Capcom's darker, more ambitious JRPG sequel — Ryu's second adventure features a township-building mechanic, seven party members with unique combination abilities, and a story that goes to genuinely dark places for a 1994 game.
Games Like Breath of Fire
12 games similar to Breath of Fire — handpicked for fans of RPG games.
Games Like Breath of Fire
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Top Games Similar to Breath of Fire
| Feature | Platform | Year | Score | Genre |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Breath of Fire II | SNES | 1994 | 8.7 | RPG |
| Breath of Fire III | PLAYSTATION | 1997 | 9 | RPG |
| Breath of Fire IV | PLAYSTATION | 2000 | 8.7 | RPG |
| Chrono Trigger | SNES | 1995 | 9.9 | RPG |
| EarthBound | SNES | 1994 | 9.5 | RPG |
| Final Fantasy IV | SNES | 1991 | 9.4 | RPG |
All 12 Games Like Breath of Fire
Capcom'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.
The 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.
The Dream Team's masterpiece. Chrono Trigger's time-traveling epic, multi-ending structure, and groundbreaking Active Time Battle system produced what many call the greatest JRPG ever made.
The most original RPG ever made. EarthBound's modern American setting, satirical humor, emotionally devastating depth, and complete refusal to follow genre conventions created a cult classic unlike anything before or since.
The game that transformed JRPGs forever. Final Fantasy IV introduced the Active Time Battle system, a deeply emotional story of redemption, and a cast of characters — Cecil, Kain, Rosa, Rydia, Edge — that remain iconic 30 years later. The first Final Fantasy to dare tell a real story.
The pinnacle of Final Fantasy's job system. Final Fantasy V gives players unprecedented freedom to mix and match abilities across 22 job classes, creating endlessly creative character builds. Its lighthearted story belies a deeply strategic RPG that rewards experimentation and mastery.
Opera Omnia. Final Fantasy VI is the crown jewel of 16-bit RPGs — a cast of 14 memorable characters, the most compelling villain in gaming history, and a second half that shattered the conventions of the genre.
The game that defined the farming simulation genre — restore your grandfather's farm across changing seasons, raise animals, grow crops, court villagers, and balance time in gaming's first truly cozy life-sim.
The middle entry in Quintet's Soul Blazer trilogy — a globe-trotting action RPG following Will's journey through historical wonders (Incan ruins, Great Wall, Nazca Lines) with transformations into two powerful alternate forms.
The original Ogre Battle and one of the deepest strategy RPGs made for 16-bit hardware. Players command liberation armies in real-time battles with alignment-based morality that changes unit stats and available endings. Yasumi Matsuno's design philosophy at its most ambitious — multiple playthroughs reveal entirely different games.
The SNES action RPG masterpiece. Secret of Mana's real-time combat, gorgeous visuals, three-player simultaneous multiplayer, and Hiroki Kikuta's transcendent score created one of the genre's defining classics.