Summary
- Blue Fire offers divisive gameplay at first but becomes a blast once leveled up for fans of 3D platforming.
- Minit provides a brief but nostalgic experience with a curse that causes the character to die every 60 seconds.
- Hyper Light Drifter modernizes retro adventure titles like Zelda, offering fluid combat, even though it falls short in some comparisons.
The Legend of Zelda is one of Nintendo’s most prestigious flagship properties. While it’s the portly plumber who really blows the doors off in terms of sales and marketability, the Zelda series has established itself as a high bar of quality with almost every one of its 21 mainline releases to date launching to widespread critical acclaim.
![Split image of The Legend Of Zelda A Link To The Past, Breath Of The Wild, and Ocarina Of Time](https://esportvoice.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/Best-Final-Lines-In-Zelda-Games.jpg)
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The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time is, in fact, still considered by many to be one of the best games of all time. So, it comes as no surprise that third-party developers would want to emulate that success and design their games around the time-tested formula. It’s fair to say the Zelda series has consistently reinvented itself in its nearly four-decade lifespan, so all iterations will be considered in considering the best Zelda-like games currently playable on the Xbox Series.
8
Blue Fire
Gravity Defying Dungeons
![Blue Fire Tag Page Cover Art](https://esportvoice.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/blue-fire-tag-cover.jpg)
Blue Fire is a tricky recommendation because it was divisive with critics, and it does make a poor first impression. Once players start to level up their protagonist, gaining some cooler traversal and combat abilities, the game is a blast right up to the end, especially for fans of 3D platforming.
The game is more aesthetically reminiscent of the Zelda series than the actual gameplay mechanics. Those thematic touches do extend to the variety of enemy types and some puzzle-based, chest-filled dungeons with towering bosses waiting at the center, so there are plenty of familiar tropes for fans of the series.
7
Minit
Time-Looping Exploration
![MINIT Tag Page Cover Art](https://esportvoice.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/mixcollage-12-dec-2024-05-32-pm-9599.jpg)
- Released
-
April 3, 2018
- OpenCritic Rating
-
Strong
Minit is a game that wears its influence on its sleeve, and that influence is retro Zelda games like the NES original. The hook to Minit is that the adventurer is burdened with a cursed sword that kills them every 60 seconds in real-time. Once that time elapses, progress will be saved but the adventurer will return to the nearest bed they’ve discovered and have to begin their loop again.
This gives a roguelike feel to the experience, consisting of a series of environmental puzzles that must be solved in a minute to advance to the next area. Followed by exploration to secure the next spawn point. It’s a brief adventure, well worth undertaking for any fans of classic Zelda.
6
Hyper Light Drifter
Modernizing The Classics
![Hyper Light Drifter Tag Page Cover Art](https://esportvoice.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/mixcollage-19-nov-2024-01-25-pm-3915.jpg)
- Released
-
March 31, 2016
- Developer(s)
-
Heart Machine
- OpenCritic Rating
-
Mighty
- Publisher(s)
-
Heart Machine
Hyper Light Drifter sets out to modernize those retro top-down adventure titles like the original The Legend of Zelda — and it largely succeeds in this goal. It adds a pace and flair that energizes the now-dated game design to make it more befitting of current standards, and at its peak, combat is very fluid and satisfying.
The problem is, it kind of falls between delivering that nostalgic hit and matching the same kind of thrill as modern action roguelikes such as Hades. Hyper Light Drifter doesn’t quite live up to either of those comparisons, making it another recommendation with caveats, but it definitely has its dedicated fans.
5
Genshin Impact
JRPG Of The Wild
![Genshin Impact Tag Page Cover Art](https://esportvoice.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/1735067722_370_Every-Character-Skin-and-Feature-Confirmed-For-Genshin-Impact-53.jpg)
RPG
Action
Adventure
Gacha
Open-World
- Released
-
September 28, 2020
- OpenCritic Rating
-
Strong
Genshin Impact almost shamelessly borrows from The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild with its world, traversal mechanics, and elemental puzzle solving such as freezing water to walk on ice. But, the free-to-play JRPG does at least make some great use of these mechanics in a way many other successors dropped the ball on.
