Best PlayStation 1 Games of All Time
By Console Codex Editorial Team · 44 min read ·
Expert-ranked list of the greatest best playstation 1 games of all time — with reviews, ratings, and guides for every game.
💡 Quick Facts
- → 52 games ranked in this list
- → Available on PLAYSTATION
- → Average review score: 8.9/10
- → Last updated: 2026-06-06
The Ranked List
Final Fantasy VII
9.9Square's magnum opus and the game that defined the JRPG genre for an entire generation. Final Fantasy VII blended cinematic storytelling, a richly imagined dystopian world, and a revolutionary Materia system into an adventure that millions of players still consider their all-time favorite.
Castlevania: Symphony of the Night
9.9One of the most perfect games ever made, Symphony of the Night merged action platforming with deep RPG mechanics and a sprawling inverted castle to create the Castlevania series' masterpiece. It gave its name to a subgenre and remains the defining standard of exploration-based action games.
Metal Gear Solid
9.8Hideo Kojima's stealth masterpiece redefined what video games could achieve narratively and mechanically. Metal Gear Solid blended Hollywood-caliber presentation with innovative stealth gameplay and fourth-wall-breaking moments that players still discuss 25 years later.
Resident Evil 2
9.7The greatest survival horror game ever made — RE2's dual protagonist system, the Raccoon City Police Department, and the relentless Mr. X pursuer combined with two fully interconnected campaigns to create the series peak.
Tekken 3
9.5The definitive PlayStation fighting game and one of the greatest 3D fighters ever made. Tekken 3 refined the series' formula to perfection with a massive roster, deep combat mechanics, side-stepping, and bonus modes that made it essential entertainment far beyond its arcade origins.
Final Fantasy IX
9.5Square's loving tribute to Final Fantasy's origins, Final Fantasy IX returned the series to its high-fantasy roots with a timeless fairy-tale setting, deeply drawn characters, and a meditation on life, death, and what it means to exist. Many consider it the most emotionally resonant entry in the franchise.
Suikoden II
9.6Frequently called the greatest JRPG story ever written — Suikoden II follows a young soldier through war, betrayal, and friendship across a 108-character recruitment epic with multiple endings.
Tony Hawk's Pro Skater
9.3Neversoft's revolutionary skateboarding game didn't just create a genre — it changed how a generation thought about skateboarding, music, and sports games entirely. With accessible combo-building, brilliantly designed levels, and a soundtrack that defined late-1990s alternative culture, Tony Hawk's Pro Skater is one of the most influential games ever made.
Gran Turismo
9.2Kazunori Yamauchi's obsessively detailed racing simulation brought genuine automotive culture to video games for the first time. Gran Turismo's 178 licensed cars, realistic physics, and career progression system created the 'Real Driving Simulator' standard that all subsequent racing games would be measured against.
Xenogears
9Square's most ambitious PS1 RPG — a philosophical science fiction epic about god, free will, and humanity's cycle of war, combining mech combat (Gears), hand-to-hand combo combat, and a narrative depth that influenced dozens of subsequent JRPGs.
Vagrant Story
9.1Square's most mechanically complex PS1 game — Vagrant Story's weapon crafting, risk system, affinity chains, and the City of Leá Monde combine into one of the deepest action RPGs ever made, directed by Yasumi Matsuno.
Valkyrie Profile
9.2One of the most original RPGs ever made — Valkyrie Profile follows the Valkyrie Lenneth collecting the souls of dying warriors and sending them to Valhalla, with Norse mythology, a side-scrolling battle system, and a timed story structure.
Resident Evil
9Capcom's survival horror masterpiece stranded players in a zombie-filled mansion with scarce resources and demanding puzzles. Resident Evil defined an entire genre with its tense atmosphere, resource management gameplay, and unforgettable monster designs — and those opening zombie groans remain some of gaming's most effective scares.
Tomb Raider
8.9Core Design's archaeological action-adventure introduced the world to Lara Croft, one of gaming's most iconic characters. Tomb Raider's blend of environmental puzzle-solving, platform navigation, and intense combat in imaginatively designed ancient ruins was genuinely revolutionary for 1996.
Spyro 2: Ripto's Rage
9Insomniac's refinement of Spyro the Dragon — 30 levels with unique characters, expanded abilities (swimming, headbash, climbing), NPCs with voiced quests, and greater world variety than the original.
