20 Games

Best Video Games of the 1990s

By Console Codex Editorial Team · 18 min read ·

Expert-ranked list of the greatest best video games of the 1990s — with reviews, ratings, and guides for every game.

💡 Quick Facts

  • 20 games ranked in this list
  • Available on NINTENDO-64, PLAYSTATION, SNES, SEGA-GENESIS
  • Average review score: 9.6/10
  • Last updated: 2026-06-06

The Ranked List

1

The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time

10
1998 · Nintendo EAD · NINTENDO-64

Widely considered the greatest video game ever made, Ocarina of Time translated the Zelda formula into three dimensions with such perfection that it redefined what action-adventure games could achieve. Its Z-targeting system, time-travel narrative, and extraordinary dungeon design set standards that remain unsurpassed.

2

Super Mario 64

9.9
1996 · Nintendo EAD · NINTENDO-64

The game that invented 3D platforming as a genre. Super Mario 64 launched alongside the Nintendo 64 and demonstrated, definitively, that video games could work in three dimensions. Its influence on every 3D game that followed is incalculable — this is where the template was written.

3

Final Fantasy VII

9.9
1997 · Square · PLAYSTATION

Square's magnum opus and the game that defined the JRPG genre for an entire generation. Final Fantasy VII blended cinematic storytelling, a richly imagined dystopian world, and a revolutionary Materia system into an adventure that millions of players still consider their all-time favorite.

4

Chrono Trigger

9.9
1995 · Square · SNES

The Dream Team's masterpiece. Chrono Trigger's time-traveling epic, multi-ending structure, and groundbreaking Active Time Battle system produced what many call the greatest JRPG ever made.

5

Super Metroid

9.8
1994 · Nintendo R&D1 · SNES

Super Metroid is widely considered one of the greatest games ever made — a masterpiece of atmospheric exploration, environmental storytelling, and movement-based design that defined the Metroidvania genre.

6

Final Fantasy VI

9.8
1994 · Square · SNES

Opera Omnia. Final Fantasy VI is the crown jewel of 16-bit RPGs — a cast of 14 memorable characters, the most compelling villain in gaming history, and a second half that shattered the conventions of the genre.

7

GoldenEye 007

9.7
1997 · Rare · NINTENDO-64

Rare's landmark first-person shooter defined console multiplayer gaming and demonstrated that licensed movie games could be exceptional. GoldenEye 007 introduced aiming, stealth mechanics, and objectives-based mission design to console FPS games, and its four-player split-screen became the standard for living room multiplayer.

8

Castlevania: Symphony of the Night

9.9
1997 · Konami Computer Entertainment Tokyo · PLAYSTATION

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.

9

Metal Gear Solid

9.8
1998 · Konami Computer Entertainment Japan · PLAYSTATION

Hideo Kojima's stealth masterpiece redefined what video games could achieve narratively and mechanically. Metal Gear Solid blended Hollywood-caliber presentation with innovative stealth gameplay and fourth-wall-breaking moments that players still discuss 25 years later.

10

EarthBound

9.5
1994 · HAL Laboratory · SNES

The most original RPG ever made. EarthBound's modern American setting, satirical humor, emotionally devastating depth, and complete refusal to follow genre conventions created a cult classic unlike anything before or since.

11

Resident Evil 2

9.7
1998 · Capcom · PLAYSTATION

The greatest survival horror game ever made — RE2's dual protagonist system, the Raccoon City Police Department, and the relentless Mr. X pursuer combined with two fully interconnected campaigns to create the series peak.

12

Sonic 3 & Knuckles

9.6
1994 · Sonic Team · SEGA-GENESIS

The complete Sonic 3 experience — when combined via lock-on cartridge, Sonic 3 & Knuckles creates the longest, deepest, and most mechanically polished Sonic game ever made.

13

Street Fighter II Turbo: Hyper Fighting

9
1993 · Capcom · SNES

The definitive home version of the game that defined competitive fighting games. Street Fighter II Turbo brought arcade-quality fighting to the SNES with all four boss characters playable.

14

Super Mario World

9.8
1990 · Nintendo EAD · SNES

The SNES launch game that defined the 16-bit era. Super Mario World introduced Yoshi, expanded Mario's move set, and delivered 96 exits across a vast, joyful world that remained the gold standard for platformers for years.

15

Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddy's Kong Quest

9.4
1995 · Rare · SNES

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.

16

Tony Hawk's Pro Skater

9.3
1999 · Neversoft · PLAYSTATION

Neversoft's revolutionary skateboarding game didn't just create a genre — it changed how a generation thought about skateboarding, music, and sports games entirely. With accessible combo-building, brilliantly designed levels, and a soundtrack that defined late-1990s alternative culture, Tony Hawk's Pro Skater is one of the most influential games ever made.

