Best Games that Play Like the Far Cry Series

Best Games that Play Like the Far Cry Series

Summary

  • Rage 2 combines DOOM combat with Far Cry structure, focusing on gameplay and open world design.
  • Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora is closest to a traditional Far Cry game, with a big map, strongholds, and unique weaponry.
  • Dying Light offers purposeful parkour and zombie gameplay, unlike bloated Ubisoft projects, with a focus on sandbox experimentation.

The Far Cry series has been around for over 20 years now. Since its original inception from Crytek, the game has become a flagship series for Ubisoft, which bought the rights to the series in 2006. Since then, Ubisoft has created an entry or two in the series every console generation, and many inspired game developers have taken a crack at the formula, or have taken elements of Far Cry‘s design.

Each of the games in this list will in some way be related to the gameplay, gameplay-fantasy, or mechanics of games from the Far Cry series. Essentially, this means they’re open-world shooters with a reliance on either sandbox elements, stealth elements, or both to vary their gameplay.

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7

Rage 2

DOOM Meets Far Cry

Released

May 19, 2019

OpenCritic Rating

Fair

Developed by Avalanche Studios, and with help from id Software, Rage 2 is an open-world game that blends the combat of DOOM (2016) with the open-world structure of the Far Cry series. The game has many mechanics that are similar to Far Cry 5 and 6 in particular. These include the ability to collect vehicles by returning them to a garage, as well as a map separated into progressing three different storylines (though more linear in Rage 2).

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Forgoing stealth almost entirely, Rage 2 instead gives players a large suite of abilities that allow them to zip through the battlefield, allowing them to take more and more control over the environment.

6

Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora

Most Similar to Far Cry

Released

December 7, 2023

OpenCritic Rating

Fair

This entry is made by Ubisoft, and probably as close as one can possibly get to an original Far Cry game. Taking place in James Cameron’s Avatar franchise, this game plays, feels, and often even looks like a Far Cry game, save for a few minor differences. As a player created Na’vi captured by human forces, players use their leverage as a perceived extinct to assist and unite other clans against human invaders who want to steal the resources found on Pandora.

The gameplay is quite similar to a typical Far Cry game in terms of there being a big map with markers, strongholds to take over, and many different weapons and vehicles to use. However, each of these is translated in a way that commits to the franchise. Vehicles are the many animals of Pandora, and many of the weapons aren’t guns but rather bows and traps.

5

Dying Light

Dead Island Meet Parkour

Released

January 27, 2015

OpenCritic Rating

Fair

Dying Light is a very purposeful game. While many of Ubisoft’s projects can feel bloated with how many mechanics they have or how much content they offer, Dying Light is very much not. Aside from maybe a stingy XP system that makes getting skills in the early-game more difficult, Dying Light is a focused take on a parkour zombie game. There’s a map, markers, and sandbox elements, but each of these are beholden to bolstering either the zombie part of Dying Light, or the parkour part.

There are no vehicles in the base game, because the fastest way to move around the map is to free-run across the rooftops. With so many craftable weapons, parkour moves, and environmental hazards to take advantage of, there is plenty of room for sandbox experimentation.

4

Halo Infinite (Campaign)

Halo’s Open-World Debut

Released

December 8, 2021

OpenCritic Rating

Mighty

The first Halo game to go completely open-world, Halo Infinite marries the seamless vehicle combat and armor abilities of the original trilogy and Halo: Reach with an open-ended structure. The product is a game that plays similarly to Far Cry, but in a way that’s not completely separated from the universe of Halo. It’s reminiscent of Halo 3‘s “Believe” marketing, where a spread-thin UNSC faces dire circumstances, hoping to be saved by some miracle.

As Master Chief, players provide that miracle, swooping in with tanks, warthogs, grappling hooks and an extensive suit of weapons to provide relief for the stranded marines of Zeta Halo. The real standout is the game’s grappling hook, which, when upgraded, turns the game into a first person Spider-Man.

3

Dishonored

First Person Stealth Masterpiece

Systems

This entry is probably the least like Far Cry in terms of its structure, as Dishonored isn’t really an open world game. It has levels, and while they are incredibly dense with things to discover, not all of them can be returned to. But what Dishonored lacks in kilometers of space to traverse, it makes up for in density.

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Dishonored is widely considered an immersive sim game, which means it was designed with sandbox elements in mind. Objectives are laid out, but it is up to players to solve them using their own tools. The creative freedom allotted to players in how to complete these objectives is so varied that it might take multiple playthroughs to see each.

2

Just Cause 3

Most Ridiculous Sandbox

Released

November 30, 2015

Just Cause 3 has easily the most comical sandbox on this list, and is up there with Goat Simulator in terms of goofy sandbox experiences. For those that haven’t played, its gameplay is similar to superhero games like Spider-Man and the Arkham Batman games, despite how it may look.

Players can use grappling hooks, gliders, thrusters, and tether cables to cause utter chaos on the fictional island of Medici, located in the Mediterranean. The game is open-world, and with so many abilities, weapons, and vehicles to use on top of being able to fly, there is a lot of sandbox to dig into.

1

Blood West

Dark Country Open-World

Released

February 10, 2022

Developer(s)

Hyperstrange

OpenCritic Rating

Strong

While it is the only indie game on this list, Blood West is probably also the hardest game on this list. The game is set in an alternate 19th century America ravaged by paranormal creatures, ghosts, and other occult abnormalities. Players take control of a man recently risen from the dead, unable to return to death unless he finds the corrupting force of the world and puts a stop to it. The game is a mix of first-person stealth and action, as players use different weapons and items to clear out the map as they complete certain objectives.

This game plays a lot like Hunt: Showdown, with its clunky firearms and its suffocating stamina system, but is entirely PvE with freaky enemies and buildcrafting using weapons and items with borderline 4th-wall breaking gameplay modifiers.

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