• Sat. Nov 1st, 2025

20 Games Like The Last Of Us That Will Invade Your Mind In 2025

In a lot of ways, The Last of Us and its sequel, The Last of Us Part 2, raised the bar for storytelling in games. Set in a grounded version of, essentially, a zombie apocalypse, they relied as much on well-written, emotional interactions between characters as they did on stealth gameplay and fighting horrific monsters, crafting horror stories that are hard to forget. Those stories were so impactful that they led to an HBO TV series adaptation–its second season is airing right now.

But there are a lot of games like The Last of Us that also evoke the specific and powerful elements that define it–whether it’s the strong relationship between the player character and a companion, the fearful intensity of being hunted by terrifying monsters, or the sharp gameplay mechanics that can make combat as satisfying as it is overwhelmingly visceral.

Below, you’ll find 16 games and franchises like The Last of Us and The Last of Us Part 2, riffing on or building on different parts of the experience that make Naughty Dog’s story-driven adventure so powerful. Most of these are action-adventure games or horror games that share similar ideas–some tell deep stories and have characters with which you’ll form a bond, some push third-person combat and stealth mechanics in smart directions or have a similar feel to The Last of Us, and some create horror experiences you simply can’t get in other media.

Regardless of their goals, like The Last of Us, these are games that create experiences that will stick with you, and maybe haunt your nightmares. For more, check out our picks for the best horror games or best survival games.

Disclosure: GameSpot and Fanatical are both owned by Fandom.

Metal Gear Solid Delta: Snake Eater

  • Developer: Konami Digital Entertainment
  • Release Date: August 28, 2025
  • Platforms: PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X|S, PC
  • Genre: Action-adventure, Stealth

The Metal Gear games may predate The Last of Us, but players of the latter should feel right at home with MGS’ emphasis on stealth over action. Metal Gear Solid Delta: Snake Eater is a remake of the original Metal Gear Solid 3 that can keep up with other modern titles in terms of graphics and gameplay.

This is an origin story for Big Boss, who goes by Naked Snake in this game. During the Cold War, Snake is betrayed by his mentor, The Boss, who defects to the Soviet Union and leaves him for dead. With only a limited time to prevent a nuclear war, Snake has to infiltrate territory behind enemy lines. This isn’t a horror game, but there are definitely unsettling sections, including at least one with supernatural overtones. There’s even an escort mission late in the game as Snake has to risk his life to bring himself and his closest ally out of danger.

Silent Hill 2 (2024)

  • Developer: Bloober Team
  • Release Date: October 8, 2024
  • Platforms: PlayStation 5, PC
  • Genre: Survival-horror

The original version of Silent Hill 2 is widely considered to be one of the best survival-horror titles ever made, even when considering its technical limitations two decades later. Bloober Team’s Silent Hill 2 remake actually manages to improve on the first version with a deeper gameplay experience and one of the most arresting games in the entire franchise.

Players once again step into the role of James Sutherland, a man who is lured to Silent Hill by a letter from his wife, Mary. Of course, Mary’s been dead for years, but that doesn’t stop James from walking into his own personal version of Hell. James also encounters Maria, a woman who looks unnervingly like his late wife. But the line between what’s real and what isn’t has slipped away, and James may not be leaving Silent Hill again.

Until Dawn

  • Developers: Ballistic Moon and Supermassive
  • Release Date: October 4, 2024
  • Platforms: PlayStation 5, PC
  • Genre: Survival-horror

Supermassive developed the original 2015 version of Until Dawn, but the 2024 remake was visually upgraded by Ballistic Moon. There were also some new character interactions as well as new endings in this version of the game. As before, Until Dawn has a lot of sections that play more like an interactive movie than a game, and it’s closer in tone to a slasher flick than The Last of Us. But there are definitely some similarities between the two.

The game focuses on a group of friends who reunite one year after twin sisters, Hannah and Beth Washington, disappeared and were presumed dead. Their brother, Josh, organizes the reunion, which soon falls prey to a masked maniac and supernatural monsters that are far more cunning than anyone expects. Unlike other games on this list, not every character needs to survive Until Dawn for the story to advance. The real challenge is saving as many of the survivors as possible.

Assassin’s Creed Shadows

Developer: Ubisoft Quebec

Release Date: March 20, 2025

Platforms: PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X|S, PC, Nintendo Switch 2

Genre: Action-adventure

The Assassin’s Creed games have almost always had stealth integrated into the gameplay. But Assassin’s Creed Shadows takes stealth to the next level with Noae, a female ninja in feudal Japan whose skills are impeccable. Naoe has no powers, and yet playing as her character almost feels like having superpowers. If Naoe was in The Last of Us, she’d tear the infected apart. She pretty much does the same thing to anyone in this game.

