Games Like Fallout for Your Next Post-Apocalyptic Obsession
The best games like Fallout — post-apocalyptic open world RPGs, CRPGs with choice-heavy narratives, and wasteland adventures with that same dark humor.
The Fallout series occupies a specific emotional space — post-apocalyptic worldbuilding, dark humor, meaningful player choices, and the freedom to approach problems through diplomacy, stealth, or violence. From the 2D isometric Fallout 1 and 2 through Fallout: New Vegas (often cited as the series peak) to Bethesda's 3D entries, the franchise created a template that other developers have been iterating on for decades.
If you've wandered the Capital Wasteland, the Mojave, and the Commonwealth enough times, here's what else delivers that specific irradiated satisfaction.
The Fallout Franchise
Fallout: New Vegas is the Fallout most fans point to as the series peak. Obsidian's writing, the faction system, the multiple endings, and the Mojave setting combined to create an RPG many consider the best ever made. If you've somehow missed it, this is essential.
Fallout 4 has weaker writing than New Vegas but excellent combat and base-building. The Far Harbor DLC especially shows what Fallout 4 could have been.
Fallout 3 is older but playable, and the Point Lookout DLC remains one of the creepiest Fallout experiences.
Fallout 1 and Fallout 2 are the classic isometric RPGs that started everything. They're demanding, old-school CRPGs but the writing and systems remain excellent.
Fallout 76 has been substantially improved since launch and now offers a functional multiplayer Fallout experience.
The Spiritual Successors
Wasteland 3 from inXile is the post-apocalyptic CRPG from the team that made Fallout 1 possible (literally — Wasteland predates Fallout and inspired it). Turn-based squad combat, choice-heavy narrative, darkly funny world.
Wasteland 2 is its predecessor, similarly excellent.
The Outer Worlds is Obsidian's spiritual successor to New Vegas set in a corporate dystopian space colony. Smaller scope than Fallout but similar dialogue-heavy choices and faction politics.
Encased is an explicit Fallout 1/2 homage with a mysterious dome setting. Rougher than professional releases but ambitious.
ATOM RPG and ATOM RPG: Trudograd are post-Soviet Russian takes on the Fallout formula. More serious tone than Fallout but similarly detailed systems.
The Open World Post-Apocalyptic
Metro 2033 and Metro: Exodus are first-person shooters set in post-nuclear Russia. Atmospheric, scary, and genuinely well-written.
STALKER: Call of Pripyat and the upcoming STALKER 2: Heart of Chernobyl are first-person open world survival shooters set in the Chernobyl exclusion zone. The original STALKER games remain foundational open-world atmospheric horror.
Rage 2 is id Software's post-apocalyptic FPS with vehicular combat and open-world progression.
Mad Max (the 2015 game) captured the film franchise's desert wasteland feel with solid open-world mechanics.
Kenshi is a low-budget but genuinely deep open-world RPG in a post-post-apocalyptic wasteland. The simulation depth and freedom to play any kind of character (slaver, merchant, adventurer, farmer) is impressive.
The CRPG Wastelands
Baldur's Gate 3 isn't post-apocalyptic but delivers choice-heavy CRPG depth that Fallout fans appreciate. Completely different setting.
Disco Elysium isn't post-apocalyptic but has similarly political, philosophical, darkly funny writing. Featured in our story games coverage.
Tyranny from Obsidian puts you on the side of the conquerors rather than the resistance. Moral complexity Fallout fans will appreciate.
Pillars of Eternity and Pillars of Eternity II: Deadfire are fantasy CRPGs but share the deep writing and choice consequences Fallout fans respond to.
Pathfinder: Kingmaker and Pathfinder: Wrath of the Righteous are massive CRPGs with Fallout-style faction politics in fantasy settings.
The Post-Apocalyptic Survivors
The Last of Us Part I and Part II are post-apocalyptic third-person action with strong narratives.
Days Gone has post-apocalyptic open-world with hordes of infected and biker gang politics.
State of Decay 2 is a zombie survival sim where you manage a community and explore procedurally selected regions.
Project Zomboid is top-down zombie survival simulation at hardcore intensity.
7 Days to Die combines open-world survival with base defense against zombie hordes.
The Sci-Fi Wastelands
The Outer Worlds (mentioned above) is the closest Fallout-equivalent experience.
Mass Effect Legendary Edition is more space opera than post-apocalyptic, but the choice-consequence structure Fallout fans love shows up here.
Deus Ex: Mankind Divided isn't post-apocalyptic but shares Fallout's themes of societal collapse and factional conflict.
Cyberpunk 2077 is post-apocalyptic-adjacent (Night City is dystopian rather than literally destroyed) with choice-heavy narratives and deep RPG systems.
Disco Elysium (again, it deserves multiple mentions) captures post-disaster atmospheric writing beautifully.
The Indie Post-Apocalyptic
60 Seconds! is a darkly comic nuclear survival game about looting your home in 60 seconds before a bomb drops.
Sheltered puts you managing a family in a fallout shelter through procedural scenarios.
This War of Mine is about civilian survival during war rather than post-apocalypse, but the moral weight and resource scarcity hit similar notes.
FTL: Faster Than Light is post-apocalyptic-adjacent space exploration with procedural encounters.
Into the Breach has you defending humanity from giant kaiju in tactical combat. Post-apocalyptic adjacent.
Why Fallout Resonates
Fallout works because it combines several things most RPGs do separately. The world-building is dark but funny. The player agency is genuine — you can pursue objectives through multiple methods and your reputation with factions actually matters. The aesthetic (retro-futurism filtered through nuclear devastation) is distinctive. And the quests frequently have no "right" answer — you're making hard choices that different players will approach differently.
No single game replicates all these qualities perfectly. Wasteland 3 matches Fallout for tactical combat and faction politics. The Outer Worlds matches for dialogue and humor. Kenshi matches for emergent simulation. New Vegas itself remains unmatched for the specific combination.
Start with Fallout: New Vegas if you haven't played it (essential). Wasteland 3 for the spiritual successor experience. The Outer Worlds for smaller-scope Fallout-adjacent. Disco Elysium if you want the best writing in gaming. STALKER 2 if you want atmospheric post-apocalyptic FPS. All of them reward the time investment that Fallout players expect.