The PS1 demolition derby game that proved the PlayStation's 3D hardware could deliver satisfying vehicular destruction physics. Destruction Derby's real-time damage modeling — cars visibly crumpling from impacts — and frantic arena modes were among the most impressive demonstrations of PS1 technical capability at launch.
Games Like Crazy Taxi
12 games similar to Crazy Taxi — handpicked for fans of Action and Racing games.
Games Like Crazy Taxi
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Top Games Similar to Crazy Taxi
| Feature | Platform | Year | Score | Genre |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Destruction Derby | PLAYSTATION | 1995 | 8.3 | Racing, Action |
| Driver | PLAYSTATION | 1999 | 8.6 | Action, Racing |
| Road Rash | SEGA-GENESIS | 1994 | 8.7 | Racing, Action |
| Twisted Metal 2 | PLAYSTATION | 1996 | 8.8 | Action, Shooter, Racing |
| Twisted Metal | PLAYSTATION | 1995 | 8.2 | Action, Racing |
| The House of the Dead 2 | DREAMCAST | 1998 | 8.5 | Shooter, Action |
All 12 Games Like Crazy Taxi
The 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.
SingleTrac'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.
SingleTrac'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.
The light-gun arcade shooter that became the Dreamcast's best peripheral showcase. House of the Dead 2's branching narrative paths, cooperative two-player zombie-blasting, and gloriously cheesy voiced cutscenes — 'Goldman! Suffer like G did?' became gaming's most quoted bad dialogue — made it essential for Dreamcast party sessions.
The cel-shaded graffiti skating game that invented an entire visual aesthetic — Jet Grind Radio's Tokyo-To setting, its eclectic hip-hop and breakbeat soundtrack, and its tag-based gameplay were so original that nothing before or since has quite replicated the experience. Smilebit's landmark Dreamcast title demonstrated that games could be genuinely, defiantly stylish rather than merely technically impressive, influencing a generation of art directors who cited it as a primary reference.
The first fully realized console MMORPG and the most ambitious game in Dreamcast history. Phantasy Star Online's online four-player cooperative dungeon crawling — accessible via the Dreamcast's built-in modem — created the template that console online gaming would follow for the next decade.
Capcom's arena fighter built around collecting three Power Stones to trigger dramatic mid-fight character transformations — shifting the entire power dynamic in seconds — across dynamic 3D arenas with destructible environments and item-based combat that were meaningfully ahead of their time. Power Stone's accessible controls masked genuine mechanical depth, and its design philosophy of environmental interaction as a combat resource would take the broader fighting game genre another decade to fully absorb.
The Dreamcast's definitive Resident Evil experience and the first entry to abandon fixed camera angles for fully 3D environments. Code Veronica's Antarctic setting, complex Ashford family narrative, and dual-protagonist structure made it the most ambitious Resident Evil story to that point.
Yu Suzuki's open-world narrative game effectively invented the interactive drama genre — Shenmue's Yokosuka setting, fully simulated daily schedules, forklift racing minigame, and obsessive environmental detail created the blueprint for the living-world design philosophy that Grand Theft Auto III would later popularize for mass audiences. Ryo Hazuki's revenge quest against Lan Di unfolds with a patience and deliberateness that remains singular in game design history.
The Dreamcast's final major Sonic release and the last first-party Sega Dreamcast title. Sonic Adventure 2 split gameplay between speed stages (Sonic/Shadow), shooting stages (Tails/Eggman), and treasure hunting (Knuckles/Rouge), with the Chao Garden providing hundreds of hours of optional content.