Why 007 First Light redefines the future of licensed video games

007 First Light demonstrates how licensed games can evolve beyond movie tie-ins to become compelling standalone experiences. Alongside titles such as Indiana Jones and the Great Circle and Hogwarts Legacy, it showcases the growing influence of original storytelling in modern gaming.

Published Date – 9 June 2026, 04:36 PM

Why 007 First Light redefines the future of licensed video games

Hyderabad: I have had a lot of fun with 007 First Light over the last fortnight, and it is, in many ways, for me the first blockbuster of this summer. Don’t get me wrong, Horizon 6: Japan is a masterpiece, but it is a game you play for a much longer duration; Bond’s First Light, though, is an unending rollercoaster ride.

You begin like you’re in an action movie or a spy thriller, and the stakes only get higher – which means you aren’t stopping until you figure out how it all fits in.


The First Light has sold close to 3 million copies at the time of writing; players all over the world are experiencing the unique abilities of being Bond and finding interesting ways to clear missions.

From using the Q-watch for interesting outcomes, like a laser to burn locks or set up traps, or to outright using Bond’s charisma to bluff or “fake surrender” your way out of trouble, the game does a lot to get the experience right.

However, it would be incorrect to say First Light is the first game to do this so successfully. 2024’s Indiana Jones and the Great Circle did achieve a similar level of emotional connection with its players by relying on a new plot. Offering a compelling journey of the iconic hero in the fedora, the game not only let one be Indy but also wove a new narrative and opened opportunities for fans that the new movies have struggled to.

However, where that game did suffer was the open-world sequences; the core narrative was amazing, but the opportunity to explore and find new things, the very job of being an adventurer, was a letdown.

Similarly, in the case of 2023’s Hogwarts Legacy: we see a similar pattern: the world of Hogwarts and Hogsmeade is made available to players, offering the opportunity to be a wizard or witch in the Wizarding World, but the central plot is completely new. Furthermore, the game’s setting is from a time untouched by the books and various media from the franchise.

Why do these games work?

For the longest time, licensed video games have been derivatives of the movies they draw from; the story and characters were always limited because their job was to augment or extend what was happening on the big screen.

But with these three titles, games aren’t playing second fiddle to cinema, but rather are unique experiences of their own. Their success has now opened new opportunities for films and TV series to be built around what these games are doing.

We have seen this with Cal Kestis and the Jedi series of games, and now a lot of people are wondering if First Light could serve as a foundation for future Bond movies.

What does it mean for gamers?

Firstly, it means gamers and their time aren’t being taken for granted; secondly, it means they are being treated as a major demographic and as arbiters of taste, culture, and class.

In First Light, Jaguar decided it was the ideal place to showcase its new Type 00, Omega showcases its watches, and most of the dialogue forces players to think about AI and technology critically.

This isn’t just you being Bond, but you being a thinking, reflective Bond who embraces the reality we live in. With games like these, there are degrees of empathy and a forceful engagement with the difficult ideas of today that will serve us as global citizens quite well.

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