17

Banjo-Kazooie

9.5
1998 · Rare · NINTENDO-64

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.

18

Tekken 3

9.5
1997 · Namco · PLAYSTATION

The definitive PlayStation fighting game and one of the greatest 3D fighters ever made. Tekken 3 refined the series' formula to perfection with a massive roster, deep combat mechanics, side-stepping, and bonus modes that made it essential entertainment far beyond its arcade origins.

19

Final Fantasy IX

9.5
2000 · Square · PLAYSTATION

Square's loving tribute to Final Fantasy's origins, Final Fantasy IX returned the series to its high-fantasy roots with a timeless fairy-tale setting, deeply drawn characters, and a meditation on life, death, and what it means to exist. Many consider it the most emotionally resonant entry in the franchise.

20

Star Fox 64

9.3
1997 · Nintendo EAD · NINTENDO-64

The definitive Star Fox experience and one of the finest rail shooters ever made. Star Fox 64 delivered exhilarating combat, memorable characters with full voice acting, and a brilliant branching mission structure — and its Rumble Pak integration was the first time console players felt the game through their controllers.

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The 1990s: Gaming’s Golden Decade

The 1990s began with the SNES and Genesis launching the 16-bit era and ended with PlayStation and Nintendo 64 fully establishing 3D gaming’s conventions. No decade in gaming history contains as many landmark first-of-their-kind games: the first 3D platformer (Super Mario 64), the first survival horror game to define the genre (Resident Evil), the first Japanese RPG to reach global mainstream audiences (Final Fantasy VII), the first console FPS multiplayer game (GoldenEye 007).

The decade’s first half — 1990-1995 — was the 16-bit era’s peak. Chrono Trigger, Final Fantasy VI, EarthBound, Donkey Kong Country 2, Super Metroid, Street Fighter II, and Castlevania: Symphony of the Night all appeared within a five-year window. The decade’s second half began with Super Mario 64 and Quake establishing 3D game design and concluded with the PS1 having assembled the deepest RPG library in gaming history.

Players alive during the 1990s experienced the fastest qualitative advancement in gaming history. The difference between the NES launch era (1985) and the PS1 era (1999) was greater in terms of design ambition, technical capability, and genre breadth than any subsequent decade.

The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time — The Canonical Best

Ocarina of Time (1998) topped nearly every “best game ever made” list between its release and approximately 2010, when the critical reassessment of modern open-world games began repositioning historical rankings. Its specific achievements — the Z-targeting lock-on system that solved 3D action combat, the field of Hyrule as the first genuinely explorable 3D game world, the dungeon designs that taught players spatial reasoning with new items — were so complete that no 3D adventure game in the decade following its release needed to reconsider its foundational approach.

Ocarina of Time’s six-year dominance of the “best game ever” designation is matched by no other title in gaming’s history of retrospective ranking.

Super Mario 64 — The 3D Design Manual

Super Mario 64 (1996) is the most technically analyzed video game ever made by the speedrunning community. Over 28 years, runners have discovered tricks that allow the game to be completed in under seven minutes, exploiting the physics engine in ways the developers neither anticipated nor imagined. The movement system’s depth — every possible combination of jump, wall kick, dive, and ground pound generating different velocities — was designed for casual players and became a subject of mathematical study.

The game’s commercial launch — North American release day, September 29, 1996, sold out within hours in most markets — validated the N64 hardware investment and the N64 analog stick design simultaneously.

Final Fantasy VII — The RPG That Went Global

Final Fantasy VII (1997) was the first JRPG to penetrate mainstream Western gaming culture beyond dedicated RPG audiences. The PlayStation’s CD-ROM storage allowed pre-rendered backgrounds and full-motion video cutscenes that made the game look cinematic in a way that no cartridge-based JRPG could approach. The marketing campaign — “Not just a game, a Final Fantasy” — positioned it explicitly as narrative entertainment for audiences who had never played an RPG.

Aerith’s death — still among gaming’s most discussed narrative moments 28 years later — demonstrated that video games could create genuine emotional investment in character deaths at the level of film or literature. The game’s commercial success, 10 million copies over its lifetime, proved the market existed and funded Final Fantasy VIII, IX, X, and the franchise’s continued global presence.

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the best video games of the 1990s?
The top picks include The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time, Super Mario 64, Final Fantasy VII, Chrono Trigger, Super Metroid. These games represent the pinnacle of classic gaming from their respective eras.
Where can I play these classic games today?
Most of these games are available through Nintendo Switch Online, PlayStation Plus Premium, or official mini-console releases. Original cartridges are also widely available from retro game shops.
Are these games still worth playing?
Absolutely. The games on this list were selected specifically because they hold up today — excellent design, tight controls, and compelling gameplay that transcends their era.