The Best Platformers You Can Play Right Now | Digital Trends

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A robot punches a boss in Astro Bot.
Sony Interactive Entertainment

One of the first actions we were given when the first pixelized version of a person was displayed on the early console generations was a jump. Jumping, a simple action, has probably been explored and expanded through video games over the decades more than any other human ability. Even the face of video games, Mario, was originally just “Jump Man” back in the day. As soon as we could jump, we needed things to jump on, over, and around, and thus the platforming genre was born.

The idea of running and jumping through an obstacle course is genius in its simplicity. Anyone, no matter what language they speak or culture they come from, can understand the basics of jumping over a pit to reach the ground on the other side. Things have only gotten more complex, as is necessary to keep the genre from becoming stale. Platformers added new elements alongside just jumping, such as unique hazards, stories, and even the third dimension. Today’s platformers are arguably at their best, and make up some of the best PS5 games and best Xbox Series X games, not just the best Switch games as you might expect. With decades of examples and inspiration to draw from, the games released today, big and small, are the most polished ever seen. Here’s our list of the best recent platformers you can play right now.

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We should also mention that only one game per franchise is eligible for this list if only to just keep it from being half made up of different Mario games. We will keep this list current as new upcoming video games give us even more great platformers.

Astro Bot

Astro Bot Play 92% Platforms PlayStation 5 Genre Platform, Adventure Developer Team Asobi Publisher Sony Interactive Entertainment Release September 06, 2024 We’ve had other adventures with Astro before, but his first non-VR exclusive finally let this little bot show the world how talented Team Asobi is. Astro Bot is an expanded version of the demo included on every PS5, which is exactly what we all wanted after playing it. You will visit dozens of bite-sized but satisfying worlds to jump, hover, and punch your way through. Many feature special power-ups to spice up the gameplay, but it is the cameo levels where Astro takes on the abilities of other PlayStation mascots in a special level that are the real standouts. From top to bottom, every inch of this game is bursting with joy and fun and gives even the mighty Mario a run for his money. Astro Bot - Announcement Trailer | PS5 Games

Banjo-Kazooie

Banjo-Kazooie Play 86% Platforms Nintendo 64 Genre Platform, Quiz/Trivia, Adventure Developer Rare Publisher Nintendo, Gradiente Release June 29, 1998 Mario was the star of the N64, but there’s a passionate group out there who knows a certain bear and bird who was just as good as the plumber. Banjo Kazooie is a collectathon platformer like any other, except it has such tight controls, unique levels, and delightful level design that many prefer it over Mario. There’s always something to new find, abilities to unlock, and creative bosses and challenges to complete. The sequel is perhaps even better, but the first set the stage for this franchise that sadly never reached its full potential. Even today, this is a great game to revisit. Banjo-Kazooie Promotional Trailer 1997

Celeste

Celeste Play 88% 5/5 E10 Platforms Linux, PC (Microsoft Windows), Mac, PlayStation 4, Xbox One, Nintendo Switch, Google Stadia Genre Platform, Adventure, Indie Developer Extremely OK Games Publisher Extremely OK Games Release January 25, 2018 What started as a simple game jam project has evolved into one of the most beloved and highly rated platformers of all time. Celeste is a heartfelt and touching story about a girl named Madeline and her quest to climb the titular Celeste Mountain, but also a deep and introspective tale on depression and mental illness. That part is better left experienced firsthand without spoiling anything, but nothing can ruin just how good the game is to play. What’s even more amazing is that it can cater to everyone from people who have never touched a platforming game before to the most hardcore speed-runners. In terms of 2D platformers, Celeste feels about as tight as any game ever could. You have just the right amount of weight and air control, plus the ability to cling onto walls, climb them, and dash either on the ground or in the air. Like the best platformers, Celeste takes these limited options and devises creative, challenging, and even puzzle-like obstacles for you to solve using those tools. Then there are the secret strawberries for additional challenges, along with the B-side levels to give people who really want to master the game’s mechanics a place to test their skills. On the other hand, the number of accessibility options the game has means you can tweak the game so that just about anyone can enjoy it without getting frustrated. Exclusive: 10 Minutes of CELESTE Gameplay — TOWERFALL Creators' Next Game!

