Short answer, because I know you’re busy: No, Ghost Recon Wildlands is not crossplay. I’ve tested this stuff for a decade, and I still get pinged about it weekly. If you’re asking “is ghost recon wildlands crossplay,” the answer is no across Xbox, PlayStation, and PC. Co-op is great, but only inside the same platform. Cross-platform play? Not here. Cross-progression? Also no. I know. It stings.
Why I’m so sure (and why this matters)

I’ve been the “crossplay person” in my circle since Wildlands launched. I keep spreadsheets. I host game nights. I listen to salty party chat logs. In my experience, if a game has crossplay, you feel it right away: clean invites, friends list handshake, mixed-platform lobbies. Wildlands never had that. It’s a 2017 open-world co-op shooter with good bones, but no cross-network tech across consoles and PC.
If you want the formal history, check the page for Tom Clancy’s Ghost Recon Wildlands. Still a blast with a squad. Still a hard “no” on playing across different systems.
What crossplay actually means (and why Wildlands misses)
Let’s clear a thing. Crossplay (or cross-platform play) lets people on different systems play together—like Xbox with PlayStation, or console with PC. Sounds simple. It isn’t. It’s servers, accounts, and policy spaghetti. If you want a tidy explainer, the idea is laid out here: cross-platform play. Wildlands runs co-op well, but it was built before crossplay became the default checkbox in pitch decks. So it stayed siloed.
So… what works today?
- Console to console (Xbox to PlayStation): doesn’t work together.
- Console to PC: also doesn’t work.
- PC to PC (Steam vs. Epic): yes, because both use Ubisoft Connect under the hood.
- Cross-progression (carry your save across platforms): no.
Quick comparison (snackable)
- Platforms: PS4/PS5 via backward compat, Xbox One/Series via backward compat, PC.
- Co-op size: Up to 4 players, PvE only.
- Crossplay: None between console families or console-to-PC.
- Cross-progression: No moving saves across platforms.
- PC storefront mixing: Yes, Steam + Epic via Ubisoft Connect friends list.
How I actually squad up without crossplay
Here’s how I run it. If I’m on PC, I don’t care which storefront my friends used. We all launch through Ubisoft Connect anyway. Add each other there, invite, done. If someone is on Xbox and someone else is on PlayStation? That’s two different squads. We hop on Discord for comms and run parallel ops like we’re in some tiny LAN party from 2008. Janky, but fun.
When folks ask me for more chill couch stuff in the meantime, I point them at co-op games like It Takes Two. Lighter vibe, actual split-screen, way fewer headset arguments about sync shots.
“But Ubisoft added crossplay to other games, right?”
Yep. The tech is there now, but not everywhere. And not retrofitted into every title. If you want a perfect case study in “partial crossplay,” I’ve written about Rainbow Six Siege crossplay. Consoles can party together there, but console and PC don’t mix for matchmaking. Wildlands is older than Siege’s crossplay rollout, and it never got that retrofit love.
Why games skip crossplay (the short version)
- Old netcode: Rebuilding is expensive. You can’t duct-tape cross-network on top of spaghetti.
- Platform rules: Sony, Microsoft, and PC ecosystems don’t always handshake neatly.
- Player balance: Mouse vs. controller drama. A whole genre of angry Reddit throws.
- ROI math: Publishers ask “Does this sell more copies now?” If not, it often dies in triage.
What about cross-progression and cloud saves?
Cross-progression is different from crossplay. It’s about your progress moving with you. Wildlands doesn’t do cross-progression across platforms. If you play on Xbox and later buy on PC, your save doesn’t come with you. Ubisoft Connect cloud saves can help within the same platform family, but not across them. It’s like having two separate lives in two separate towns. Weird, but that’s how it is.
If you want to see how another hit handles mixed systems, I’ve broken down Stardew Valley cross-platform. You’ll see a similar pattern: lots of love for co-op… but platform walls are stubborn.
Okay, but is the game still worth it in 2025?

