The rare sequel that surpasses the original. Donkey Kong Country 2 improved on its predecessor in every dimension — tighter level design, superior music, more varied environments, and better boss encounters.
Games Like Donkey Kong Country
12 games similar to Donkey Kong Country — handpicked for fans of Platformer games.
Games Similar to Donkey Kong Country
If you love Donkey Kong Country, you’ll enjoy these similar games that share its gameplay style, mechanics, and charm.
Why These Games Are Similar
Curated recommendations and detailed comparisons to be added.
Top Games Similar to Donkey Kong Country
| Feature | Platform | Year | Score | Genre |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddy's Kong Quest | SNES | 1995 | 9.4 | Platformer |
| Donkey Kong Country 3: Dixie Kong's Double Trouble | SNES | 1996 | 8.5 | Platformer, Action |
| Donkey Kong 64 | NINTENDO-64 | 1999 | 8.7 | Platformer, Adventure |
| ActRaiser 2 | SNES | 1993 | 8.2 | Action, Platformer |
| Demon's Crest | SNES | 1994 | 9 | Platformer, Action |
| Diddy Kong Racing | NINTENDO-64 | 1997 | 9.1 | Racing |
All 12 Games Like Donkey Kong Country
The third DKC entry — Dixie Kong and Baby Kiddy adventure through the Northern Kremisphere with water-heavy stages, multiple overworld paths, and Rare's signature pre-rendered 3D graphics.
Rare's ambitious collectathon platformer sent Donkey Kong and four Kong companions through eight enormous worlds in pursuit of 3,821 collectibles. Technically impressive and generously sized, DK64's scope is both its greatest strength and its most criticized aspect — a game of extraordinary content that some consider bloated.
The ActRaiser sequel that removed the city-building simulation to focus on pure action. The wing mechanics, divine magic system, and technically polished platforming make it an excellent action game in isolation — though the loss of the original's unique hybrid design disappointed players expecting ActRaiser's complete formula.
Capcom's overlooked SNES masterpiece and one of the platform's most sophisticated action games. Demon's Crest gave players control of Firebrand — the gargoyle villain from Ghosts 'n Goblins — across a non-linear world with seven Crests that transform him into different elemental forms. Its dark aesthetic, exploration-based structure, and excellent soundtrack make it one of the SNES's most underrated games.
Rare's answer to Mario Kart 64 — an adventure racing game with three vehicle types (kart, hovercraft, plane), a full single-player story mode, and boss races that outpaced the competition in depth.
The anarchic sequel that matched and occasionally surpassed the original. Earthworm Jim 2 introduces a firing range level, invertebrate racing, and the rocket ship segments while maintaining the bizarre humour and fluid animation that made the first game a classic. More varied, more absurd, and equally entertaining.
Eight games in one cartridge, each with a distinct mode — Spring Breeze, Gourmet Race, Great Cave Offensive, Revenge of Meta Knight, Milky Way Wishes, and more. Kirby Super Star's unprecedented content breadth, polished co-op, and satisfying copy ability system made it the most complete game on the SNES at launch.
The SNES follow-up with a hand-drawn crayon art style and five animal friends. Kirby's Dream Land 3's co-op mode and hidden objectives for each level — complete all to unlock the true final boss — made it a satisfying close to the Super Nintendo Kirby era.
The brilliant reinvention of Mega Man for the 16-bit era. Mega Man X introduced wall-sliding, dashing, upgradeable armor, and a darker story while delivering one of the SNES's finest action-platformer experiences.
The worthy successor to Mega Man X that refined every element of the original. Mega Man X2 uses the Super FX chip to add smooth 3D cutscenes, introduces the X-Hunter storyline, and delivers eight memorable Maverick bosses. Collecting Zero's parts for the secret ending is one of the era's best hidden objectives.
The SNES finale of the original Mega Man X trilogy, introducing the ability to play as Zero and the Ride Armor system. Mega Man X3 features the most complex upgrade paths in the SNES series, with four hidden Ride Armors and a fully playable Zero making the game's secrets among the richest of the era.