Capcom's 1997 PS1 Mega Man entry — Mega Man 8 features anime-quality cutscenes, eight Robot Masters including the fan-favorites Tengu Man and Frost Man, the Rush Super Adapter's return, and one of the franchise's most distinct visual presentations. Polarizing due to cutscene quality but admired for stage design and Mega Man legacy.
Games Like Mega Man Legends
12 games similar to Mega Man Legends — handpicked for fans of Action and Adventure games.
Top Games Similar to Mega Man Legends
| Feature | Platform | Year | Score | Genre |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mega Man 8 | PLAYSTATION | 1997 | 8.6 | Action, Platformer |
| Dino Crisis | PLAYSTATION | 1999 | 8.3 | Action, Adventure |
| Legacy of Kain: Blood Omen | PLAYSTATION | 1996 | 8.8 | Action, Adventure |
| Legacy of Kain: Soul Reaver | PLAYSTATION | 1999 | 9 | Action, Adventure |
| MediEvil 2 | PLAYSTATION | 2000 | 8.5 | Action, Adventure |
| Mega Man 2 | NES | 1988 | 9.5 | Platformer, Action |
All 12 Games Like Mega Man Legends
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.
Silicon Knights' dark action-adventure casts players as the vampire Kain in a gothic top-down odyssey through the cursed land of Nosgoth, combining Zelda-style exploration with morally complex storytelling far ahead of its time. The game's fully voiced cast, Shakespearean dialogue, and willingness to question whether the protagonist should save or doom the world established Blood Omen as a landmark in mature narrative gaming and launched one of the most acclaimed dark fantasy franchises in PlayStation history.
Crystal Dynamics' dark masterpiece — Raziel, a vampire destroyed by his master Kain, returns as a wraith who shifts between material and spectral realms to devour souls and hunt his former vampire brethren across a gothic decaying world.
Sony Cambridge's 2000 PS1 sequel to MediEvil — MediEvil 2 relocates Sir Dan to Victorian London in 1886, adds new weapons including a Tesla staff and blunderbuss, introduces the interchangeable hand mechanic allowing Sir Dan to swap limbs for different abilities, and continues the undead hero's darkly comic adventure through a Jack the Ripper-adjacent mystery.
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.
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.
Capcom's 1995 SNES Mega Man entry — Mega Man 7 is the first mainline Mega Man on Super Nintendo, with eight Dr. Wily robots, Rush Super Adapter combining abilities, a shop system for buying items with bolts, and the first direct confrontation scene between Mega Man and Bass. A substantial SNES upgrade of the NES franchise formula.
The Blue Bomber's first portable outing takes bosses from Mega Man 1 and 2 and combines them into a challenging handheld adventure. A faithful if punishing translation of the NES series that holds its own as a standalone Mega Man experience.