One of the Genesis's greatest RPGs — Phantasy Star II takes the series to the sci-fi world of Mota with a dark narrative, first-person dungeons, eight party members, and a story about government dependence that felt radical for 1989.
Games Like Phantasy Star Online
12 games similar to Phantasy Star Online — handpicked for fans of RPG and Action games.
Games Like Phantasy Star Online
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Top Games Similar to Phantasy Star Online
| Feature | Platform | Year | Score | Genre |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phantasy Star II | SEGA-GENESIS | 1989 | 8.9 | RPG |
| Phantasy Star IV: The End of the Millennium | SEGA-GENESIS | 1993 | 9.3 | RPG |
| Azure Dreams | PLAYSTATION | 1997 | 8 | RPG, Action |
| Beyond Oasis | SEGA-GENESIS | 1994 | 8.9 | Action, RPG |
| Castlevania: Aria of Sorrow | GAME-BOY-ADVANCE | 2003 | 9.4 | Metroidvania, Action, RPG |
| Castlevania II: Simon's Quest | NES | 1987 | 7.5 | Platformer, Action, RPG |
All 12 Games Like Phantasy Star Online
The crown jewel of the Phantasy Star series. Phantasy Star IV's manga-style story presentation, Macro combo combat system, and satisfying conclusion to the Algo Star System saga make it the Genesis's finest RPG.
Konami'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.
Ancient's Genesis action RPG masterpiece — Prince Ali summons four elemental spirits (water, shadow, fire, plant) with distinct attack patterns in a game that rivals Zelda's combat depth on Sega hardware.
The finest handheld Castlevania and a landmark Metroidvania that introduced the Soul system — absorbing enemy abilities — creating one of the deepest ability collections in the genre. Set in the future year 2035, Aria of Sorrow reinvented the series with a bold narrative twist and exceptional mechanical depth.
The controversial Castlevania sequel that introduced open-world exploration, day/night cycles, and RPG mechanics — a divisive game that proved ahead of its time.
One 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.
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 isometric action RPG that challenged Zelda on Genesis hardware — Nigel the treasure hunter explores 20+ dungeons in an isometric perspective with precise platforming, clever puzzles, and one of the Genesis's best stories.
Square'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.
Square'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.
The second generation of Pokémon introduced 100 new creatures, day/night cycles, two full regions, and a secret post-game that doubled the content of any RPG of its era.