Best Roguelike Games for 2025 Top Picks and Recommendations

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Across the glitchy veil of procedural worlds, twenty lifetimes unfold in a single run, each booting with danger, curiosity, and the rogue’s instinct to outthink the map.

Still, it’s only in the last decade or so that roguelikes entered the mainstream. They have become so trendy, in fact, that aspects of their makeup are now often visible in behemoth AAA efforts, from mechanics like permadeath to the incorporation of randomness, procedurally generated dungeons, and build variety in their design ethos. Hell, one of 2021’s best games was a roguelike from a PlayStation first-party studio, and other roguelikes were named AELGAMES’s Game of the Year in 2020, 2021, and 2024. This has led to somewhat of a saturation in the market, where it can often be difficult to know which game among hundreds is the one for you. That’s where we come in.

We’ve spent hours and hours in each of these games, running through their endlessly replayable mechanics to find the best of the best for you. From ruthless rampages through the depths of Tartarus to dicey encounters with legendary Irish heroes to spine-tingling scout-runs through a mysterious moon base, here are the best roguelikes you can play right now.


Dead Cells

$12$2552% off $12

Where to play: Android, iOS, Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Windows PC, Xbox Games Pass, Xbox One, and Xbox Series X

No list of the best roguelikes would be complete without Dead Cells, one of the purest and most popular games to ever liken itself to Rogue. It operates on sheer freneticism, with every jump and jab feeling vigorous yet deeply tactile.

A large part of Dead Cells’ appeal is its ability to blend its various influences into its own unique formula. While it functions as a roguelike, it is styled as a Metroidvania and borrows patterns from notoriously difficult games, namely FromSoftware’s Souls series. That is not a loose statement in the way most comparisons to Souls are – Dead Cells teaches you to intuit enemy behaviors until you reach a point where you can anticipate and ultimately foil them. It is a deeply satisfying game to learn, and is beyond deserving of the praise that it’s so often afforded.

That is not a loose statement in the way most comparisons to Souls are – Dead Cells teaches you to intuit enemy behaviors until you reach a point where you can anticipate and ultimately foil them. It is a deeply satisfying game to learn, and is beyond deserving of the praise that it’s so often afforded.

Read More $25 at Steam$12 at Nintendo$25 at Xbox

Returnal

$38 $38

Where to play: PS5 and Windows PC

We kind of spoiled Returnal‘s inclusion on this list already, so we might as well use it to kick things off. Previously known for games like Resogun and Nex Machina, Housemarque has always been a studio with a cult following, but it hasn’t necessarily been a household name. That all changed with Returnal.

Set on the planet Atropos, Returnal places you in the space boots of astronaut Selene Vassos, who has found herself locked in a strange time loop that prevents her from staying dead. It’s a brutally challenging third-person shooter that leans heavily into the difficult side of roguelike design, so it’s not for the uninitiated. If the element of roguelikes you’re most interested in is their high skill ceiling, Returnal should shoot its way to the top of your list. If not, it’s probably best to give Atropos a miss.

Read More $70 at Best Buy$38 at Amazon$60 at Fanatical

Rogue Legacy 2

$25 $25

Where to play: MacOS, Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Windows PC, Xbox One, and Xbox Series X

While Rogue Legacy has been popular in roguelike circles for almost a decade, its widely lauded sequel catapulted the series to new heights when it launched in early 2022. The first game is good – the second one is better.

Rogue Legacy 2 is a Metroidvania-style platformer that tasks you with traversing procedurally generated dungeons, as is the case with many action-oriented roguelikes. What makes this game stand out is how tight its level design is, beautifully meshing Metroidvania shapes and structures with the precision demanded by only the most unforgiving roguelikes.

It’s probably worth mentioning that, if you’re a pedant, Rogue Legacy 2 – as well as several other games on this list – is technically a roguelite, as opposed to a roguelike. This is because the ability to use currency to purchase permanent upgrades implies a retention of progress across runs, as opposed to every single run forcing you to start from absolute zero.

But hey, it’s still ultimately inspired by Rogue, right? So who cares?

Read More $25 at Steam$25 at Nintendo$25 at PlayStation

Spelunky 2

$20 $20

Where to play: Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Windows PC, Xbox One, and Xbox Series X

Just like Rogue Legacy, Spelunky started strong yet fared even better on its second outing. It’s another platformer that prides itself on level design above all else, with each new series of procedurally generated caves making a fine case for further spelunking.