I think so—if you have even one friend on the same platform. Ghost mode is tense. Sync shots feel amazing. The open world still has that “let’s improvise a night raid and hope nobody flips the chopper” energy. I wouldn’t buy Wildlands expecting a cross-platform future update though. That ship sailed years ago and did not circle back.
If you want a Ubisoft-sanctioned page to peek at, the official hub is here: Ubisoft’s Wildlands page. You won’t find a crossplay toggle hidden in the fine print. I’ve looked. Repeatedly.
How I set up a no-drama Wildlands night
Smart, simple checklist
- Confirm everyone’s on the same platform. Save the “is ghost recon wildlands crossplay” debate for later.
- On PC, add each other in Ubisoft Connect. Don’t rely on Steam/Epic alone.
- Match your difficulty. No one likes bullet-sponge enemies unless you’re into pain.
- Pick roles: drone scout, sniper, driver, chaos gremlin. Yes, that last one is a job.
- Agree on audio. In-game VOIP or Discord. Not both. Echo is evil.
If you vibe with the culture side of this—why some games get crossplay, why others don’t—you’ll probably dig my ramblings in gaming culture. There’s more nuance than “devs lazy,” I promise.
Alternatives if you need crossplay or couch co-op
Not every night has to be sneaky-cartel-sim. Sometimes two players, one couch, some laughs, done. I keep a shortlist of two-player co-op games like It Takes Two for exactly that. Zero debates about platforms. Maximum yelling about who missed the jump.
PC storefront gotchas (quick notes)
- Steam friends list won’t find Epic friends. Use Ubisoft Connect to bridge.
- Turn off overlays you don’t need. They can cause invite weirdness.
- Verify game files if invites fail. Yes, it’s boring. Yes, it works annoyingly often.
Does Ubisoft ever flip this switch later?
Wildlands is in maintenance mode. I’d love to be wrong, but I don’t expect a crossplay miracle patch. Ubisoft moved on to Breakpoint and other live titles for feature experiments. Wildlands remains what it is: a very solid same-platform co-op sandbox.
Who should still buy this?
- If you and friends share the same platform and love PvE tactics.
- If you like open-world stealth chaos with helicopters and questionable plans.
- If you’re fine with no crossplay and no cross-progression.
Who shouldn’t? Players who only play with friends on other platforms. You’ll be sad. I don’t want you to be sad.
Mini “table” you can skim (list-style)
- Crossplay status: None between Xbox, PlayStation, and PC.
- PC cross-storefront: Yes (Steam and Epic can play together via Ubisoft Connect).
- Cross-progression: No saves between different platforms.
- Co-op cap: 4 players, PvE only.
- Best use case: Same-platform friend group who likes tactical co-op.
If you made it this far, you probably care about getting the facts fast and then getting back to your squad. Same. I’ll keep watching the crossplay space, but for Wildlands—set your expectations low on that front and high on teamwork chaos. That mix still slaps.
FAQs
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Does Wildlands have crossplay between Xbox and PlayStation?
No. Xbox and PlayStation can’t play together in Wildlands. Same goes for console to PC.
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Can Steam and Epic players squad up on PC?
Yes. Add each other in Ubisoft Connect and invite from there. Storefront doesn’t matter on PC.
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Is there cross-progression if I switch platforms?
No. Your save won’t move from console to PC or vice versa. Separate progress per platform.
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Is Wildlands still worth buying without crossplay?
If your friends share your platform, absolutely. The co-op sandbox is still great in 2025.
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Will Ubisoft add crossplay later?
Very unlikely. Wildlands is old and stable. Don’t wait on a crossplay patch.

Henry Wright: Celebrating the artistry of gaming. I cover Pixel Games, Indie Battles, Arcade Classics, Gaming Culture, and Visual Design. Let’s explore the pixels together!