Super Meat Boy

Super Meat Boy Play 83% Platforms PlayStation 4, Linux, Wii, PC (Microsoft Windows), Mac, Wii U, PlayStation Vita, Xbox 360, Nintendo Switch Genre Platform, Adventure, Indie Developer Team Meat Publisher BlitWorks, Team Meat Release October 20, 2010

On the other end of the difficulty spectrum, Super Meat Boy revels in punishing you. In fact, it makes it downright addictive to try dozens of times to perfectly navigate a level and finally reach the goal so you can watch a replay of all your attempts play out at the same time. This was one of the original breakout indie games and its quality played no small part in getting the mainstream more interested in smaller games. The controls are simple but tuned so tight that you never have anything to blame but yourself for a missed jump. Average players can expect to beat the game with enough effort, but doing all the challenge levels and getting the highest ranks is a task even the most skilled 2D platformers struggle to accomplish.

Super Meat Boy - PS4/PS Vita Trailer

Psychonauts 2

Psychonauts 2 Play 89% 4/5 T Platforms Linux, PC (Microsoft Windows), Mac, PlayStation 4, Xbox One, Xbox Series X|S Genre Platform, Adventure Developer Double Fine Productions Publisher Xbox Game Studios Release August 25, 2021 3D platformers are rare these days, let alone sequels to ones as unique as Psychonauts. But, thanks to a Kickstarter and eventual purchase from Microsoft, DoubleFine was able to release Psychonauts 2 and remind everyone that platformers can be packed to the brim with fun, creativity, and heart. Each level takes you into the mind of a different character, leading to a series of stages so diverse that you will want to keep playing just to see what crazy new landscape awaits you in the future. There are tons of things to collect, interesting and quirky characters to meet, and a story that actually hits a bit harder than you might expect. Even if you never played the old original, Psychonauts 2 will catch you up and get you right into the action without missing a beat. Psychonauts 2 Announce Teaser!

Ori and the Will of the Wisps

Ori and the Will of the Wisps Play 88% E Platforms PC (Microsoft Windows), Xbox One, Nintendo Switch, Xbox Series X|S Genre Platform, Adventure Developer Moon Studios Publisher Xbox Game Studios, iam8bit Release March 10, 2020 The surprising hit Ori and the Blind Forest left a strong impression thanks to a touching story, beautiful art, and the Metroidvania-style design that kept Ori’s movement abilities a joy to utilize. The sequel, Ori and the Will of the Wisps, came later, and while it did suffer from a slightly rocky launch, is now firmly one of the best platformers you can get on Xbox. Visually, this game hasn’t lost an ounce of detail or care. The environments are lush and beg to be explored, with more details packed into the fore and background than you will probably notice while zipping through them. Speaking of which, Ori’s animations and control are so tight and fluid that you never feel bogged down even when treading back over familiar spaces. Ori and the Will of the Wisps ups the ante in every way. The world is larger, with more to explore and do, choices to make regarding progression, more varied environments, side quests, and even more exciting challenges that test all your abilities. You even build up a little hub town full of friendly NPCs to talk to for more story and characterization that will draw you deeper into the game’s world. No space or effort is wasted here. Every time you go off exploring will lead to something worth your time, and at no point does the game ever feel unfair. Ori and the Will of the Wisps - E3 2017 - 4K Teaser Trailer