It’s worth noting that while Spelunky 2 is definitely stronger than the original, avid roguelike fans shouldn’t neglect the latter. The first Spelunky was a pioneer of contemporary roguelike design, and is in part responsible for starting the genre’s renaissance over a decade ago. If you’re interested in the history of roguelikes but don’t have the patience for some of the more dated stuff, Spelunky offers an excellent place to start. Then you can move on to Spelunky 2, and enjoy the pair as a sort of diorama displaying how much progress has been made in the genre over the last 15 years.

Read More $20 at Steam$20 at Nintendo$20 at PlayStation

Risk of Rain 2

$25 $25

Where to play: Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Windows PC, Xbox One, and Xbox Series X

Another sequel! (Last one, we promise.) Risk of Rain 2 is a third-person shooter that is often regarded as one of the greatest roguelikes ever made, and for good reason. Its high-octane, run-‘n’-gun structure is perfectly attuned to both of roguelikes’ most crucial selling points: being enjoyable in relatively short bursts, and being so enjoyable that said short bursts somehow transform into ultramarathons. It’s also basically the Mario 64 of roguelikes.

One of the best things about Risk of Rain 2 is that it supports co-op, which is a sadly undervalued element of most roguelike design. The only thing better than experiencing “Just one more run!” is experiencing it with a friend – especially when said friend is the one helping you to escape a planet on which every living organism wants to kill you.

Read More $25 at Steam$25 at Nintendo$25 at Xbox

Inscryption

$20 $20

Where to play: Mac, Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Windows PC, Xbox One, Xbox Series X

Inscryption is a weird amalgam of many things, and all of them are fascinating. To talk about it at length is arguably the only proper way to talk about it at all, although for the sole purpose of encouraging you to play it, we’ll merely set the stage.

At first glance, Inscryption might seem like a slightly edgy yet standard deck-builder. However, it also incorporates found footage, functions as a sort of ARG, introduces a variety of puzzles that operate outside of its proprietary card game, and more. It’s the kind of game you won’t be able to understand until you try it out for yourself – but we promise that you should. If you’re interested in the various shapes and forms roguelikes can take, it’s a must-play. And that’s not to mention the fact it was AELGAMES’s best game of 2021.

Read More $20 at Steam

Enter the Gungeon

$15 $15

Where to play: Mac, Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, Windows PC, Xbox One

Now considered a classic, Enter the Gungeon is a fast and frenetic bullet-hell shooter that uses procedural generation and immense build variety to double up as a roguelike. As well as having various playable characters, it has literally hundreds of weapons to pick up and experiment with, making mastery of this game a mean feat to accomplish.

The premise of the game is to make your way through the titular Gungeon, defeating enemies and collecting loot as the difficulty progressively ramps up. While simple in theory, it is – like many roguelikes – fiendishly difficult in execution.

Read More $15 at Steam$15 at Nintendo$15 at Xbox

Darkest Dungeon

$25 $25

Where to play: iOS, Mac, Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, Windows PC, Xbox One

It’s dark, and it’s got dungeons. What’s not to like?

Darkest Dungeon brings a very welcome complexity to the core functionality of roguelikes. Instead of controlling one character at a time, it tasks you with managing an entire expedition, in which a company of heroes is sent to investigate the weird and wily horrors lurking beneath a Gothic mansion.

As well as having their own classes and skill sets, each hero is individually affected by a Stress mechanic, which makes tending to your party significantly more demanding by incorporating a level of micromanagement beyond conventional combat.

Read More $25 at Steam$25 at Nintendo$25 at Xbox

Dicey Dungeons

$15 $15

Where to play: Android, iOS, Mac, Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Windows PC, Xbox One, Xbox Series X

As well as having arguably the most unique concept on this list – weird game show in which each contestant is unknowingly transformed into one of several sentient dice – Dicey Dungeons is an extremely tight roguelike deck-builder that makes all kinds of fascinating design choices.

The core gameplay loop involves collecting cards and using dice to activate them in combat. However, playing Dicey Dungeons well demands a much more intricate understanding of the game. After mastering basic runs, you’ll be invited to experiment with tailor-made levels, dubbed “episodes,” which have their own innate challenges: Your health goes down instead of up as you progress, or you’re cursed from the get-go, to name a couple. Every time you solve a puzzle in Dicey Dungeons, your reward is. a harder puzzle. It’s tough but satisfying in the way only the very best roguelikes are.

