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.
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
Banjo-Kazooie
Celeste
Super Meat Boy
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.
Psychonauts 2
Ori and the Will of the Wisps
Shovel Knight: Treasure Trove
Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze
A Hat in Time
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.