But if you prefer a more hands-on approach to your action, the samurai Yasuke is basically like a walking tank. What he lacks in stealth, Yasuke makes up with sheer power and he can handle multiple enemies at once. Shadows allows players to switch between Naoe and Yasuke, but we suspect most of the gamers go with the former rather than the latter.

Uncharted: Lost Legacy

  • Developer: Naughty Dog
  • Release Date: August 22, 2017
  • Platforms: PlayStation 4, PS5, PC
  • Genre: Action-Adventure

Naughty Dog first dialed in its cinematic, story-focused approach to development with the Uncharted games, and of all of them, Uncharted: Lost Legacy is the purest version of the experience. It’s also the most similar to The Last of Us, thanks to the fact that while you play Lost Legacy as Chloe Fraser (instead of series mainstay Nathan Drake), you spend almost the entire game hanging out with Uncharted 4 semi-villain Nadine Ross. Like The Last of Us 2, Lost Legacy is a linear game with a few large open areas to explore, and through those sections the character development and banter between Chloe and Nadine is a lot like that between Joel and Ellie or Ellie and Dina. Along with stealth as an option for combat, Lost Legacy ends up feeling a bit like a lighter version of The Last of Us.

Alien: Isolation

  • Developer: Creative Assembly
  • Release Date: October 7, 2014
  • Platforms: PlayStation 3, PlayStation 4, Xbox 360, Xbox One, PC, Nintendo Switch, iOS, Android
  • Genre: Survival Horror

The peak of tension in The Last of Us is sneaking around enemies who are actively hunting you, but no game captures the fear and dread of being hunted like Alien: Isolation. Creative Assembly’s take on Ridley Scott’s classic 1979 film is a masterclass in stealth-horror gameplay, pitting you against the Alien franchise’s frightening black killing machine with only your wits and a handful of makeshift tools that might distract or drive the creature away, but never for long. The alien stalks after you throughout much of Alien: Isolation, reacting in believable and frightening ways and forcing you to outsmart it if you want to stay alive. Isolation is at its best when you’re pitted against the alien, but its human and android enemies will test your stealth skills as well, capturing the same tension that make The Last of Us games so intense.

Tomb Raider / Rise of the Tomb Raider / Shadow of the Tomb Raider

  • Developer: Crystal Dynamics
  • Release Date: March 5, 2013 / November 10, 2015 / September 14, 2018
  • Platforms: PlayStation 3, PlayStation 4, Xbox 360, Xbox One, PC
  • Genre: Action-Adventure

The rebooted Tomb Raider series that began in 2013 expands on the essential elements that defined the franchise, while emphasizing stealth, crafting, and hunting–a lot of the same kinds of gameplay that define The Last of Us. Across all three games, protagonist Lara Croft has to use her survival skills to overcome hordes of enemies, keeping herself hidden so she can lay traps and execute ambushes. Tomb Raider carries very similar combat and shooting mechanics to what you’ll see in The Last of Us alongside its stealth, and throws in some Uncharted-style environmental traversal for good measure, finding a middle ground between both of Naughty Dog’s storied franchises.

Resident Evil 2

  • Developer: Capcom
  • Release Date: January 25, 2019
  • Platforms: PlayStation 4, PS5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X|S, PC, Nintendo Switch
  • Genre: Survival Horror

Capcom’s remake of its survival-horror classic, Resident Evil 2, is a phenomenal modernization of the gameplay elements that helped define the genre, and which would eventually influence The Last of Us. RE2 picks up with the Midwestern town of Raccoon City in the throes of an exploding zombie outbreak, with unlikely heroes Leon Kennedy and Claire Redfield fighting for their lives as the apocalypse engulfs the town. There’s a direct line to draw from the dark and spooky environs of the Raccoon City Police Station, filled with the hungry undead, and the ruined structures of The Last of Us, and while Resident Evil 2 is far from a stealthy game–it’s mostly running, shooting, and freaking out–it trades in a lot of the same panic and dread that make The Last of Us so powerful.

The Evil Within 2

  • Developer: Tango Gameworks
  • Release Date: October 13, 2017
  • Platforms: PlayStation 4, Xbox One, PC
  • Genre: Survival Horror

The Evil Within looked to go back to the roots of survival-horror games, conjuring something of a concoction of Resident Evil 2 and Resident Evil 4. The results were mixed, but developer Tango Gameworks absolutely hit the mark with its follow up. The Evil Within 2 leans into a supernatural story and some well-worn but terrifying horror tropes, in contrast to The Last of Us, but plays in a similar way, emphasizing using stealth to sneak around and take down tough enemies. Where The Evil Within 2 stands apart, aside from its storytelling, is with its open suburban landscapes, often-huge monsters, and intense, out-there boss fights. There are a lot of similarities in how the two games approach their gameplay, but if you want a straight-on horror story full of gore and terrors, The Evil Within 2 will scratch that itch.