Read More $15 at Steam$15 at Nintendo$15 at Xbox

Gwent: Rogue Mage

$10 $10

Where to play: Android, iOS, Mac, Windows PC

Anyone who has had the pleasure of playing The Witcher 3 will already be intimately familiar with Gwent, The Continent’s most popular card game. It became so popular, in fact, that CD Projekt Red decided to give it a game of its own – which was ironically not very popular.

Fortunately, Gwent gained a formidable companion piece with its first expansion, Rogue Mage. It’s a single-player story that reappropriates the base game’s deck-building for a roguelike experience, drastically outshining it in the process. People often complain that there aren’t enough Witcher games, despite the fact that The Witcher, The Witcher 2, and Thronebreaker are all excellent. (The complaint would be more honest if it was “There aren’t enough Witcher 3s.”) Let Rogue Mage be the argument that finally rebuts that criticism once and for all.

Read More $10 at Steam$10 at App Store$12 at Google Play

Monster Train

$25 $25

Where to play: iOS, Nintendo Switch, Windows PC, Xbox Game Pass, and Xbox One

Everyone talks about Slay the Spire – which, spoiler alert, is also on this list – but in many ways, Monster Train is a superior deck-builder. It’s nowhere as stylish as Slay the Spire, nor is it quite as refined, but its verticality mechanic introduces a variety of permutations and combinations that often make planning your next move an ordeal – in a good way, of course. Video games are supposed to be fun.

Monster Train also allows you to combine drastically different factions, which adds compelling build opportunities for players who have mastered the basics. It doesn’t have the nicest aesthetic, and its challenges can often feel a bit. arbitrary, to be generous. In terms of raw deck-building potential, though? Easily one of the best games on the market. The fact that its daily challenge is still actively attempted by hundreds, if not thousands, of people is a testament to that.

Read More $25 at Steam$25 at Xbox$30 at Nintendo

Into the Breach

$7$1553% off $7

Where to play: Android, iOS, Mac, Netflix, Nintendo Switch, and Windows PC

Into the Breach differs from the other games on this list in that it is primarily a turn-based strategy game – it is still undoubtedly a roguelike, however.

The objective of the game is to protect civilization from a hostile kaiju species using powerful mechs. This plays out via grid-based combat, which incorporates mobility management as well as standard actions. The elegance and simplicity of Into the Breach allow it to be approachable without compromising its strategic depth, making it a perfect entry point for aspiring roguelike-likers – or roguelikers.

*dangerous

Read More $7 at Steam

The Binding of Isaac

$5 $5

Where to play: Mac, Windows PC, Mac, and Linux (The Binding of Isaac: Rebirth is available on Mac, Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Windows PC, Xbox One, Xbox Series X)

Most roguelike fans have probably already done their time with The Binding of Isaac, but if you’re new to the genre, it’s a crucial part of its history that shouldn’t be skipped. It’s fair to say we wouldn’t be where we are today without Isaac and his incessant crying.

The Binding of Isaac is a roguelike dungeon-crawler that tasks you with shooting your way through procedurally generated dungeons. While that sounds like a lot of other games, it was one of the first popular modern efforts to introduce. well, all of those descriptors! There certainly have been better roguelikes in the decade since it originally launched, but they’re few and far between, making Isaac not just a classic, but an enduring mainstay in the scene.

Read More $5 at Steam

Prey: Mooncrash

$20 $20

Where to play: PlayStation 4, Windows PC, Xbox One

This is admittedly a bit of a weird pick, since it’s technically DLC for a story-driven immersive sim. But the reason I revisited Prey to try out Mooncrash was because it was literally described to me as a “Prey roguelike.” Failing all other logic, that justifies its position on this list.

In all seriousness, Mooncrash is functionally a roguelike in that it offers a high level of variability, a procedurally resetting map, and a total loss of progress upon death. It also has the added benefit of being part of Prey, one of the greatest games of the last decade, developed by one of the greatest games studios of all time. If that doesn’t sell it to you, nothing will.