Shovel Knight: Treasure Trove

Shovel Knight: Treasure Trove 85% E Platforms Linux, PC (Microsoft Windows), PlayStation 3, Mac, Nintendo 3DS, Wii U, PlayStation Vita, PlayStation 4, Xbox One, Nintendo Switch Genre Platform, Adventure, Indie Developer Yacht Club Games Publisher Yacht Club Games, Nintendo Release December 09, 2019 Shovel Knight laid the groundwork, if you’ll pardon the pun, for all indie-developed Kickstarters. It was, at the time, one of the most well-funded game projects on the site, reaching tons of stretch goals that kept additional content coming to the game for years after release. Now that the dust has settled and the game is complete, retitled Shovel Knight: Treasure Trove, this homage to classic 16-bit platformers has outclassed just about every source of inspiration it was taken from. If you have a fondness for those classic platformers like Mario, MegaMan, and Ducktales, Shovel Knight is somehow able to surpass even your most nostalgic memories. The base game alone would make it a contender for this list, but all the extra content that has been added just makes this retro-style platformer stand even taller. You get the original adventure with the titular hero, three additional character campaigns, and co-op and competitive modes. Each additional character has its own abilities and playstyle that feel distinct from one another, along with hand-crafted levels that take full advantage of each individual character’s move set. Once you use your shovel to pogo bounce on enemies to clear obstacles while the amazing soundtrack bops in your ears, you’ll be glad to have dug up this treasure trove of a game.

Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze

Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze Play 80% E Platforms Nintendo Switch Genre Platform Developer Retro Studios Publisher Nintendo Release May 04, 2018 Praised by critics when it originally releases on the WiiU for being one of the best 2D platformers on the system, Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze finally got the chance to reach the audience it deserved when it was ported to the much more popular Switch. Just like the older Donkey Kong Country games on the SNES, Tropical Freeze is a tough platformer with tons of secrets, collectibles, and inspired boss battles that rival even the best 2D Mario titles. Every stage is immaculately designed, whether it’s one of the series famous minecart or barrel-blasting sequences, or more traditional ones. No two levels feel overly similar, and the game prides itself on strong attention to detail. The one downside some had with the original release was the difficulty. The game expects you to learn and get better as the stages go on, as any good platformer should, but ramps up to a level right on the cusp of frustration. Nothing is ever unfair thanks to well-telegraphed dangers and tight controls, but the level of execution the game asks for by the end can be a little daunting. If you’re up to it, that’s all the more points in the game’s favor, but if not, the Switch version included a new “Funky Mode” where you play as Funky Kong. This kong has more hits and can use his surfboard to glide slightly to help with precision platforming and avoid spike damage. Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze – Launch Trailer (Nintendo Switch)

A Hat in Time

A Hat in Time Play 84% T Platforms PC (Microsoft Windows), Mac, PlayStation 4, Xbox One, Nintendo Switch Genre Platform, Adventure, Indie Developer Gears for Breakfast Publisher Gears for Breakfast, Humble Bundle, Humble Games Release October 05, 2017

In a clear ode to the formula of Mario 64, A Hat In Time is an old-school collectathon style platformer, only with highly polished modern controls, an awesome soundtrack, and deep story. You play as a girl who has lost all her Time Pieces and must go across various parts of the planet to collect them so she can get back home. The open levels are all places you’ve never quite been to in any other platformer, like a creepy forest inhabited by a soul-stealing creature known as The Snatcher, or an island in the sky inhabited by birds, cats, and goats. Just like any good collectathon, you can progress picking up some Time Pieces, with getting them all being an extra challenge, plus plenty of even harder bonus areas for those who really want to master all the movement options.

A Hat in Time Gameplay (PC HD)

Sonic Mania

Sonic Mania Play 84% E Platforms PC (Microsoft Windows), PlayStation 4, Xbox One, Nintendo Switch Genre Platform, Adventure, Indie Developer PagodaWest Games, SEGA of Japan, Headcannon, Christian Whitehead Publisher Sega Release August 15, 2017 Sonic was a fierce competitor with Mario back in the 2D days, but immediately stumbled once introduced to the third dimension. Since then, the blue blur has struggled to find his footing again in the gaming space, experimenting with multiple different styles of games, and even releasing a few good ones, but Sonic Mania is far and away the best Sonic has been since his original trilogy. It isn’t just based on nostalgia, either. While the game does feature many locations from those old games, they are remixed and changed in ways that make them even better than before. The level design and way Sonic himself moves and animates just ooze with passion. Part of the reason for Sonic Mania’s success, or perhaps all of it, can be placed on the decision to allow an outside team led by fans of the series to develop the game. Team Sonic clearly has talent, but seemed unable or unwilling to just give fans of the series what they loved about the first games. If you have any nostalgia for those Genesis classics, or just want to know why Sonic was held in such high regard in the first place, Mania has become the quintessential 2D Sonic title. Sonic Mania - 25th Anniversary Debut

