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.
Games Like Prince of Persia
12 games similar to Prince of Persia — handpicked for fans of Action and Platformer and Adventure games.
Top Games Similar to Prince of Persia
| Feature | Platform | Year | Score | Genre |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Conker's Bad Fur Day | NINTENDO-64 | 2001 | 9.1 | Platformer, Adventure, Action |
| Flashback: The Quest for Identity | SEGA-GENESIS | 1993 | 9.3 | Action, Adventure, Platformer |
| Shantae | GAME-BOY-COLOR | 2002 | 8.9 | Platformer, Action, Adventure |
| Spyro the Dragon | PLAYSTATION | 1998 | 8.9 | Platformer, Action, Adventure |
| Tomba! | PLAYSTATION | 1998 | 9 | Platformer, Action, Adventure |
| ActRaiser 2 | SNES | 1993 | 8.2 | Action, Platformer |
All 12 Games Like Prince of Persia
Delphine Software's 1992 cinematic action-adventure masterpiece — Flashback: The Quest for Identity follows Conrad B. Hart, an agent who wakes with no memory in 2142, using rotoscoped animation and Prince-of-Persia-style fluid platforming to navigate a conspiracy involving shapeshifting aliens infiltrating human society. One of the most cinematic games of the 16-bit era.
WayForward's half-genie hero arrived in 2002 — a year after the Game Boy Advance had replaced the Game Boy Color — making it one of the most technically accomplished and rarest GBC games. Shantae uses belly-dancing transformation magic across a connected world of villages and dungeons, combining Arabian Nights aesthetics with Metroidvania-style exploration in one of the handheld era's great hidden gems.
Insomniac Games' gem-collecting adventure placed players in the wings of a young purple dragon exploring vast, colorful worlds. Spyro the Dragon's open, exploratory design and warm personality made it an instant PlayStation classic and launched one of gaming's most beloved franchises.
Whoopee Camp's overlooked 1998 PS1 platformer that blends action-adventure with mission-based exploration — Tomba! is one of gaming's most beloved hidden gems and one of the rarest and most expensive PS1 games in the secondary market. A feral boy rescuing pigs from Evil Pigs through connected world exploration that predates the 'Metroidvania' vocabulary.
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 1993 SNES action-platformer based on the Disney film — the SNES Aladdin is a completely different game from the acclaimed Genesis version, featuring Capcom's precise platformer design with a scimitar sword and apple-throwing combat, six stages following the film's narrative, and Capcom's signature control polish.
Blizzard Entertainment's 1994 SNES dark platformer — Blackthorne follows Kyle Vlaros, a prince returning to the planet Tuul after being raised on Earth, shooting his way through alien environments with a shotgun and environmental puzzle mechanics inspired by Prince of Persia's rotoscoped movement. An early Blizzard production with distinctive dark atmosphere.
Konami's 1995 SNES adaptation of Rondo of Blood — Castlevania: Dracula X is a re-imagining rather than a direct port, with redesigned stages, Richter Belmont as protagonist, the whip-combat and sub-weapon system of the classic Castlevania formula, and the rescue of Annette across eight stages of 16-bit gothic horror.
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.
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.
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.