Read More $20 at Steam$20 at Xbox$20 at PlayStation

FTL: Faster Than Light

$10 $10

Where to play: iOS, Mac, and Windows PC

FTL is a titan in the roguelike scene, having maintained immense popularity for a whole decade. It was the first effort produced by Subset Games – more recently known for the aforementioned Into the Breach – and is therefore a critical part of the one-two punch that proves the developer managed to dodge a sophomore slump.

Similar to Into the Breach, FTL is one of the less uniform games on this list, in that it basically does. just totally its own thing. You’re tasked with operating a spaceship from a top-down view, from maintaining oxygen levels to rerouting power across shields, weapons, and various other systems. The core gameplay loop involves fighting space pirates, taking over beacons, exploring the galaxy, and much more. And, obviously, if you die, your progress is lost. It’s very tense, but that’s a major part of its charm, and why it still endures as one of the best roguelikes today.

Read More $10 at Steam

Slay the Spire

$25 $25

Where to play: Android, iOS, Mac, Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, Windows PC, and Xbox One

This should come as no surprise given that we mentioned it earlier, but Slay the Spire is an essential part of any curated roguelike collection. It is partially responsible for the uptick and corresponding popularity of roguelike deck-builders over the last three years, and has since become a staple of the genre.

Most roguelike deck-builders that have come out since Slay the Spire have been forced to deviate from it in increasingly more discernible ways – again, just look at how strange Inscryption is. As a result, it might seem slightly simple compared to more recent titles. But simple is good. It’s why Slay the Spire is still the quintessential roguelike deck-building game, and it’s why that statement will continue to be true no matter how many games follow in its wake.

Read More $25 at Steam$25 at Nintendo

Loop Hero

$15 $15

Where to play: Android, iOS, Nintendo Switch, Xbox One, Xbox Series X, Windows PC

Loop Hero is yet another odd collision of genres that becomes something truly original and totally inimitable once you see it play out.

At face value, you walk a hero around a loop. Just a loop. A path that leads only back to itself. But as you spend time with Loop Hero, you’ll start to notice all of its various intricacies: It incorporates deck-building; it includes influences from city-builders and management sims; there are skill and stat modifications.

None of these things should work together, at least in theory – it’s too busy, there’s too much conflict. But somehow Loop Hero is extremely cohesive, and has slowly but surely made a case for itself as one of the best roguelikes ever made. Once you join the loop, it’s hard as hell to leave it behind.

Read More $15 at Steam$15 at Nintendo

Vampire Survivors

$5 $5

Where to play: Android, iOS, Mac, Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X, Windows PC

While 2022 wasn’t the most exciting year for AAA blockbusters, it had its fair share of sleeper hits, one of which is the absurdly excellent Vampire Survivors.

Going off its minimalist art style, limited control scheme, and ostensibly cluttered mob design, you’d be forgiven for thinking that Vampire Survivors is a bit boring. However, beneath all of its chaos is a degree of complexity that makes it exactly what every roguelike aspires to be: near-infinitely replayable.

From soul-harvesting trees to strange old men waving cloves of garlic above their heads, every single run in Vampire Survivors feels like the first time you’ve ever played it, except that somehow you’ve gained intimate knowledge of its sorcerous tricks and darkest arts.

Read More $5 at Steam$5 at Nintendo$5 at Xbox

Hades

$25 $25

Where to play: Mac, Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Windows PC, Xbox One, Xbox Series X, Windows PC

As the title arguably responsible for why this list exists, Hades burst onto the scene in late 2020 with the energy of the Underworld’s cheekiest demigod mowing down hordes of hellions in search of his Olympian mother. It’s the main reason “roguelike” went from a relatively niche term to one of the most highly sought-after genres around town. Hell, it even became the first video game in history to win a Hugo Award – Zag and the chthonic crew are just that good.

Developed by Supergiant Games, Hades blends a narrative structure derived from visual novels with the kind of high-octane combat and on-the-fly build experimentation that befits only the best roguelikes – or, in this case, the best roguelike. As denizens of the House of Hades likely already know by now, as soon as you set foot in Tartarus, there is no escape.

You play Hades and you become a rogueliker. It’s that simple.

Read More $25 at Nintendo$25 at Target

Show me gameplay clips of top roguelikes

Here are some easy-click gameplay compilations and channels where you can watch top roguelikes in action (Hades, Spelunky, Isaac, Dead Cells, Risk of Rain 2, etc.).