Pizza Tower

Pizza Tower Play 84% Platforms PC (Microsoft Windows), Nintendo Switch Genre Platform, Adventure, Indie Developer Tour De Pizza Publisher Tour De Pizza Release January 26, 2023 Unless you played one of the Wario games, there was never any other platformer that moved or played quite like it. Pizza Tower isn’t just a ripoff of that momentum-based style but wraps it in a ’90s cartoon art style that gives it a fever-dream-like tone in all the best ways. You will charge through levels at a break-neck pace, never fully feeling in control and reacting on pure instinct most of the time as you ram through enemies and use your various moves to traverse obstacles. Then, at the end, you need to race all the way back through the level backward before a giant pizza catches you. It is a crazy experience that has to be played to understand but is already a classic among its fans. Pizza Tower Steam Trailer

Hollow Knight

Hollow Knight Play 92% E10 Platforms Linux, PC (Microsoft Windows), Mac, PlayStation 4, Xbox One, Nintendo Switch Genre Platform, Adventure, Indie Developer Team Cherry Publisher Team Cherry Release February 24, 2017 If Shovel Knight was the Kickstarter successor to classic titles like MegaMan and Ducktales, then Hollow Knight is the same for Metroid. Taking the Metroidvania formula, wrapping it up in a fluid, soft, and slightly creepy art style, and making it feel like a dream to control, Hollow Knight deserves every ounce of praise it has gotten since release. It uses the genre to slowly introduce new movement mechanics, like dashes and double jumps, without overwhelming you right off the bat. As you get deeper into the game, literally and figuratively, the game will push on your execution more and more. This game is on the more difficult side of the platforming spectrum since it also takes some cues from the Souls genre, with an equal amount of the challenge coming from combat as it does from platforming sections. That’s not even mentioning how hard the platforming itself can get on its own, with challenging gauntlets that require near-perfect precision to pass through. Those are, for the most part, optional, but do consider this one tailored more to the experienced and hardcore platforming fan. Hollow Knight Trailer

Spelunky 2

Spelunky 2 Play 89% T Platforms PC (Microsoft Windows), PlayStation 4, Xbox One, Nintendo Switch, Xbox Series X|S Genre Platform, Adventure, Indie Developer BlitWorks, Mossmouth Publisher Mossmouth Release September 15, 2020 It might seem counterintuitive to include a rougelike on a list of best platformers. After all, how could a game that’s somewhat randomly generated be tuned to give a polished and well-crafted experience every time? In truth, Spelunky 2 doesn’t have levels that can compete with, say, a Mario stage that has been tested and tweaked for weeks and months by dozens of people. On the other hand, the fact that it still has really good levels that are always beatable without taking damage if you’re careful and good enough is a massive accomplishment. Spelunky 2 is a very simple platformer. By default, you can jump, grab ledges, climb ropes and ladders, and attack with your whip, bombs, and other throwable items. There are items and other ways to expand your move set some, but those are the basic tools that alone can get you through the entire game … if you’re good enough. The key to what makes this game such a great platformer is that it tests not only your reflexes and precision but also your ability to pay attention and plan. One bad jump into a trap or a single enemy knocking you back will more often than not lead to your death. If you learn the game’s language and pay attention, nothing is more satisfying than perfectly clearing a dangerous floor. Spelunky 2 - Announcement Trailer

