The definitive TMNT game and one of the greatest beat-em-ups ever made. Turtles in Time sends Leonardo, Donatello, Michelangelo, and Raphael through time periods from prehistoric prehistory to the distant future, delivering relentless two-player co-op action that still holds up perfectly today.
Games Like Batman Returns
12 games similar to Batman Returns — handpicked for fans of Action and Beat 'em Up games.
Games Like Batman Returns
to be added
Top Games Similar to Batman Returns
| Feature | Platform | Year | Score | Genre |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Turtles in Time | SNES | 1992 | 9.2 | Beat 'em Up, Action |
| Altered Beast | SEGA-GENESIS | 1988 | 7.5 | Beat 'em Up, Action |
| Battletoads & Double Dragon | NES | 1993 | 8.2 | Action, Beat 'em Up |
| Battletoads | NES | 1991 | 8.5 | Beat 'em Up, Action |
| Comix Zone | SEGA-GENESIS | 1995 | 8.7 | Beat 'em Up, Action |
| Double Dragon | NES | 1988 | 8.5 | Beat 'em Up, Action |
All 12 Games Like Batman Returns
The Genesis launch pack-in that greeted millions of new console owners. Altered Beast's transformation mechanic was innovative and memorable, even if the overall game was short and repetitive by modern standards.
A landmark crossover event for early 90s beat-em-up fans, Battletoads & Double Dragon unites Rare's bruising amphibian warriors with Technos' iconic martial arts duo against the shared threat of the Dark Queen and the Shadow Warriors. The game wisely tempers Battletoads' notorious difficulty with Double Dragon's more accessible combat pacing, resulting in a co-op brawler that rewards skilled play without punishing newcomers at every turn.
Rare's beat-em-up masterpiece is one of the most technically impressive NES games ever made — and one of the most brutally difficult. The Turbo Tunnel alone has broken thousands of controllers.
Sega's most original late-Genesis game — a beat-em-up set inside a comic book, where the protagonist fights panel-to-panel, enemies are drawn to life by the villain, and the player can tear panels to make paper airplanes as weapons.
The beat-em-up that started it all. Double Dragon's blend of martial arts combat, weapon pickups, and mission-based brawling defined the belt-scrolling genre for years to come.
The arcade sequel that improved on Golden Axe in every dimension — four-player simultaneous play, larger sprites, more varied enemy types, and rideable creatures with unique attacks. Golden Axe: The Revenge of Death Adder was arcade-only in most regions, making it one of the great hidden gems in the Golden Axe franchise.
The greatest beat-em-up ever made. Streets of Rage 2 combined technical brawling combat with a roster of distinct fighters, excellent level design, and Yuzo Koshiro's legendary techno soundtrack to produce a masterwork of the genre.
The final Genesis Streets of Rage built on Streets of Rage 2's foundation with a darker story, faster gameplay, special moves tied to health management, and a more complex combat system. While divisive on release due to its difficulty compared to SoR2, Streets of Rage 3 has grown in reputation as a mechanically deep action game.
The original Streets of Rage — Axel, Blaze, and Adam fight through a crime-ridden city in the Genesis beat-em-up that introduced Yuzo Koshiro's legendary score and established Sega's most beloved brawler franchise.
ActRaiser is one of the SNES's most original games — alternating between side-scrolling action stages and top-down city-simulation, with a god-like protagonist restoring civilization against demons.
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.