Games Like Kingdom Hearts: Action RPGs With Heart and Chaos
The best games like Kingdom Hearts — action RPGs that blend flashy combat, melodramatic storytelling, and weird crossover energy.
Kingdom Hearts shouldn't work. A teenager with a giant key fights darkness across Disney worlds alongside Donald Duck and Goofy. Add Final Fantasy characters. Add time travel. Add a plot so convoluted that the actual recap videos are 45 minutes long. On paper, this is the worst idea ever pitched. In practice, somehow, it's one of the most beloved action RPG franchises in gaming.
What makes Kingdom Hearts work is the sincerity. Nomura and his team believed in this thing so hard that the melodrama becomes earnest. The flashy combat with air combos and finishers and reaction commands genuinely feels good. And the world-hopping structure keeps the pacing fresh because you're always arriving somewhere new.
Finding games like Kingdom Hearts means hunting for action RPGs that nail at least two of those three pillars: flashy real-time combat, emotional storytelling without irony, and variety in the journey.
The closest direct matches
Final Fantasy VII Remake and FFVII Rebirth are basically Kingdom Hearts combat refined. Square Enix clearly learned from the KH series — the real-time action layered over strategic ATB charge management hits the same rhythm as KH's reaction commands. Plus the same melodramatic sincerity. Cloud crying at the sky is peak Kingdom Hearts energy.
Final Fantasy XVI leans even further into the action side. Clive's combat is essentially what KH3's combat wanted to be — fluid, stylish, with big satisfying impact on every hit. Less party management, more you-alone being a walking apocalypse. Devil May Cry's Ryota Suzuki actually designed the combat, so it's no accident it feels this good.
NieR: Automata has the same "combat feels like a dance, story will make you cry" DNA. The action is Platinum Games, so it's ridiculous in the best way. The story is Yoko Taro, which means it will mess with your head in ways you don't see coming. Different aesthetic from Disney, same emotional payoff.
When you want the Disney-style world variety
This is the hardest thing to replicate because Kingdom Hearts literally has Disney. Nothing else has that specific license. But there are games that capture the episodic world-hopping structure with different flavors.
Tales of Arise is the Tales series at its current peak. Real-time combat with combos and arte management, a journey through distinct zones with their own character and atmosphere, a party that actually feels like friends by the end. If you want JRPG action with personality, the Tales series is Kingdom Hearts' quieter cousin.
Star Ocean The Second Story R is a remake of a classic that somehow made the original even better. The combat, the exploration across multiple planets, the cast chemistry — all of it lines up with the KH vibe. Plus the remake is genuinely gorgeous and modern-feeling.
Ys IX Monstrum Nox runs the Kingdom Hearts combat formula through the Ys engine, which means even faster, even more satisfying. Adol has been doing this for 40 years and the series has gotten consistently better. Ys IX is a great entry point.
The action-focused options
If what you love about Kingdom Hearts is specifically the combat — the air combos, the flashy finishers, the feel of landing hits — there's a whole genre dedicated to that.
Bayonetta 3 goes further than KH ever could with action complexity. Same Platinum Games studio, same commitment to making the player look cool while they demolish everything on screen. The story is bonkers in a different way (witch vs angels vs dimension-hopping shenanigans), but the sincerity-above-self-awareness energy is there.
Devil May Cry 5 is the other peak of character action games. Three different playstyles, absurd combat depth, a story that takes itself seriously enough to be fun. Dante's "weapon master" style and Nero's variable devil breakers hit KH-style variety within a more focused combat system.
Astral Chain from Platinum Games lets you control two characters at once, creating combo possibilities that feel genuinely fresh. The world is a weird future city with monsters from another dimension, which is closer to KH's tonal weirdness than most action games get.
The emotional-story-first picks
If what hooks you is specifically the "I was not prepared to cry at this" feeling:
Persona 5 Royal doesn't have KH's action combat, but it has the same sincere melodrama about young people saving the world from adults who refuse to see them clearly. The games like Persona 5 post covers this whole space.
Xenoblade Chronicles 3 delivers enormous, meandering stories about found families, the nature of life, and extremely attractive young people in impractical outfits saving worlds. If you've ever cried at a KH ending, Xenoblade 3 will get you.
13 Sentinels: Aegis Rim is pure narrative overload with thirteen interlocking protagonists and a timeline that fractures and rebuilds across hours. The combat is minimal but the story is KH-level convoluted in the most satisfying way.
The deep cut
Scarlet Nexus had the budget and the ambition to be the next Kingdom Hearts. It didn't quite get there, but what's here is genuinely good. Action-heavy combat with psychokinetic powers, anime style, dual-protagonist storyline. If you want something that was explicitly designed to sit in the KH-adjacent space, this is it.
Kena: Bridge of Spirits from Ember Lab is the indie version. Smaller scope, Pixar-quality visuals, sincere emotional storytelling, combat that feels good without overcomplicating. If KH's charm is what you're after more than its scope, Kena delivers.
What we're up to at Choost
We're not making a 100-hour action RPG anytime soon — the scope alone would bury a solo operation. But the games like Slay the Spire and our own Granny's Gambit share some DNA with the KH "find the satisfying core mechanic and explore it hard" approach, just in a much smaller package.
Starting points
If you've never touched Kingdom Hearts but want to try it after reading about all this, Kingdom Hearts 1.5 + 2.5 ReMIX on Steam is the entry point. Start with KH1, skip around the Birth By Sleep prequel if you want to understand KH3 better, and then prepare for a series that gets more unhinged and more sincere the longer you play.
Or if you want KH's energy with a slightly tighter story, start with FFVII Rebirth. Same developer, same combat philosophy, significantly less narrative spaghetti.