V’s story mode to be five times longer.
PayDay 3 — best focused heist co-op
PayDay 3 does one thing very well: a four-player crew, a heist, a plan, and enough chaos that the plan never survives the first vault door. The stealth-versus-loud tension is the tightest on the list, and the 2026 patch cycle finally landed the matchmaking and progression fixes the community asked for at launch. For a Friday-night session of “run a heist with three friends and cash out,” it beats GTA Online cleanly on setup time.
Where it falls short: no open world. The moment-to-moment is heist maps, not city driving. Solo play is possible but not the point.
Pricing:
- Free: sometimes on Game Pass; Silver Edition free week promotions happen
- Paid: modest one-time price
- vs GTA Online: heist-only, no free-roam, but every session is a heist
Download: Steam
Bottom line: the pick if the heist itself is the fun and the open world is a bonus we do not need.
Just Cause 4 — best physics sandbox
Just Cause 4 is what happens when a studio decides physics is the game. The grapple hook, the tether, the wingsuit, and the destructible everything add up to a sandbox that GTA Online cannot match on chaos-per-minute. There is no MMO-lite shared session, but a mod scene ships a co-op patch that turns Solís into a four-player playground. On Steam Deck it holds a stable 60 fps at modest settings.
Where it falls short: the story is thin and the online mode is a community mod, not an official service. The world feels less lived-in than GTA V’s Los Santos.
Pricing:
- Free: trials via subscription services
- Paid: frequently deep-discounted on Steam
- vs GTA Online: no shared world, but the mayhem toolkit is unmatched
Download: Steam
Bottom line: the alternative when we just want to blow things up in a huge sandbox.
Sleeping Dogs Definitive Edition — best hand-to-hand crime story
Sleeping Dogs Definitive Edition is the sleeper pick. It is the game GTA V borrowed from without acknowledging: an undercover cop drama in Hong Kong with the tightest melee combat in any open-world crime game. On a modern PC it runs at any framerate and any resolution, and the Definitive Edition bundles every DLC. There is no multiplayer, so this is a story-mode pick, but the story is one of the best in the genre.
Where it falls short: no online. Some driving physics feel dated. The sequel we are all still waiting for is not coming.
Pricing:
- Free: none
- Paid: modest one-time price, often on sale
- vs GTA Online: single-player only, but a story that GTA Online’s contact missions never approach
Download: Steam
Bottom line: the pick when the crime story matters more than the sandbox.
How to choose the right GTA Online alternative
- If we want Rockstar’s open-world craft with a slower content cadence: Red Dead Online.
- If we want to build a gang and take over districts: Saints Row (2022).
- If we want a heist crew in a real city map: Watch Dogs Legion.
- If we want the best single-player crime story of the last decade: Cyberpunk 2077 or Sleeping Dogs Definitive Edition.
- If we want tight four-player heists and nothing else: PayDay 3.
- If we want to blow things up in a huge sandbox: Just Cause 4.
Stay on GTA Online if the community and the accumulated character progression are what actually keeps us logging in. None of the alternatives replace the specific weight of years of levels on a single character. For a fresh start with friends, though, several of these beat GTA Online for value-per-hour in 2026.
FAQ
What is the best free GTA Online alternative? There is no fully free GTA V-scale open-world crime game on PC in 2026. The closest paths are subscription services (Game Pass, PS Plus Premium, Ubisoft+) that rotate several of the games on this list through their catalogues.
Are there GTA Online alternatives with cross-play? Watch Dogs Legion has cross-play across current-gen platforms. PayDay 3 supports cross-play too. Red Dead Online does not.
What can I play instead of GTA V on Steam Deck? Cyberpunk 2077, Watch Dogs Legion, and Just Cause 4 all run reasonably on Steam Deck at 30 to 40 fps with tuned settings. Sleeping Dogs Definitive Edition is a Verified title and holds 60 fps at 800p.
Is GTA VI coming to PC? Rockstar has publicly confirmed console-first, with PC to follow. There is no official PC date. For now, GTA Online is the only Rockstar crime experience on PC.
Do any of these games have crews or clans like GTA Online? Red Dead Online has posses. Saints Row has co-op crews. Watch Dogs Legion has online teams. None of them run a persistent MMO-lite session the way GTA Online does.
Which alternative is the closest to GTA Online’s heists? PayDay 3 for the heist mechanic itself, Red Dead Online or Watch Dogs Legion for the “friends in an open world” feeling. Saints Row’s cooperative story mode also fits.