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.
Games Like Gradius III
12 games similar to Gradius III — handpicked for fans of Shooter games.
Games Like Gradius III
to be added
Top Games Similar to Gradius III
| Feature | Platform | Year | Score | Genre |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pocky & Rocky | SNES | 1992 | 8.8 | Shooter, Action |
| UN Squadron | SNES | 1991 | 8.8 | Shooter, Action |
| Zombies Ate My Neighbors | SNES | 1993 | 8.8 | Action, Shooter |
| Alien Soldier | SEGA-GENESIS | 1995 | 8.8 | Action, Shooter |
| Blazing Lazers | TURBOGRAFX-16 | 1989 | 8.8 | Shooter |
| Duck Hunt | NES | 1984 | 7.8 | Shooter |
All 12 Games Like Gradius III
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.
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.
Sega's colorful side-scrolling space shooter starring Opa-Opa, the sentient spaceship with adorable sneakers. Fantasy Zone's shop system — where players spend coins collected from defeated enemies on speed upgrades, bombs, and weapon enhancements — was a novel mechanic that set it apart from every other shooter of the era.
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.
Treasure's debut game and one of the finest action games ever made on the Genesis. Gunstar Heroes combined four weapon elements into sixteen possible combinations, three difficulty levels with distinct enemy sets, and boss fights of legendary creativity — including a board game level that remains one of gaming's most inventive stage concepts.
The light-gun arcade shooter that became the Dreamcast's best peripheral showcase. House of the Dead 2's branching narrative paths, cooperative two-player zombie-blasting, and gloriously cheesy voiced cutscenes — 'Goldman! Suffer like G did?' became gaming's most quoted bad dialogue — made it essential for Dreamcast party sessions.
Rare's N64 third-person shooter — Juno, Vela, and Lupus fight through insectoid armies to rescue enslaved Tribals across 13 planets in one of the N64's most visually impressive and ambitiously scaled games.