One-stop compilation videos

  • Top 16 Roguelikes Of All Time (gameplay montage of classics like Risk of Rain 2, Spelunky, Slay the Spire, Dead Cells, Binding of Isaac, Enter the Gungeon) – YouTube: “Top 16 Roguelikes Of All Time” by Dan Gheesling.​

  • The 10 Best Roguelike Games (shows gameplay for Hades, Spelunky, FTL and more, focused on permadeath + procedural generation) – YouTube: “The 10 Best Roguelike Games” by IGN.​

  • The Best Roguelike Games (rapid-fire gameplay clips for Cult of the Lamb, Enter the Gungeon, Rogue Legacy 2, Monster Train 2, Returnal, Vampire Survivors, Blue Prince, Dead Cells, Balatro, FTL, Slay the Spire, Spelunky 2, Hades, Binding of Isaac, Hades 2) – YouTube video “The Best Roguelike Games”.​

  • This is IGN’s Top 16 Roguelikes of All Time (streamer reacts while full gameplay segments of each game are shown, including Dead Cells, Hades 2, Risk of Rain 2, Vampire Survivors, etc.) – YouTube: “This is IGN’s Top 16 Roguelikes of All Time”.​

Shooter-focused roguelike clips

If you want more action/shooter roguelikes (Risk of Rain 2, Enter the Gungeon-style):

  • Top 20 INSANELY FUN Roguelike/Roguelite Shooters (includes gameplay of Risk of Rain 2, Enter the Gungeon, Nuclear Throne, Gunfire Reborn, Neon Abyss, Returnal, Crab Champions and many others) – YouTube: “Top 20 INSANELY FUN Roguelike/Roguelite Shooters…”.​

Playlists to binge gameplay

If you just want to browse lots of roguelike runs:

  • “Best Roguelike Games” playlist – a YouTube playlist full of individual gameplay videos for many different roguelikes and roguelites (Ravenswatch, Blazblue Entropy Effect, and more).​

  • “Roguelike Gameplay” playlist – another YouTube playlist with many full-run videos of various roguelikes, good for seeing how runs actually flow over time.​

You can copy-paste any of those exact titles into YouTube and you’ll go straight to long gameplay clips of most of the big roguelikes people talk about today.

Hades gameplay highlights and boss fights

Here are some direct, easy-to-watch options for Hades gameplay highlights and boss fights:

All boss fights in one place

  • “Hades – All Bosses (With Cutscenes) HD 1080p60 PC” on YouTube shows every major and hidden boss in order, including Megaera, Bone Hydra, Theseus & Asterius, the Fury sisters, Charon, Tiny Vermin, and the final Hades fight, with timestamps in the description so you can jump straight to specific encounters.​

  • “Hades – All Bosses [Hell Mode, No Damage]” is great if you want high-skill highlights; it showcases every boss being beaten flawlessly, so you see clean patterns and optimal dodging for Megaera, Bone Hydra, Theseus & Asterius, Charon, and Hades himself.​

  • “Hades: All Boss Fights (60fps)” is another full compilation focused on smooth, cinematic boss encounters, collected into one long video for binge-watching.​

Focused boss-fight playlists

  • The YouTube playlist “Hades BOSS FIGHTS” contains individual videos of each boss encounter, making it easy to rewatch specific fights like Extreme Measures Theseus & Asterius or Charon without scrubbing through a long compilation.​

Highlighted / harder variants

  • “Hades EXTREME MEASURES Boss Fight Gameplay” shows an upgraded version of the final Hades battle with added moves and patterns, which is perfect if you already know the base fight and want to see a more intense version.​

  • “Hades – Ending & Final Boss Fight” focuses specifically on the climactic encounter with Hades plus the ending sequence, giving you a story-rich highlight of the run’s finale.​

Boss guides with gameplay

  • “Hades Boss Guides | Tips and Tricks” breaks down boss mechanics while showing live gameplay-how Bone Hydra’s phases work, how Theseus & Asterius coordinate, and how Hades’ multi-phase fight is structured-so you get both spectacle and practical explanation.​

If you tell me which boss you’re most interested in (Hades, Theseus & Asterius, Furies, etc.), I can point you to the exact timestamped clip that focuses on that fight.

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Usman Ahmed

His gaming journey began with a fierce RuneScape addiction. He now proudly puts the unique linguistic skills honed from countless hours in that classic MMORPG to good use for the blog.

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