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Browse Adventure games before you commit.

Compare Adventure games by player fit, difficulty, update signals, and community sentiment.

Showing 49-60 of 78 games. Page 5 of 7. Adventure games.

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Dimhaven - The Lost Source header art
AdventureIndie

Dimhaven - The Lost Source

Dimhaven - The Lost Source is a first-person, narrative puzzle adventure that pairs exploration with challenging Myst‑like logic puzzles. Reviews praise its atmosphere, camera/photo note system, and well-crafted puzzles, while common criticisms note a relatively short runtime, occasional bugs at launch, and a handful of puzzles some players find overly obtuse. The game is a good fit for experienced puzzle players or fans of the developer’s previous work who don’t mind a compact, tightly focused experience.

Difficulty75/100

PaceDeliberate, exploration-focused

Reviews100 sampled

Best for: Players who enjoy challenging logic and exploration puzzles

Wizzerd Quest 2 header art
AdventureRPG

Wizzerd Quest 2

Wizzerd Quest 2 is a retro first-person RPG that mixes live-action FMV cutscenes, full split-screen co-op, and an open world into a compact 5–10 hour experience. The game leans into handcrafted charm, humor, and deliberate jank: many players praise its style, FMV, and short scope, while others report bugs, uneven combat AI, and slippery platforming. The developer has issued quick patches after launch, and local co-op works best with two controllers but has notable interaction limitations for player two.

Difficulty55/100

PaceExploratory, leisurely

Reviews33 sampled

Best for: Players who enjoy retro first-person RPGs and handmade humor

Pawsome Resort header art
AdventureCasualIndie

Pawsome Resort

Pawsome Resort is a cozy early-access pixel-art pet-resort sim where you manage animal boarding, farm, craft, fish, and befriend villagers. Player reviews praise its charm, relaxing pacing, and variety of animals but frequently note UI quirks, control issues, some bugs, and a need for more content and deeper NPC/story systems. The developer has published launch-day updates and previously ran a demo and festival showcase, and the store page outlines a planned Early Access period with regular updates.

Difficulty35/100

PaceLeisurely, relaxed pace

Reviews55 sampled

Best for: Players looking for a relaxed, cozy pet-care sim

Warhammer 40,000: Darktide - Skitarii Class Deluxe Edition header art
ActionAdventureRPG

Warhammer 40,000: Darktide - Skitarii Class Deluxe Edition

Warhammer 40,000: Darktide - Skitarii Class Deluxe Edition is a paid cosmetic DLC released June 23, 2026 that adds an exclusive Skitarii outfit, a unique servo skull skin, six deluxe weapon skins, and a portrait frame restricted to the Skitarii class. The store listing confirms these cosmetics are class-locked. Player feedback (77 reviews, overall Very Positive) praises the aesthetic but repeatedly reports issues: some buyers said items were not available at character creation but could be applied later at the Hub's Barber-Chirurgeon station, others call out color/forgeworld limitations, missing cosmetics in separate bundles, and complaints about price. There are no update notes or roadmap items in the provided bundle, so ongoing support or fixes are not confirmed here.

Difficulty20/100

PaceLow-intensity

Reviews67 sampled

Best for: Fans of Warhammer 40,000 aesthetics and the Adeptus Mechanicus

Warhammer 40,000: Darktide - Skitarii Class header art
ActionAdventureRPG

Warhammer 40,000: Darktide - Skitarii Class

Warhammer 40,000: Darktide - Skitarii Class is a single-class DLC that adds an Adeptus Mechanicus operative with a non-linear talent tree, servo-skull companion, and a loadout of Arc, Phosphor, Transonic and Galvanic weapons. Players praise weapon sound design, cinematic presentation, and lore fidelity, while some reviews call the class mechanically underwhelming and several report launch queue/login issues after purchase. The DLC is targeted at Darktide players who want a new class fantasy and weapon feel, but be aware of early technical friction and mixed opinions on long-term depth.

Difficulty50/100

PaceAction-focused, cooperative

Reviews82 sampled

Best for: Fans of Warhammer 40,000 lore who want an Adeptus Mechanicus playstyle

Dark Scrolls header art
ActionAdventureIndie

Dark Scrolls

Dark Scrolls is a retro-flavored action platformer with roguelite progression and local/online co-op. Runs are short and fast-paced, with high skill demands, varied characters, unlockables, and mixed reviews citing fun multiplayer and visual/audio polish issues. If you enjoy arcade-style challenge and cooperative chaos, Dark Scrolls can be worth trying now, but expect balance quirks, a learning curve, and some early-launch bugs.