God Of War / God Of War: Ragnarok

  • Developer: Sony Santa Monica
  • Release Date: April 20, 2018 / November 9, 2022
  • Platforms: PlayStation 4, PS5, PC
  • Genre: Action-Adventure

The success of Naughty Dog’s cinematic approach to games, with a heavy focus on putting characters together and letting them talk to one another to bring players into the story, rubbed off on the rest of Sony’s first-party studios. With the reboot of God of War, Sony Santa Monica pulls a lot of the same tricks. Like The Last of Us, God of War is another “dad” game, where you play the father figure and spend all your time with a child, developing a relationship through a road-tripping adventure. God of War brings more action-focused gameplay, but its focus on story and excellent character development make for an emotionally deep experience that goes a lot further than just slicing up draugr and trolls. The story continues in God of War: Ragnarok, expanding on the relationships between God of War’s characters even further.

Alan Wake / Alan Wake 2

  • Developer: Remedy Entertainment
  • Release Date: May 14, 2010 / October 27, 2023
  • Platforms: PlayStation 4, PS5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X|S, PC
  • Genre: Action-Adventure

Remedy Entertainment made more of a supernatural thriller than a survival-horror game with the first Alan Wake, but with the follow-up 10 years later, it fully leaned into the horror aspects of the premise. The Alan Wake games are a great deal weirder than The Last of Us but are similarly dedicated to using the medium to tell a particular story. In the Alan Wake games, it’s the tale of a supernatural entity using its powers to free itself and wreak havoc on the world, using a story spun by a novelist as the weapon by which it rewrites reality itself. Third-person shooter mechanics and dark, frightening environs evoke some of the same feelings and frights as The Last of Us games, but it’s the fascinating, highly personal stories told in the Alan Wake games and their focus on characters that will keep you interested across both titles.

A Plague Tale: Innocence / A Plague Tale: Requiem

  • Developer: Asobo Studio
  • Release Date: May 14, 2019 / October 18, 2022
  • Platforms: PlayStation 4, PS5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X|S, PC
  • Genre: Action-Adventure Stealth

Especially in recent years, games have gotten better at telling stories that build deep relationships between the player, the player character, and AI companions. At the center of A Plague Tale: Innocence is that kind of relationship. You play as Amicia as she tries to escape a deadly plague of rats and the French Inquisition with her five-year-old brother Hugo. Stealth is the main focus of the Plague Tale games, as is carefully manipulating a flow of hundreds of deadly rats to clear paths or overwhelm and kill enemies. The Plague Tale games nail a sense of disempowered helplessness, where everything around you is dangerous, but it’s the focus on the relationship between Amicia and Hugo that really makes the story compelling.

Dead Space

  • Developer: Visceral Games / Motive Studio (remake)
  • Release Date: October 13, 2008 / January 27, 2023 (remake)
  • Platforms: PlayStation 3, PS5, Xbox 360, Xbox Series X|S, PC
  • Genre: Survival Horror

As settings go, you can’t really get further away from The Last of Us than Dead Space, which takes place hundreds of years in the future and on a giant mining spaceship, as opposed to a ruined contemporary America. In terms of vibes, though, you get a lot of the same crap-your-pants panic as formerly human terrors haul ass out of the shadows, bent on ripping you apart. In Dead Space, these are necromorphs, twisted monsters that used to be the crew of the Ishimura, now reformed into little more than sharp bones and sharper teeth. They also can’t be killed by any normal means, instead requiring you to shear off their limbs using futuristic mining gear in order to render them immobile. The more recent remake of Dead Space amps up the visuals and some of the storytelling of the original, while maintaining the atmosphere and intensity that has made Dead Space into a modern horror classic.

SOMA

  • Developer: Frictional Games
  • Release Date: September 22, 2015
  • Platforms: PlayStation 4, Xbox One, PC
  • Genre: Survival Horror

SOMA comes from developer Frictional Games, which had a major impact on horror gaming with Amnesia: The Dark Descent and its gameplay that forces players to run and hide from its monsters, rather than fight them. That same approach persists in SOMA, a sci-fi story set in a half-destroyed facility at the bottom of the ocean. Frictional does a phenomenal job creating an oppressive and haunting atmosphere in its apocalyptic setting, but you’ll be just as drawn to understanding the story taking place in SOMA and what’s happened to the survivors in the facility as to the game’s more horrific moments. SOMA’s story is its most exciting feature, delving deep into themes of life, death, personhood, and the self.