![collage of 3 non-nintendo developed zelda games](https://esportvoice.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/1738819825_Best-Zelda-Games-Not-Made-By-Nintendo.jpg)
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It has that sense of exploration that made Breath of the Wild such a huge success; players actually want to explore this world and are consistently rewarded for doing so. Genshin Impact also adds its own distinct flourish to the formula with a rich RPG system of classes and unlockable characters that allow players to adapt the play style to suit them.
4
The Plucky Squire
Meta-Retro Nintendo Adventure
![The Plucky Squire Tag Page Cover Art](https://esportvoice.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/1733953470_577_Plucky-Squire-Update-Adding-Game-Changing-New-Feature.jpg)
- Released
-
September 17, 2024
- Developer(s)
-
All Possible Futures
- OpenCritic Rating
-
Strong
The Plucky Squire is a special little game that really toys with its concepts and pays affectionate homage to a number of classic NES titles, one of the most prominent being The Legend of Zelda. The story takes place predominantly within a storybook that is chronicling the tale; rearranging or replacing words in the text to change environments is a key part of puzzle-solving.
The game is continuously shifting the goalposts with Jot, the eponymous squire, being transported outside the bounds of the book into the real world. There are a bunch of competing mechanics tossed into the meta adventure, but the core exploration and top-down sword-swinging combat of Jot will certainly give players that classic Zelda feel.
3
Immortals Fenyx Rising
Exploring The Greek Pantheon
![Immortals Fenyx Rising Tag Page Cover Art](https://esportvoice.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/1738834534_132_Best-PS5-Games-Like-Zelda.jpg)
- Released
-
December 3, 2020
- OpenCritic Rating
-
Strong
Depending on who’s asked, this entry is perhaps interchangeable with Genshin Impact, which is certainly a deeper system but does border on pay-to-progress, so it probably comes down to individual tolerance and restraint. Outside Genshin Impact, though, Immortals Feynx Rising is the most complete Breath of the Wild successor on the Xbox platform.
The similarities are so apparent that it drew criticism from the die-hard Zelda community upon its release, but it has since taken up its place as the best alternative for gamers who don’t own a Nintendo Switch. Everything is here, right down to pretty much the exact same puzzles. There’s nothing to not recommend to Zelda fans, but it is definitely an imitator rather than an innovator.
2
Death’s Door
Haunting Adventure
![Death's Door Tag Page Cover Art](https://esportvoice.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/mixcollage-25-nov-2024-06-06-pm-3741.jpg)
- Released
-
July 20, 2021
- Developer(s)
-
Acid Nerve
- OpenCritic Rating
-
Mighty
Maybe a little bias showing, but Death’s Door is a fantastic action-adventure game easily worth its relatively brief runtime. The design pays homage to The Legend of Zelda series and is perhaps most reminiscent of the DS era of games such as The Legend of Zelda: Spirit Tracks.
Combat and exploration are familiar with a sword, bow, bombs, and hookshot serving as the main tools. However, Death’s Door very much has an identity of its own, set in a beautifully realized gothic world; the player is a reaper tasked with collecting the souls of those who won’t go willingly into death. Death’s Door is full of distinct wit and character and some spectacular boss fights to cap off each act.
1
Tunic
Cunning Like A Fox
![Tunic Tag Page Cover Art](https://esportvoice.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/1734626001_173_The-15-Best-PS-Plus-Games-of-2024.jpg)
- Released
-
March 16, 2022
- Developer(s)
-
Andrew Shouldice
- OpenCritic Rating
-
Mighty
- Publisher(s)
-
Finji
Another indie release that wears its influence on its sleeve, Tunic carves out an experience that is uniquely brilliant in its own right. The core appeal of Tunic is the steep learning curve and the complete lack of hand-holding. It’s the classic Zelda experience with some Soulslike difficulty for modern audiences.
The complete lack of instruction means that figuring out the game is as much a part of gameplay as the actual dungeon crawling and exploration. That can be understandably off-putting to some players, and while online guides will greatly simplify those frustrations, that comes at the cost of some of the wonder and ‘wow’ moments from actually unearthing the secrets. For fans looking for a modern recreation and a truly challenging Zelda experience, Tunic is still the best option on the Xbox Series.
![An image of Link from Skyward Sword HD, in a collage with 4 PS5 games that play like Zelda: Kena: Bridge of Spirits, Horizon Forbidden West, Oceanhorn 2 and God of War Ragnarok.](https://esportvoice.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/1738834541_Best-PS5-Games-Like-Zelda.jpg)
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