The pinnacle of the NES Mega Man series. Mega Man 2 perfected the formula of absorbing defeated bosses' weapons and applied it to eight masterfully designed stages with an all-time great soundtrack.
Games Like Mega Man: Dr. Wily's Revenge
12 games similar to Mega Man: Dr. Wily's Revenge — handpicked for fans of Platformer and Action games.
Games Similar to Mega Man: Dr. Wily’s Revenge
If you love Mega Man: Dr. Wily’s Revenge, you’ll enjoy these similar games that share its gameplay style, mechanics, and charm.
Why These Games Are Similar
Curated recommendations and detailed comparisons to be added.
Top Games Similar to Mega Man: Dr. Wily's Revenge
| Feature | Platform | Year | Score | Genre |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mega Man 2 | NES | 1988 | 9.5 | Platformer, Action |
| Mega Man 3 | NES | 1990 | 9 | Platformer, Action |
| Mega Man 4 | NES | 1991 | 8.6 | Platformer, Action |
| Mega Man 5 | NES | 1992 | 8.4 | Platformer, Action |
| Mega Man 6 | NES | 1993 | 8.5 | Action, Platformer |
| Mega Man X2 | SNES | 1994 | 9 | Platformer, Action |
All 12 Games Like Mega Man: Dr. Wily's Revenge
Mega Man 3 introduced Rush the Robot Dog and the Slide move while delivering a massive adventure with 24 stages. A strong entry that many fans consider the series' most ambitious NES installment.
Mega Man 4 introduced the Mega Buster charge shot that became the series standard — alongside eight new Robot Masters, the villainous Dr. Cossack, and one of the NES's most polished action-platformer entries.
The NES Mega Man series' most polished late entry — Mega Man 5 introduces Beat, the bird weapon found by collecting hidden letters, with eight Robot Masters including Gravity Man, Crystal Man, and Charge Man.
The grand finale of the original NES series, Mega Man 6 introduces the Jet and Power Adapters that fuse Rush with Mega Man himself, enabling flight and super-strength in a game that ranks among the most mechanically refined entries on the platform. Capcom wrings every last drop of performance from the aging NES hardware, delivering tight controls, memorable robot masters, and a satisfying conclusion to one of the console's defining franchises.
The worthy successor to Mega Man X that refined every element of the original. Mega Man X2 uses the Super FX chip to add smooth 3D cutscenes, introduces the X-Hunter storyline, and delivers eight memorable Maverick bosses. Collecting Zero's parts for the secret ending is one of the era's best hidden objectives.
The SNES finale of the original Mega Man X trilogy, introducing the ability to play as Zero and the Ride Armor system. Mega Man X3 features the most complex upgrade paths in the SNES series, with four hidden Ride Armors and a fully playable Zero making the game's secrets among the richest of the era.
The darkest Mega Man game — Zero wakes from cryo-sleep to find a dystopian future where humans and Reploids are at war, with brutal difficulty, a ranking system, and a narrative that treats its characters with unusual gravitas.
The original Mega Man introduced the Blue Bomber, the weapon-copying mechanic, and the non-linear boss selection system that defined one of gaming's most beloved action-platformer series.
The original Game Boy Castlevania — Christopher Belmont's debut pits the whip-wielding vampire hunter against Dracula across four stages on Nintendo's handheld, establishing the franchise on portable hardware despite notably sluggish gameplay.
The debut of one of Nintendo's most beloved characters, Kirby's Dream Land introduced the pink puffball's signature inhale mechanic and charming aesthetic in a breezy platformer designed to be accessible to all ages. Short but delightful, it launched an enduring franchise.
Samus travels to SR388 to exterminate the Metroid species — a game-changing narrative that introduced the Baby Metroid and directly set up Super Metroid's story.