Vermintide 2 is a co-op-focused game that is played from a first-person perspective. It’s as odd as one can expect from a Persona game, this time going for massive spectacle over…well, the usual weird spectacle that Persona brings. Gone is taking turns, switching the focus to bigger battles against multiple enemies. Rather than the traditional Persona gameplay, Strikers instead blends Dynasty Warriors-esque combat scenarios into the mix. Instead, Strikers is a spin-off that still keeps its hand in with the gameplay that bore it. Raise your hand if you thought this sounded like a football tie-in to the popular JRPG series. It may be one of the oldest games on this list, but it still holds up to this day. The game offers four classes to play, and each class contains skill trees, allowing for more variants on character builds as players hack and loot their way through the procedurally generated dungeons. Initially planned as an MMORPG, Torchlight II became both single and multiplayer instead, to the delight of many. While roguelikes are more common nowadays, they were few and far between in 2012.
There are a lot of extraneous pickups to wade through, but when players figure out how to refine their build, Code Vein feels as over the top as an episode of Dragon Ball Z in terms of combat.Īnother top-down action RPG, Torchlight II changes the formula up by being randomly generated. The plot is a little too wacky to break down here, but Code Vein does offer some of the brightest and best combat this side of a Dark Souls system. It was only inevitable that we’d get “Soulslike but anime,” with Bandai Namco leading the small cavalry charge. There’s been a lot of variants on the Souls formula, from grim to sci-fi, so it made sense that there would be an attempt on every angle. Here are our top picks for the best PS4 action RPGs that you should pick up as soon as possible. The action side brings frenetic combat, exhilarating action, and a sense of excitement that is lacking from turn-based combat. The RPG side still brings character leveling, customizable equipment, and depth otherwise seen in the likes of, say, Devil May Cry. Combining tenets of both, the ARPG can be seen as a progression of the slower-paced genre. Thankfully, this is where the hybrid action RPG comes in.
Likewise, the hack and slash genre can be great for stress relief, but they may lack the depth of character progression that many gamers seek. Role-playing games can be an absolute timesink.