
GTA Online’s Kortz Center art heist is pulling players back to Los Santos for a summer of loud entries and quiet lifts. Payday 3 is still finding its feet. Somewhere between the two, the heist genre has quietly become one of the healthiest on desktop, with room for a hardcore four-hour planning session and a twenty-minute smash-and-grab. These are the seven heist games on desktop we would keep installed on a fresh Windows build.
We looked for games that let planning, stealth, and violence coexist in one lobby. Every entry below is either currently patching, currently discounting, or currently on someone’s most-played list.
What to look for in a heist game
- Stealth-to-loud transitions. Every good heist game lets a run go loud without becoming a firing range. If the shift is one-way only, the ceiling is low.
- Progression that outlives one job. Skill trees, loadouts, and unlocks that carry into the next job change how a group returns.
- Solo and squad support. Bots or a strong single-player mode matter when the group is only three tonight.
- Job variety. Bank hits are the classic. Art heists, kidnap jobs, and casino runs stop the genre from feeling like one long training level.
- Live service or complete package. Some picks below are complete on day one, others patch new content quarterly. Know which one your patience wants.
Quick comparison
| Game | Best for | Platforms | Free | Standout |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Payday 2 | Classic heist toolkit | Windows | No | Deep skill trees, active modding scene |
| Payday 3 | Modern heist sequel | Windows | No | New engine, roadmap now on quarterly rhythm |
| Hitman World of Assassination | Solo puzzle heists | Windows | No | Reference sandbox design, huge map count |
| Monaco: What’s Yours Is Mine | Top-down four-player heists | Windows | No | Split-screen local co-op, silly and tense |
| GTA V | Big-set-piece heists | Windows | No | Kortz Center DLC is the reason for the resurgence |
| Deceive Inc. | Spy-vs-spy PvP heists | Windows | Free-to-play periods | Extraction-shooter twist with disguises |
| Crime Boss: Rockay City | Story-driven heist career | Windows | No | Single-player campaign that co-op friends can drop into |
The apps
1. Payday 2 — Best classic heist toolkit
Payday 2 is still the reference for four-player heist play. Skill trees, weapon builds, and a decade of DLC produce a deeper toolkit than any other entry on this list, and the modding scene keeps the game feeling current.
Where it falls short: Diesel 3.0 upgraded the engine, but the game still shows its age around modern high-refresh monitors. The DLC catalogue is dense enough to be intimidating.
Pricing:
- Free: Occasional free weekends
- Paid: Cheap base, DLC bundles on regular sale
Platforms: Windows
Download: Steam
Bottom line: The pick for a squad that wants the biggest and most stable heist toolkit at the lowest price.
2. Payday 3 — Best modern sequel
Payday 3 is the direct continuation. After a rough launch it now ships on a quarterly patch schedule with new heists, skill-tree updates, and matchmaking improvements that finally landed in 2026.
Where it falls short: Smaller current playerbase than Payday 2. Online-only by design.
Pricing:
- Free: Free weekends
- Paid: Moderate base, season pass extra
Platforms: Windows
Download: Steam
Bottom line: The pick for the current-gen heist loop with a live roadmap.
3. Hitman World of Assassination — Best solo puzzle heist
Hitman World of Assassination rolls the three World of Assassination trilogy games into one launcher, giving a solo player the largest sandbox-heist catalogue on Steam. Every map is a puzzle box where a coin, a screwdriver, and a costume are enough to take down the target.
Where it falls short: Not multiplayer in the traditional heist sense. Freelancer mode adds structure but not co-op.
Pricing:
- Free: Starter Pack with one map
- Paid: Moderate base, DLC campaigns extra
Platforms: Windows
Download: Steam
Bottom line: The pick for a single player who wants heist puzzles that reward five or six replays each.
4. Monaco: What’s Yours Is Mine — Best small-team heist
Monaco: What’s Yours Is Mine is a top-down cooperative heist for up to four players that pairs a clean visual language with an ecosystem of gadgets, class picks, and campaign scenarios. Same-couch local co-op is still supported.
Where it falls short: Visual style reads as retro. Sequels have been talked about for years.
Pricing:
- Free: Free weekends
- Paid: Cheap
Platforms: Windows
Download: Steam
Bottom line: The pick for a couch co-op heist night with four friends and one screen.
5. GTA V — Best big-set-piece heists
GTA V’s heist missions are the reason the Kortz Center art job made news in the first place. The base game’s cinematic heists are the best story-driven cooperative moments in Rockstar’s catalogue, and the online updates have added structured heists on a schedule.
Where it falls short: Getting into GTA Online is still an arm’s-length effort against griefers on public servers. Invite-only lobbies are the fix.
Pricing:
- Free: None
- Paid: Cheap base, Enhanced version on sale often
Platforms: Windows
Download: Steam
Bottom line: The pick for the biggest budget-per-mission and the newest heist content that came out this year.
6. Deceive Inc. — Best spy-vs-spy heist
Deceive Inc. twists the extraction shooter into a heist by giving every player a disguise, a target, and the same map. Spot the person who moved a little too naturally past the vault and the shots come out.
Where it falls short: Smaller playerbase than the big three. Solo queuing can leak into duo lobbies.
Pricing:
- Free: Regular free periods
- Paid: Cheap
Platforms: Windows
Download: Steam
Bottom line: The pick when the group’s heist itch is really a spy-thriller itch.
7. Crime Boss: Rockay City — Best single-player heist career
Crime Boss: Rockay City wraps four-player heist play in a single-player career where each run is one attempt in a longer strategic layer. The cast is intentionally over-the-top, and co-op friends drop into the individual heists rather than the career layer.
Where it falls short: The strategic layer between heists is thinner than the marketing implied at launch.
Pricing:
- Free: Free weekends
- Paid: Moderate
Platforms: Windows
Download: Steam
Bottom line: The pick when the group wants a heist campaign that keeps a story going between jobs.
How to pick the right one
If you want the deepest toolkit at the lowest price: Payday 2. Nothing else has the same skill-tree depth for the cost.
If you want the current-gen sequel: Payday 3. Live roadmap, new heists.
If you play solo: Hitman World of Assassination. The sandbox is the entire game.
If you have four people and one couch: Monaco: What’s Yours Is Mine.
If you want the biggest budget per mission: GTA V. The Kortz Center update makes 2026 a good year to reinstall.
If you want spy-vs-spy tension in a PvP frame: Deceive Inc..
If you want a single-player career with drop-in co-op: Crime Boss: Rockay City.
FAQ
Is Payday 3 worth playing in 2026? Yes. The matchmaking is fixed, skill trees have been reworked, and quarterly patches are shipping. It is a better game than it was at launch.
Which heist game has the best solo experience? Hitman World of Assassination for pure solo. Crime Boss: Rockay City for solo with a story wrapper.
Are there free heist games on Steam? Deceive Inc. runs free periods regularly. Payday 2 and Payday 3 both run free weekends several times a year.
Can I play these on Steam Deck? Payday 2, Hitman, Monaco, Crime Boss, and Deceive Inc. all boot cleanly on Steam Deck. Payday 3 and GTA V have caveats depending on the current patch.
Which heist game has the highest playercount right now? Payday 2 and GTA V trade the top spot week to week, with Hitman close behind for solo play.
What is the cheapest heist game? Monaco: What’s Yours Is Mine and Payday 2, both frequently under a coffee’s worth on sale.