Crash Bandicoot 2: Cortex Strikes Back
9Naughty Dog's refinement of the Crash Bandicoot formula — adding the slide, body slam, and super-powered spin makes Crash more capable, and 27 stages with expanded variety mark it as the series' most balanced entry.
Crash Bandicoot
8.8Naughty Dog's technically dazzling PlayStation launch platformer introduced the world to the wacky orange marsupial and demonstrated that 3D platforming could be precise, challenging, and visually spectacular. The game that made Sony's console a genuine rival to Nintendo.
Twisted Metal 2
8.8SingleTrac's vehicular combat masterpiece cranked everything up from the original: bigger arenas set across world landmarks, more vehicles, more weapons, and darkly comic character endings that became the series' signature. Twisted Metal 2 remains the definitive entry in the beloved PlayStation franchise.
Ape Escape
8.8The first game to require the DualShock analog sticks — Ape Escape's 204-monkey catching adventure across 26 stages used every feature of Sony's then-new controller in creative ways.
Siphon Filter
8.8Sony's answer to GoldenEye — Gabe Logan's third-person action-stealth shooter featured a sprawling conspiracy narrative, diverse mission objectives, and over 20 weapons in one of the PS1's best action games.
Final Fantasy VIII
8.8The ambitious follow-up to Final Fantasy VII doubles down on cinematic storytelling and introduces the unconventional junction magic system — drawing spells from enemies and equipping them as stat modifiers — alongside the Guardian Forces summon mechanic. Squall and Rinoa's slow-burning romance anchors one of the most emotionally ambitious narratives in the series, culminating in sequences that pushed the original PlayStation's FMV capabilities to their absolute limit.
Final Fantasy Tactics
9.2Ivalice's tactical RPG masterpiece tasks players with mastering over 400 abilities across a sprawling job system while navigating a political story — class warfare, religious corruption, and betrayal — dark enough to genuinely shock players in 1998. Yasumi Matsuno's design philosophy rewards methodical planning over brute force, and the depth of unit customization has kept Final Fantasy Tactics in active competitive discussion for nearly three decades.
Chrono Cross
8.9The ambitious spiritual sequel to Chrono Trigger features 45 playable characters, a parallel world mechanic built around the tension between destiny and free will, and Yasunori Mitsuda's most acclaimed score — a sweeping soundtrack that remains a benchmark in game composition. Controversial on release for its relationship to its predecessor, Chrono Cross has grown substantially in critical esteem over the decades as its thematic density and visual artistry receive the serious analysis they always deserved.
Silent Hill
9The psychological horror masterpiece that defined atmospheric dread in video games — Silent Hill's fog-shrouded town, creature design by Masahiro Ito drawing on a tradition stretching back to HR Giger, and Akira Yamaoka's industrial soundtrack created a genre-defining experience that Resident Evil's more action-oriented horror never attempted. Harry Mason's search for his daughter Cheryl generates existential unease through environmental storytelling and deliberate, uncomfortable pacing that still holds up against modern horror game design.
Parasite Eve
8.7Square's survival horror RPG blends cinematic storytelling with turn-based combat and real-time enemy positioning in a mitochondrial horror story set across New York City — from Carnegie Hall to the Natural History Museum. The Active Time Battle-derived combat system, where protagonist Aya Brea repositions mid-combat to optimize attacks and avoid enemy abilities, created a genuinely novel hybrid that neither pure RPG nor pure horror games had attempted before.
Dino Crisis
8.3Capcom's dinosaur-based survival horror — essentially Resident Evil redesigned for faster, smarter predators — features real-time creature AI that makes the Velociraptors genuinely terrifying rather than scripted obstacles. Regina's infiltration mission in Secret Operation Wipeout demonstrated that the studio's survival horror formula could absorb a radically different threat profile without losing any of its tension, and the game stands as the PS1's finest horror experience outside of Resident Evil 2 and Silent Hill.
Tekken 2
8.8The PlayStation fighter that cemented Tekken's dominance — Tekken 2 doubled the roster to 25 characters, introduced Arcade Mode endings with anime cutscenes, and refined the 3D fighting system that would define the genre on PS1.
Wipeout
8.5The futuristic anti-gravity racer that helped define the PlayStation's identity — Wipeout's sleek graphic design, Chemical Brothers and Leftfield soundtrack, and blistering speed made it the coolest launch-era PS1 game.
