The Genesis Aladdin — animated by the actual Disney animators who worked on the film, featuring fluid hand-drawn sprites, a throwing mechanic, and the Disney quality that made it the definitive console version over the SNES edition.
Games Like Strider
12 games similar to Strider — handpicked for fans of Action and Platformer games.
Top Games Similar to Strider
| Feature | Platform | Year | Score | Genre |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aladdin | SEGA-GENESIS | 1993 | 9 | Platformer, Action |
| Castle of Illusion Starring Mickey Mouse | SEGA-GENESIS | 1990 | 8.8 | Platformer, Action |
| Castlevania: Bloodlines | SEGA-GENESIS | 1994 | 8.9 | Platformer, Action |
| Dynamite Heady | SEGA-GENESIS | 1994 | 8.6 | Platformer, Action |
| Earthworm Jim | SEGA-GENESIS | 1994 | 9 | Platformer, Action |
| Flashback: The Quest for Identity | SEGA-GENESIS | 1993 | 9.3 | Action, Adventure, Platformer |
All 12 Games Like Strider
The Genesis platformer that proved Sega could do Mickey Mouse better than Disney's other platform partners. Castle of Illusion Starring Mickey Mouse is a polished, charming platform adventure across five magical worlds inside a castle, designed to showcase the Genesis hardware and the studio's platformer expertise. One of the best Mickey Mouse games ever made and a model of early 16-bit design.
The only mainline Castlevania on Genesis — Bloodlines introduces two playable protagonists (John Morris and Eric Lecarde) and a globe-trotting adventure through six European countries in a darker, more violent Castlevania than its SNES counterparts.
Treasure's creative Genesis platformer where protagonist Heady throws his detachable head to attack, solve puzzles, or swap with special heads granting unique powers. Dynamite Heady's constant mechanic variation, inventive level designs, and technical achievement make it one of the Genesis's most creative and underrated games.
The animated platformer that took the 16-bit era by storm — Earthworm Jim's fluid hand-drawn animation, creative stage design, and irreverent humor made it the independent platformer sensation of 1994.
Delphine Software's 1992 cinematic action-adventure masterpiece — Flashback: The Quest for Identity follows Conrad B. Hart, an agent who wakes with no memory in 2142, using rotoscoped animation and Prince-of-Persia-style fluid platforming to navigate a conspiracy involving shapeshifting aliens infiltrating human society. One of the most cinematic games of the 16-bit era.
Buena Vista Interactive's 1995 Genesis action-platformer based on the Disney animated series — Gargoyles follows Goliath across eight stages with gliding mechanics, wall-clinging, and combat inspired by the series' dark action tone. One of the best Genesis licensed games and a rare quality title from the console's final years.
Sega's shape-shifting Genesis platformer — Casey collects masks to transform into eight characters (Jason, Berzerker, Maniaxe, Iron Knight, Eyeclops, Juggernaut, Red Stealth, Skycutter) with distinct abilities across 103 stages.
The Donald Duck Genesis platformer that surprised players with its polish and non-linear world design. QuackShot: Starring Donald Duck sent players across six global locations in any order, using plungers and super balls to traverse different environments. One of the best Disney licensed games of the 16-bit era.
The Genesis launch era classic that established the 16-bit action-platformer standard. As ninja Joe Musashi, players fight through eight worlds of enemies to rescue a kidnapped fiancée, using shurikens, magic, and fluid platforming across some of the most memorable stages of the early Genesis library. Revenge of Shinobi remains one of the most important early Genesis games and one of the series' finest entries.
Sega's late-era Genesis gem — Ristar grabs and headbutts enemies using his extendable arms across six colorful planets, delivering some of the best visuals and music the Genesis hardware ever produced in a sadly overlooked platformer.
One of the Genesis's most spectacular platformers follows Sparkster, an opossum knight with a jet pack, through five worlds of flame-blasting, dash-attacking action. With tight controls, inventive level design, and some of the best visuals on the platform, Rocket Knight Adventures was Konami at their early-90s peak.