Difficulty65/100

PaceFast-paced

Reviews64 sampled

Best for: Players who enjoy retro arcade and action-platformer difficulty

Voltage High Society header art
ActionAdventureIndie

Voltage High Society

Voltage High Society is a first-person, melee-focused Metroidvania that puts exploration and body-horror cyberpunk atmosphere front and center. You progress by ripping abilities from the island to open new paths; art, level design and exploration are frequently praised, while combat, hit detection, and occasional technical jank are common criticisms. The game left Early Access with a 1.0 release on June 23, 2026 that added the final level and several fixes, but some players still report rough edges.

Difficulty70/100

PaceExploration-forward, aggressive melee

Reviews100 sampled

Best for: Players who enjoy first-person exploration and Metroidvania gating

Cozy Cleaner header art
AdventureCasualSimulation

Cozy Cleaner

Cozy Cleaner is a low-pressure cleaning simulation where you tidy rooms made messy by playful cats. The game emphasizes simple point-and-click cleaning, gentle tool upgrades, and calming audio—most players report a soothing, easy-to-learn loop but note the release is short and has some fiddly interactions. Reviews are largely positive and a small post-launch patch addressed a UI scaling issue; the developer has signaled more levels are planned.

Difficulty20/100

PaceLeisurely, low-pressure pace

Reviews100 sampled

Best for: Players seeking a relaxing, low-pressure experience — Cozy Cleaner fits this well

Tales Beyond The Tomb - No Witnesses header art
ActionAdventureCasual

Tales Beyond The Tomb - No Witnesses

Tales Beyond The Tomb - No Witnesses is a short, cinematic psychological horror episode focused on stealth, exploration, and tense storytelling. The first-person chapter-based experience (50–90 minutes) uses optional microphone detection for immersive stealth moments, multiple playable perspectives, full voice acting, and graphic violence. Player reviews are Very Positive overall, praising atmosphere, gore, and pacing, while common downsides include repetitive similarities to earlier entries, occasional bugs, and lack of official Chinese text. The game is best for solo indie-horror players who want a compact, intense roadside slasher tale rather than deep systems or long playtime.

Difficulty60/100

PaceTense, cinematic

Reviews52 sampled

Best for: Solo players who enjoy short, narrative-driven indie horror

The Adventures of Elliot: The Millennium Tales header art
ActionAdventureRPG

The Adventures of Elliot: The Millennium Tales

The Adventures of Elliot: The Millennium Tales is an HD-2D action RPG that pairs nostalgic exploration with real-time, weapon-switching combat and a companion magic system. The game is praised for its visuals, music, and boss fights, and supports a prologue demo that can carry saves into the full release. Common criticisms from players include repeated map reuse across the four time periods, recycled enemy designs, frustrations with the magicite (item) drop/rarity progression, a number of performance problems at launch (notably FPS drops when the fairy companion appears on some systems), and pricing/value concerns. If you appreciate retro-inspired Zelda-like exploration, tactical positioning in ARPG combat, and HD-2D presentation, this title is worth trying (the demo exists); players sensitive to repetition, poor optimization on specific hardware, or unwilling to wait for discounts may prefer to wait.

Difficulty65/100

PaceDeliberate exploration and combat

Reviews99 sampled

Best for: Fans of HD-2D visuals and classic JRPG aesthetics

Until Then: Afterimages header art
AdventureCasualIndie

Until Then: Afterimages

Until Then: Afterimages is a two-chapter narrative DLC that returns to familiar characters with melancholic, mature stories. Chapter 1 (Homecoming) follows Sofia and Chapter 2 (Sparks) follows Mark; the DLC includes small minigames (tarot, baking), in-game phone apps, and pixel-art presentation. Player reception is largely positive overall but the second chapter and the ambiguous ending are divisive; a number of players report short playtime and occasional performance or rendering issues. Best suited for players who loved the base game and want more character-focused scenes rather than a long canonical continuation.

Difficulty30/100

PaceSlow, reflective

Reviews100 sampled

Best for: Players who enjoyed the Until Then base game and want more character scenes

Prologue: Go Wayback! header art
AdventureIndieSimulation

Prologue: Go Wayback!

Prologue: Go Wayback! is a single-player, open-world survival roguelike that generates a new 64km² wilderness each run. The game emphasizes realistic navigation (map and compass), dynamic weather, and emergent player freedom—no quest markers or scripted path. Player feedback highlights strong atmosphere and unique, meditative exploration runs, but reviewers consistently report major optimization problems, bugs, sparse interactive content, and limited fauna. The studio published a final update making the game free and announced development has ended, so future feature expansions and official coop are not confirmed.

Difficulty55/100

PaceSlow, exploration-focused

Reviews99 sampled

Best for: Players who enjoy navigation-driven, low-combat survival and exploration