Twisted Metal
8.2SingleTrac's vehicular combat original launched alongside the PlayStation and defined an entirely new genre — armed vehicles tear through destructible arenas, collecting weapons while chasing the immortal prize offered by the demonic Calypso in his twisted game show. The dark, carnivalesque tone, memorable roster of drivers with unique backstories, and frenetic multiplayer established Twisted Metal as a PlayStation institution and one of Sony's earliest system-selling franchises.
Legacy of Kain: Soul Reaver
9Crystal Dynamics' dark masterpiece — Raziel, a vampire destroyed by his master Kain, returns as a wraith who shifts between material and spectral realms to devour souls and hunt his former vampire brethren across a gothic decaying world.
Ridge Racer
8.5The PS1 launch title that defined console racing — Ridge Racer's drift-heavy arcade racing with a single course, multiple car classes, and Namco's gallery of unlockable cars from other franchises set the early PlayStation standard.
Need for Speed
8.2The racing franchise that started it all — the original Need for Speed featured real exotic cars from Ferrari, Lamborghini, and Porsche with full-motion video car profiles, police pursuits, and a revolutionary sense of speed for 1994.
Breath of Fire III
9Capcom's most beloved Breath of Fire — Ryu's journey from child to adult splits the game across two time periods, with the Master system for skill inheritance and a fishing minigame that spawned an entire genre.
Breath of Fire IV
8.7The peak of Capcom's RPG ambitions on the original PlayStation, Breath of Fire IV introduces a dual-protagonist narrative structure that boldly humanizes its antagonist emperor Fou-Lu alongside series hero Ryu in a story with genuine moral weight. Stunning hand-drawn sprite work, a haunting Eastern-inspired soundtrack, and a refined combo battle system that lets players chain elemental attacks across the party make this the definitive entry in the series.
Azure Dreams
8Konami's inventive hybrid blends roguelike dungeon-crawling with a town-building simulation, tasking the son of a legendary monster tamer to explore a procedurally generated tower while cultivating relationships and developing the village that surrounds it. Azure Dreams rewards patience and repeated runs with genuine progression in both the combat and social systems, creating a compelling loop that anticipates the structure of many beloved games that followed years later.
Suikoden
8.8The original Suikoden — a 108-character JRPG based on the Chinese novel Water Margin, featuring strategic warfare battles, a castle to develop, and one of the earliest JRPG narratives to explore political revolution.
Wild ARMs
8.5The Western fantasy JRPG — Wild ARMs blends Wild West aesthetics with traditional JRPG mechanics, featuring three protagonists with unique abilities used for puzzles, and an early-PS1 production quality that established Sony's JRPG presence.
Klonoa: Door to Phantomile
9One of the most emotionally affecting platformers ever made. Klonoa's wind bullet mechanic and 2.5D layered stages create inventive puzzle-platforming, then the story builds to a conclusion that genuinely surprised players expecting a cheerful children's game — its final moments are among gaming's most unexpectedly affecting narrative sequences.
Jumping Flash!
8.3Sony's launch-window PS1 experiment that combined first-person platforming with vertical jumping mechanics. Jumping Flash!'s high-altitude vertical level design — players could jump two screens high, then descend slowly — created a unique spatial experience that no other game has replicated. A cult classic of early 3D design.
Rayman
8.5Ubisoft's limbless platformer that demonstrated hand-drawn animation quality could survive the PS1 era. Rayman's precision platforming, vibrant worlds, and the titular hero's fist-throwing mechanics made it the PS1's best non-Nintendo platformer — and one of the few games of the era to rival the visual quality of 16-bit 2D.
Soul Blade
8.7The PS1 predecessor to Soulcalibur that introduced weapon-based 3D fighting to PlayStation owners. Soul Blade's Edge Master Mode was an early story-driven fighting game experience that gave each character distinct narrative chapters, and the weapon degradation system added strategic tension to every fight. Released as Soul Edge in Japan.
Spyro the Dragon
8.9Insomniac Games' gem-collecting adventure placed players in the wings of a young purple dragon exploring vast, colorful worlds. Spyro the Dragon's open, exploratory design and warm personality made it an instant PlayStation classic and launched one of gaming's most beloved franchises.
Spyro: Year of the Dragon
9.1Insomniac's PS1 trilogy finale — Year of the Dragon adds four playable friends (Sheila the Kangaroo, Sgt. Byrd, Bentley, Agent 9) with unique gameplay sections, 37 worlds, and 150 dragon eggs to rescue.