Telltale’s The Walking Dead

  • Developer: Telltale Games
  • Release Date: April 24, 2012
  • Platforms: PlayStation 3, PS4, PS5, Xbox 360, Xbox One, Xbox Series X|S, PC, Nintendo Switch, Android, iOS
  • Genre: Adventure

When it comes to serious zombie games with affecting stories, Telltale’s The Walking Dead set the standard. The episodic game is set in the universe of Robert Kirkman’s comic series of the same name but tells its own story about a man, Lee, and Clementine, a young girl he finds and cares for as the zombie apocalypse kicks off in full force. The relationship between Lee and Clementine is at the center of The Walking Dead’s story, and choices players make shapes who Clementine grows to become over the course of not just one game, but four total “seasons.” Emotional, tragic, frightening, and intense, The Walking Dead doesn’t have the gameplay complexity of The Last of Us but matches it in storytelling step for step.

Tom Clancy’s The Division / The Division 2

  • Developer: Massive Entertainment
  • Release Date: March 8, 2016 / March 15, 2019
  • Platforms: PlayStation 4, Xbox One, PC
  • Genre: Action RPG

If you want more of the type of third-person cover-shooting mechanics at the heart of The Last of Us, The Division games can provide. Massive’s live games are open-world RPGs as opposed to linear, story-driven games, but they share some mechanical similarities as you fight through ruined urban locations in the wake of a vicious pandemic that has destroyed much of the country. Instead of makeshift shivs and clubs, though, you’ll use all manner of firearms and a host of gadgets like drones in combat to fight various factions trying to take power in a fallen New York and Washington D.C.

Days Gone

  • Developer: Bend Studio
  • Release Date: April 26, 2019
  • Platforms: PlayStation 4, PS5, PC
  • Genre: Action-Adventure

Like The Last of Us, Days Gone also imagines a post-apocalyptic world overrun by humans who’ve been transformed into unthinking cannibalistic monsters. The approach here is different, though–Days Gone gives you a motorcycle to manage and releases you into an open world to explore. Hordes of “freakers” swarm across the Oregon countryside, but the open-ended nature of gameplay in Days Gone means that you don’t just fight the infected; you can also draw them toward other enemies to use as weapons. A big focus on characters and an emotional story mean that Days Gone scratches a similar itch if you’re looking for an affecting look at the end of the world.

This War of Mine

  • Developer: 11 bit Studios
  • Release Date: November 14, 2014
  • Platforms: PlayStation 4, PS5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X|S, Nintendo Switch, iOS, Android, PC
  • Genre: Survival

Side-scrolling strategy game This War of Mine is known for being intense and grueling to try to capture the experience of eking out life in a warzone. You control a group of survivors hiding in a house while war rages outside. Trapped by snipers during the day, you spend your hours crafting tools, cooking food, and tending to your people. Nightfall offers a chance to scavenge for supplies in the dangerous surrounding areas. This War of Mine asks you what you’re willing to do to survive, especially as you meet other people along the way. It’s a dark and difficult experience that captures something few games ever attempt.

State of Decay 2

  • Developer: Undead Labs
  • Release Date: May 22, 2018
  • Platforms: Xbox One, PC
  • Genre: Survival

Facing the zombie apocalypse is a little easier when you’ve got friends. State of Decay 2 puts you in the middle of a world overrun by the undead, with the goal of establishing a settlement and finding other survivors. Permadeath means if your characters are killed, they stay dead, requiring you to do your best to keep them healthy and uninfected–if you don’t, you’ll lose their unique attributes and abilities. State of Decay 2 also lets you work together with other players in cooperative mode, allowing you to work together as you strike out into the open world in search of salvage and survivors. If you have a Xbox Game Pass subscription, you can find it there.

Enslaved: Odyssey to the West

  • Developer: Ninja Theory
  • Release Date: October 5, 2010
  • Platforms: PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, PC
  • Genre: Action-adventure

One of the things that makes The Last of Us so powerful is the relationship that develops between protagonist Joel and his charge Ellie during their trip across the country. Enslaved: Odyssey to the West has something of a similar premise, although its characters’ relationship starts in a very different place. Set in a far-flung future after a global war, Enslaved sees protagonist Monkey thrown together with a young woman named Trip, who uses a “slave headband” to force him to help her. If Trip dies, the headband will kill Monkey. With no choice but to work together, the relationship between the two develops in some interesting and unexpected ways.