The first game to require the DualShock analog sticks — Ape Escape's 204-monkey catching adventure across 26 stages used every feature of Sony's then-new controller in creative ways.
Games Like Grand Theft Auto
12 games similar to Grand Theft Auto — handpicked for fans of Action games.
Top Games Similar to Grand Theft Auto
| Feature | Platform | Year | Score | Genre |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ape Escape | PLAYSTATION | 1999 | 8.8 | Platformer, Action |
| Azure Dreams | PLAYSTATION | 1997 | 8 | RPG, Action |
| Brave Fencer Musashi | PLAYSTATION | 1998 | 8.2 | Action, Jrpg |
| Castlevania Chronicles | PLAYSTATION | 2001 | 8.4 | Action, Platformer |
| Castlevania: Symphony of the Night | PLAYSTATION | 1997 | 9.9 | Metroidvania, Action, RPG |
| Crash Bandicoot 2: Cortex Strikes Back | PLAYSTATION | 1997 | 9 | Platformer, Action |
All 12 Games Like Grand Theft Auto
Konami's inventive hybrid blends roguelike dungeon-crawling with a town-building simulation, tasking the son of a legendary monster tamer to explore a procedurally generated tower while cultivating relationships and developing the village that surrounds it. Azure Dreams rewards patience and repeated runs with genuine progression in both the combat and social systems, creating a compelling loop that anticipates the structure of many beloved games that followed years later.
Square's quirky 1998 action-RPG featuring a miniature legendary swordsman summoned to save a kingdom — Brave Fencer Musashi combines real-time combat, enemy ability absorption, and a day/night time system with Square's production values and sense of humor. A charming alternative to Square's Final Fantasy dominance that built a cult following.
Konami's 2001 PS1 package and the Western debut of the Sharp X68000 Castlevania — Castlevania Chronicles includes the 1993 X68000 computer original plus a redrawn 'Arranged Mode' with enhanced graphics and Simon Belmont with updated sprites, providing the most faithfully arcade-accurate classic Castlevania port alongside the most demanding difficulty of any entry in the franchise.
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.
Naughty Dog's refinement of the Crash Bandicoot formula — adding the slide, body slam, and super-powered spin makes Crash more capable, and 27 stages with expanded variety mark it as the series' most balanced entry.
The commercial peak of the Crash Bandicoot series — Warped's time-travel premise introduces motorbikes, planes, sea-doos, and baby T-rex riding across 30 time-period stages, making it the most varied entry in the trilogy.
Naughty Dog's technically dazzling PlayStation launch platformer introduced the world to the wacky orange marsupial and demonstrated that 3D platforming could be precise, challenging, and visually spectacular. The game that made Sony's console a genuine rival to Nintendo.
Sony's PS1 answer to Mario Party featuring Crash and friends in competitive minigame tournaments. Crash Bash's four-player arena battles — polar bear push, bowling, pogo party, and tank warfare — made it the best party game in the PS1 library despite critical reception that focused on the lack of a proper platformer installment.
The PS1 demolition derby game that proved the PlayStation's 3D hardware could deliver satisfying vehicular destruction physics. Destruction Derby's real-time damage modeling — cars visibly crumpling from impacts — and frantic arena modes were among the most impressive demonstrations of PS1 technical capability at launch.
Capcom's 2000 PS1 sequel — Dino Crisis 2 abandons the survival horror approach of the first game for full action gameplay with point-based extinction points, two playable characters (Dylan and Regina), and a faster, more frantic dinosaur combat that divides fans of the original but delivers its own high-intensity experience.
Capcom's dinosaur-based survival horror — essentially Resident Evil redesigned for faster, smarter predators — features real-time creature AI that makes the Velociraptors genuinely terrifying rather than scripted obstacles. Regina's infiltration mission in Secret Operation Wipeout demonstrated that the studio's survival horror formula could absorb a radically different threat profile without losing any of its tension, and the game stands as the PS1's finest horror experience outside of Resident Evil 2 and Silent Hill.