Crash Bandicoot 3: Warped
9.1The commercial peak of the Crash Bandicoot series — Warped's time-travel premise introduces motorbikes, planes, sea-doos, and baby T-rex riding across 30 time-period stages, making it the most varied entry in the trilogy.
Parasite Eve II
8.3Square's survival horror RPG sequel shifted toward Resident Evil's tank controls and survival horror mechanics while retaining the Active Time Battle system from the original. Parasite Eve II's ANMC creature designs, detailed environmental storytelling, and atmospheric MIST facility make it the darker, more action-oriented companion to its predecessor.
Medal of Honor
8.5The PS1 WWII shooter conceived by Steven Spielberg during Saving Private Ryan production. Medal of Honor's immersive first-person perspective, authentic wartime setting, and mission-based structure made it the PS1's most compelling shooter — and the direct ancestor of the military FPS genre that would dominate the following decade.
Gran Turismo 2
9.2The PS1 racing simulation that cemented Gran Turismo as gaming's most serious car franchise. With 650+ meticulously modeled cars spread across two discs, Gran Turismo 2 offered unprecedented automotive depth — detailed tuning options, license tests, and physics that communicated genuine feel for each vehicle's weight and handling characteristics.
Driver
8.6The PS1 open-city driving game that bridged OutRun and Grand Theft Auto. Driver's four-city sandbox, 70s car chase film aesthetic, and cinematic replay editor created an experience that felt uniquely adult on PS1 hardware — its undercover cop narrative and chase mechanics made it the most compelling open-world driving game before GTA III.
Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 2
9.7The game that perfected arcade skating — THPS2 added manuals (extending trick combos endlessly), the Create-A-Skater, eight-minute runs, and a soundtrack that defined early 2000s culture.
Crash Team Racing
9.2Naughty Dog's answer to Mario Kart 64 — Crash Team Racing's drift boost system, 18-course world tour, adventure mode, and tight multiplayer made it the PS1's definitive kart racer.
Legacy of Kain: Blood Omen
8.8Silicon Knights' dark action-adventure casts players as the vampire Kain in a gothic top-down odyssey through the cursed land of Nosgoth, combining Zelda-style exploration with morally complex storytelling far ahead of its time. The game's fully voiced cast, Shakespearean dialogue, and willingness to question whether the protagonist should save or doom the world established Blood Omen as a landmark in mature narrative gaming and launched one of the most acclaimed dark fantasy franchises in PlayStation history.
Resident Evil 3: Nemesis
8.8Jill Valentine vs Nemesis — RE3's titular pursuer is an indestructible bioweapon that can appear in any non-safe room at any time, creating the series' most relentless survival horror experience.
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The Console That Changed Everything
The original PlayStation (1994) didn’t just beat the Sega Saturn in the fifth-generation console war — it permanently shifted gaming’s center of gravity toward Sony and proved that CD-ROM-based gaming was the future. More importantly, it brought gaming to a new demographic: older players who wanted cinematic experiences, complex narratives, and genres that consoles had previously ignored.
The PS1 library is arguably the most diverse in console history. From the survival horror of Resident Evil to the open-world action of Grand Theft Auto (yes, the original), from the racing perfection of Gran Turismo to the RPG masterpieces of Final Fantasy VII and IX, the PlayStation had something for everyone who was willing to sit close enough to the TV to read the tiny 3D text.
Final Fantasy VII: The Game That Sold PlayStations
No single game defined the PS1 era more than Final Fantasy VII. Square’s decision to move from Nintendo to Sony was industry-shaking, and the result justified every bit of the drama. FFVII’s cinematic FMV cutscenes, emotional narrative, and 40+ hours of content showed what CD-ROMs could do that cartridges never could.
Metal Gear Solid: Cinematic Gaming Arrives
Hideo Kojima’s Metal Gear Solid (1998) proved that video games could have the scope and storytelling ambition of Hollywood films. Its codec conversations, boss fights with genuine personality (Psycho Mantis reading your memory card), and fourth-wall-breaking moments defined an entire approach to game design that continues to influence the industry today.
Symphony of the Night: The Metroidvania Masterpiece
Castlevania: Symphony of the Night’s 1997 release created an entire genre. By adding RPG elements, a non-linear castle structure, and Alucard’s fluid movement to the Castlevania formula, it produced one of the most beloved action-RPGs ever made. “What is a man?” remains one of gaming’s most memed lines for good reason.