Konami's 1992 SNES technical showcase shmup — Axelay alternates between vertical and horizontal scrolling stages, uses Mode 7 and multiple scrolling layers to create pseudo-3D effects, and features six selectable weapon types that combine for distinct attack configurations. A demonstration of SNES hardware capabilities wrapped in an excellent shoot-em-up.
Games Like Super Aleste
12 games similar to Super Aleste — handpicked for fans of Shooter games.
Top Games Similar to Super Aleste
| Feature | Platform | Year | Score | Genre |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Axelay | SNES | 1992 | 9 | Shooter |
| Gradius III | SNES | 1990 | 8.7 | Shooter |
| Parodius | SNES | 1992 | 9 | Shooter, Shoot 'em Up |
| Pocky & Rocky | SNES | 1992 | 8.8 | Shooter, Action |
| Sunset Riders | SNES | 1993 | 8.9 | Action, Shooter |
| Super Turrican | SNES | 1993 | 9 | Action, Shooter |
All 12 Games Like Super Aleste
The SNES launch Konami shooter and one of the most demanding horizontal shoot-em-ups ever made. Gradius III's weapon selection screen, power-up capsule system, and devastating final stages — plus the famous continue code NEMESIS that immediately destroys the player — made it the SNES's definitive hardcore shooter.
Konami's 1992 SNES shoot-em-up parody — Parodius (Parodius Da! in Japan) is a self-aware joke at the expense of Gradius and the shoot-em-up genre, with player ships including Vic Viper, octopus, Pentaro the penguin, and TwinBee, fighting against giant dancing showgirls, bunny robots, and Easter Island heads wearing sunglasses. The power-up system from Gradius applies in a completely absurdist context.
The SNES two-player overhead shooter starring a shrine maiden and a tanuki — one of the platform's finest cooperative action games. Pocky & Rocky's fluid character movement, clever enemy patterns, and satisfying weapon system made it a cult classic that commanded premium prices for decades before its re-release. Japanese folklore aesthetics in an action game format done brilliantly.
Konami's 1993 SNES western run-and-gun — Sunset Riders follows bounty hunters Steve, Billy, Bob, and Cormano across the American frontier hunting wanted outlaws, with run-and-gun shooting, two-player co-op, and a wild west aesthetic that no other SNES action game captured. Arcade-faithful port with some exclusive SNES content.
Factor 5's 1993 SNES run-and-gun — Super Turrican brings the Amiga cult hit to SNES with tight action, a freeze ray that crystallizes enemies, smart bombs, a grappling hook wheel, and Chris Hülsbeck's acclaimed sci-fi soundtrack. One of the finest SNES action-shooters and a technical showcase for Factor 5's console expertise.
Based on the Area 88 manga and anime, UN Squadron is a masterclass in SNES launch-era shoot-em-up design — pilots choose from three characters with distinct aircraft, purchase weapon upgrades between missions, and tear through enemy-dense side-scrolling stages with exhilarating firepower. Capcom's adaptation benefits from the SNES's Mode 7 capabilities and a pounding soundtrack that establishes the game as one of the finest scrolling shooters of the 16-bit generation.
Natsume's 1994 SNES gallery shooter combining western and science fiction — Wild Guns is a screen-fixed shooting gallery where players control Clint or Annie shooting enemies on a layered background plane while dodging incoming fire. Two-player simultaneous co-op, a wide array of weapons collected from enemies, and a unique design that doesn't resemble any contemporary SNES game.
LucasArts' wildly creative top-down action game packed with horror movie homages across 55 stages. Zombies Ate My Neighbors tasked two players with rescuing neighbors from classic monsters — zombies, chainsaw maniacs, vampires, alien pods — with an arsenal ranging from water guns and silverware to bazookas. Two-player co-op elevated it to SNES cult classic status.
Treasure's Genesis technical showpiece — a game with 25 boss encounters and minimal stage segments, designed as a pure boss-rush action game. Alien Soldier's six-weapon system, counter attack mechanics, and screen-filling enemy designs pushed the Genesis hardware beyond anything other developers achieved.
The vertical shoot-em-up that launched alongside the TurboGrafx-16 and immediately established the console's technical credentials — Blazing Lazers' deep weapon upgrade tree, relentless screen-filling enemy patterns, and smooth scrolling demonstrated hardware capabilities that the competition struggled to match. Compile's design philosophy of escalating chaos rewarded players willing to master the upgrade system, and the game set the standard for the genre on home hardware that many subsequent shooters aspired to but few equaled.
One of Atari's most successful arcade games and the shooter that made mushroom fields dangerous. Guide your blaster through a garden invaded by a segmented centipede winding down through mushrooms, while spiders and fleas add chaos. A golden-age classic that introduced many players to arcade gaming.