Mega Man 11

Mega Man 11 Play 78% E10 Platforms PC (Microsoft Windows), PlayStation 4, Xbox One, Nintendo Switch Genre Shooter, Platform Developer Capcom Publisher Capcom Release October 02, 2018 The Mega Man franchise arguably had an even more unpleasant shift when trying to go 3D than Sonic did. Aside from maybe Legends, all the 3D games just felt … bad to play and led to the series becoming mostly dormant for years. Eventually, the series came back with Mega Man 9 and 10, which went back to the original NES style of 2D platformers, pixel art and all. Those entries felt like they fit right in with the original games, but Mega Man 11 feels like a true step forward for the series in 2D. Whether you love or hate pixel art, it is hard to deny that Mega Man 11’s smooth, more cartoon-inspired look isn’t a treat for the eyes. If you’ve played any Mega Man game in the past then you will know the drill here. You have eight robot masters to take down in whatever order you want, claiming their abilities to use against the next boss. You can run, slide, jump, shoot, charge, and even call in your robot dog Rush for assists in platforming, but the new mechanic this game brings is the Gear system. You can use your Gear meter in two ways: Speed and power. Speed allows you to slow down time to make platforming and dodging easier, and power increases your firepower. While all the stages give you a blend of shooting and platforming challenges, this title adds in a ton of extra challenges for hardcore players, such as time trials, stages where you can’t shoot, or even ones where you can’t jump. Mega Man 11: Demo and Bounce Man Trailer

Yooka-Laylee and the Impossible Lair

Yooka-Laylee and the Impossible Lair Play 74% E Platforms PC (Microsoft Windows), PlayStation 4, Xbox One, Nintendo Switch Genre Platform, Adventure, Indie Developer Playtonic Publisher Team17 Release October 07, 2019 The first Yooka-Laylee game was attempting to be a successor to the massive collectathon titles Rare made on the N64 like Banjo-Kazooie and Donkey Kong 64. It couldn’t quite recapture that magic as well as the 2D follow-up, Yooka-Laylee and the Impossible Lair, did as a successor to Rare’s 2D titles like Donkey Kong Country on the SNES. This shift in scope allowed the team to make far more memorable and enjoyable levels for our heroes to leap through. The duo also feels far better to control in a 2D space than in 3D, and the way the game shakes up some established formats of the genre is truly inspired. Right off the bat, you start this game in the final level. If you can manage to beat it, well, you’re better than we are. If you do fail, as you’re intended to, then you can begin exploring the levels on the overworld map. Each one you beat gives you more lives to take with you when you decide to try the final level again. It’s up to you when you think you are ready, putting you in direct control of both the difficulty and pacing of the game. Of course, there are plenty of things to collect and secrets to unlock in all the stages that make them worth playing. In fact, you will want to play them twice, since actions you do on the overworld can dramatically impact stages you already beat once, such as flooding or freezing them. Yooka-Laylee and the Impossible Lair: Reveal Trailer

Super Mario Maker 2

Super Mario Maker 2 Play 81% 4.5/5 E Platforms Nintendo Switch Genre Platform Developer Nintendo EPD, Nintendo Publisher Nintendo Release June 28, 2019 It was never a question of if we would have a Mario game on this list, but rather which one. The Switch has probably the greatest collection of Mario games that any single Nintendo system ever has, from Odyssey to Super Mario 3D World + Bowser’s Fury. However, we have to give it to Super Mario Maker 2. Not only is there something just so pure about 2D Mario platformers compared to 3D, but SMM2 encompasses an almost endless amount of content. If you were a fan of the original Super Mario Bros., Mario Bros. 3, Super Mario World, or the 2D Wii games, they’re all here. Someone has made all the levels for each of those original games, and if by some fluke they haven’t, then you can make them yourself! Nintendo basically handed over the keys to developing our own Mario games with Super Mario Maker 2, and the community has not disappointed. From ultra-hard, bordering on impossible, challenges of skill that require pixel-perfect action and timing, to fun and wacky adventures, and even puzzles and other genres you didn’t even think could work, there’s something here for everyone to enjoy. Not every level will be worth your time, obviously, but because of the base engine the game runs on, it will always feel as good as 2D Mario always has. Super Mario Maker 2 - Announcement Trailer - Nintendo Switch Jesse Lennox Jesse Lennox Former Digital Trends Contributor linkedin twitter Jesse Lennox covers all things gaming but has a specific interest in all things PlayStation, JRPGs, and experimental indies…
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