The refined sequel that many consider the peak of the Mario Party series. Mario Party 2 added themed boards with costume changes, more balanced minigames, and new Items that made the experience deeper and more strategic than the original.
Games Like Mario Party 3
12 games similar to Mario Party 3 — handpicked for fans of Party and Minigame games.
Top Games Similar to Mario Party 3
| Feature | Platform | Year | Score | Genre |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mario Party 2 | NINTENDO-64 | 1999 | 8.8 | Party, Minigame |
| Mario Party | NINTENDO-64 | 1998 | 8.5 | Party, Minigame |
| Crash Bash | PLAYSTATION | 1999 | 7.8 | Party, Action |
| 1080° Snowboarding | NINTENDO-64 | 1998 | 8.7 | Sports |
| Banjo-Kazooie | NINTENDO-64 | 1998 | 9.5 | Platformer, Adventure |
| Banjo-Tooie | NINTENDO-64 | 2000 | 9 | Platformer, Action |
All 12 Games Like Mario Party 3
The party game that defined competitive friendship destruction. Mario Party's board game structure combined with 50 minigames created an entirely new genre. The N64 game that turns any gathering into a lively tournament, complete with Bowser stealing stars and the infamous stick-spinning mini-games.
Sony's PS1 answer to Mario Party featuring Crash and friends in competitive minigame tournaments. Crash Bash's four-player arena battles — polar bear push, bowling, pogo party, and tank warfare — made it the best party game in the PS1 library despite critical reception that focused on the lack of a proper platformer installment.
Nintendo's snowboarding game built physics-based trick mechanics and courses designed around realistic mountain topography into a package that felt fundamentally different from the arcade snowboarders competing for the same market. The Legendary Eagle course remains one of the most technically impressive N64 tracks — a long, branching descent that rewards knowledge of its hazards and delivers a genuine sense of mountain speed that was unmatched on home hardware in 1998.
Rare's charming 3D platformer masterpiece sent a bear and a bird through nine inventive worlds brimming with collectibles, clever puzzles, and an irresistible sense of fun. Banjo-Kazooie refined the collectathon formula with exceptional world design and remains one of the N64's finest games.
The ambitious Banjo-Kazooie sequel with nine interconnected worlds, a massively expanded moveset, multiplayer modes, and first-person shooter sections — bigger in every way than its predecessor.
Rare's brilliantly odd N64 debut — pilot demolition vehicles to clear a path for a runaway nuclear missile carrier, destroying everything in its route across 57 stages using bulldozers, mechs, a dump truck, and a rocket cycle.
A direct predecessor to the Grand Theft Auto open-world formula from the same studio, Body Harvest drops a time-traveling soldier into sprawling free-roaming environments spanning multiple eras of human history under alien invasion. DMA Design's ambitious scope — hijack any vehicle, explore vast maps, battle massive alien bosses — resulted in a game rougher than its ambitions but historically fascinating as the missing link between top-down GTA and the 3D open-world games that followed.
Hudson Soft's bold translation of Bomberman into 3D on the Nintendo 64. Bomberman 64 reinvented the series with a 3D platformer adventure mode featuring five worlds and memorable boss fights, alongside the traditional multiplayer battle mode. The pump mechanic — inflating bombs to increase blast radius — added a new strategic layer that made both modes feel distinct from every other Bomberman entry.
Konami's divisive attempt to bring Castlevania into 3D. Castlevania 64's gothic atmosphere, memorable boss designs, and dual-protagonist structure offered genuinely compelling moments despite its rough controls and dated visuals — and Reinhardt Schneider's vampire hunting quest captured the series' atmosphere better than the camera system deserved.
The enhanced version of Castlevania 64 with two new characters — Cornell the werewolf and Henry the Crusader — plus additional stages, improved engine performance, and the complete content of the original game. Legacy of Darkness is the definitive N64 Castlevania experience for players willing to engage with early 3D adventure design.
Rare's audacious, boundary-pushing platformer used the deceptively cute character of Conker the squirrel as a vehicle for adult humor, cinematic parodies, and surprisingly emotional moments. One of the N64's most technically impressive games and its most unexpectedly mature.