The game that invented 3D platforming as a genre. Super Mario 64 launched alongside the Nintendo 64 and demonstrated, definitively, that video games could work in three dimensions. Its influence on every 3D game that followed is incalculable — this is where the template was written.
Games Like Paper Mario
12 games similar to Paper Mario — handpicked for fans of RPG and Adventure games.
Games Similar to Paper Mario
If you love Paper Mario, 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 Paper Mario
| Feature | Platform | Year | Score | Genre |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Super Mario 64 | NINTENDO-64 | 1996 | 9.9 | Platformer, Adventure |
| Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars | SNES | 1996 | 9.3 | RPG |
| Mario Kart 64 | NINTENDO-64 | 1996 | 9.2 | Racing |
| Golden Sun | GAME-BOY-ADVANCE | 2001 | 9.2 | RPG, Adventure |
| Pokémon Red Version | GAME-BOY | 1996 | 9.5 | RPG, Adventure |
| Wonder Boy III: The Dragon's Trap | SEGA-MASTER-SYSTEM | 1989 | 9 | Action, Adventure, RPG |
All 12 Games Like Paper Mario
The collaboration that shouldn't have worked but produced one of gaming's greatest surprises. Square's RPG design applied to Mario's universe created a game of warmth, humor, and unexpected depth.
Nintendo's kart racing series made its landmark 3D debut with Mario Kart 64, delivering sixteen imaginative tracks, eight beloved characters, and the four-player multiplayer that made it a mandatory purchase for any N64 owner. The game that made group gaming on consoles a standard part of social life.
Camelot's technical marvel proved the Game Boy Advance could host a fully-featured JRPG. Golden Sun's Psynergy system — elemental magic used both in battle and for overworld puzzle-solving — was innovative, the presentation was stunning for handheld hardware, and the world of Weyard was richly imagined.
The game that started one of the most successful media franchises in history, Pokémon Red challenges players to catch 151 creatures and become the greatest Pokémon Trainer in the land. Deceptively deep, relentlessly charming, and groundbreaking in its social design.
One of the Sega Master System's greatest achievements and a pioneering open-world action RPG. Wonder Boy III casts players as a hero cursed to transform between five animal forms — Lizard-Man, Mouse-Man, Piranha-Man, Lion-Man, and Hawk-Man — each with unique abilities needed to explore the interconnected world. Remade in 2017, it remains a masterpiece of 8-bit design.
Rare's charming 3D platformer masterpiece sent a bear and a bird through nine inventive worlds brimming with collectibles, clever puzzles, and an irresistible sense of fun. Banjo-Kazooie refined the collectathon formula with exceptional world design and remains one of the N64's finest games.
A direct predecessor to the Grand Theft Auto open-world formula from the same studio, Body Harvest drops a time-traveling soldier into sprawling free-roaming environments spanning multiple eras of human history under alien invasion. DMA Design's ambitious scope — hijack any vehicle, explore vast maps, battle massive alien bosses — resulted in a game rougher than its ambitions but historically fascinating as the missing link between top-down GTA and the 3D open-world games that followed.
Konami's divisive attempt to bring Castlevania into 3D. Castlevania 64's gothic atmosphere, memorable boss designs, and dual-protagonist structure offered genuinely compelling moments despite its rough controls and dated visuals — and Reinhardt Schneider's vampire hunting quest captured the series' atmosphere better than the camera system deserved.
The enhanced version of Castlevania 64 with two new characters — Cornell the werewolf and Henry the Crusader — plus additional stages, improved engine performance, and the complete content of the original game. Legacy of Darkness is the definitive N64 Castlevania experience for players willing to engage with early 3D adventure design.
Rare's audacious, boundary-pushing platformer used the deceptively cute character of Conker the squirrel as a vehicle for adult humor, cinematic parodies, and surprisingly emotional moments. One of the N64's most technically impressive games and its most unexpectedly mature.
Rare's ambitious collectathon platformer sent Donkey Kong and four Kong companions through eight enormous worlds in pursuit of 3,821 collectibles. Technically impressive and generously sized, DK64's scope is both its greatest strength and its most criticized aspect — a game of extraordinary content that some consider bloated.