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Best Games Like Diablo: Action RPGs and Looters Worth Playing in 2026

Best Games Like Diablo: Action RPGs and Looters Worth Playing in 2026

By Scott Gill18 min read
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You finished the Diablo 4 campaign. You've run the same Nightmare Dungeons a hundred times. The seasonal grind has lost its pull and you're sitting there wondering what the hell to play next. You're not alone, because "games like Diablo" is one of the most searched gaming queries on the internet, and for good reason. The ARPG genre has exploded over the last few years, and there are legitimately great options out there that scratch the exact same itch, some of them arguably better than Diablo itself.

This list covers 15 action RPGs and looters that deliver on the core Diablo fantasy: kill monsters, get loot, build your character, repeat until 3 AM. We've included the big names and a few you probably haven't heard of. Every game has platform availability listed because nothing is more annoying than getting hyped about a game only to find out it's not on your system.


Quick Answer: What's the Best Diablo Alternative Right Now?

If you want the deepest ARPG ever made: Path of Exile 2 is the answer. Still in early access but already the most ambitious action RPG on the market. It's free-to-play when it hits 1.0 later this year. Available on PC, PS5, and Xbox Series X|S.

If you want something polished and accessible right now: Diablo III: Eternal Collection is still fantastic and available on literally everything including Switch. The gameplay loop is tight, the classes are fun, and it runs like butter.

If you want a modern alternative with great combat: Hades II flips the formula with roguelike structure, but the moment-to-moment gameplay is some of the best in the genre. Available on PC and Switch.


The Best Games Like Diablo in 2026

1. Path of Exile 2

Developer Grinding Gear Games
Release Early Access Dec 2024 (1.0 targeting late 2026)
Price Paid Early Access / Free-to-Play at 1.0
Available On PC, PS5, Xbox Series X

The spiritual successor to Diablo II that some would argue surpassed its inspiration. Path of Exile 2 takes everything that made the first game a cult phenomenon and rebuilds it from the ground up with a new engine, new campaign, and six acts of content. The passive skill tree is still absolutely massive, the itemization goes deeper than any ARPG on the market, and the boss fights are genuinely challenging.

The catch? It's still in early access. Grinding Gear Games is targeting a full 1.0 release by the end of 2026, at which point it goes free-to-play. If you're willing to deal with balance patches and incomplete content, the early access is already worth jumping into. If you'd rather wait for the finished product, keep this one on your watchlist because it's going to be a big deal.

Fair warning: the learning curve is steep. This is not a "pick up and play" game. But if you're the type of person who spends hours theory-crafting builds on a wiki, Path of Exile 2 will consume your life in the best way possible.


2. Diablo IV

Developer Blizzard Entertainment
Release 2023
Metacritic 90
Available On PS5, PS4, Xbox Series X

Yeah, I'm recommending a Diablo game on a "games like Diablo" list. Here's why: if you bounced off Diablo 4 at launch, it's gotten significantly better. Blizzard has been steadily adding content, rebalancing classes, and the seasonal structure has improved a lot since the rocky Season 1. The Vessel of Hatred expansion added a new class (the Spiritborn) and a co-op dungeon that's actually fun.

The open world still has that MMO-lite feeling where you'll randomly team up with strangers for world bosses, then go right back to grinding with your group. Couch co-op is available on consoles (no local co-op on PC, which is still annoying). And the Lord of Hatred expansion drops April 2026 with more endgame content.

If you've been away since launch, it's worth another look. The core combat was always great, and the surrounding systems have caught up.


3. Grim Dawn

Developer Crate Entertainment
Release 2016
Metacritic 83
Available On PC, Xbox (One/Series X

Grim Dawn is the quiet king of the ARPG genre. Built by former Titan Quest developers, it mixes Lovecraftian horror with dark fantasy in a way that feels genuinely unique. The dual-class system lets you combine any two of its eight masteries, creating hundreds of viable build combinations. Want to be a Warder (Soldier + Shaman) who tanks everything? Or a Spellbreaker (Arcanist + Nightblade) who dashes through enemies? You can do that.

The two expansions, Ashes of Malmouth and Forgotten Gods, add massive amounts of content including new classes, areas, and an endless dungeon mode called the Shattered Realm. The modding community is active too, with total conversion mods that basically turn it into a new game.

The only downside is platform availability. It's on PC and Xbox but there's no PlayStation port (Crate has said Sony never responded to their inquiries), and Switch can't handle it. If you're on PC or Xbox though, this is one of the best ARPGs money can buy. It goes on sale frequently for under $10.


4. Hades II

Developer Supergiant Games
Release September 2025
Metacritic 93 (original Hades)
Available On PC, Switch, Switch 2

Hades II isn't a traditional isometric ARPG, but the gameplay loop is absolutely in the same wheelhouse. You're fighting through procedurally arranged rooms, collecting power-ups, building synergies between abilities, and dying over and over while getting slightly stronger each time. The roguelike structure means every run feels different, and the combat is some of the tightest, most responsive action in any game period.

Supergiant knocked it out of the park again with the sequel. New protagonist Melinoe plays differently from Zagreus, the magic system adds a whole new layer to builds, and the story is just as compelling. If you loved the first Hades, this is an easy recommendation.

It's currently on PC and Nintendo Switch (including Switch 2). PS5 and Xbox versions haven't been confirmed yet, though Supergiant has said their "current focus" is on PC and Nintendo platforms. If you're on PlayStation or Xbox, you might want to keep an eye on this one for a future announcement, but no guarantees.


5. Last Epoch

Developer Eleventh Hour Games
Release 2024 (1.0)
Metacritic 82
Available On PC only (PS5 announced, no date)

Last Epoch is what happens when a small studio builds an ARPG specifically for the people who obsess over build diversity and crafting systems. Five base classes branch into 15 masteries, each with their own skill trees. And the skills themselves can be customized with their own mini talent trees, meaning two players running the same mastery might play completely differently.

The time-travel storyline takes you across multiple eras, and the endgame Monolith of Fate system gives you branching paths of increasing difficulty. The crafting system is one of the best in the genre, letting you deterministically modify gear instead of relying purely on RNG. That alone makes it worth playing if you're tired of praying to the loot gods.

The big caveat is that it's PC-only right now. A PS5 version was announced alongside an expansion called Orobyss, but there's no release date. No Xbox or Switch versions have been confirmed. If you're a PC gamer looking for a deep ARPG that respects your time while still offering hundreds of hours of content, Last Epoch deserves your attention.


6. Titan Quest Anniversary Edition

Developer Iron Lore Entertainment
Release 2006 (Anniversary Ed. 2016)
Metacritic 77
Available On PC, Xbox (One/Series X

Titan Quest is one of the OG Diablo clones and it still holds up surprisingly well. The Greek/Egyptian/Asian mythology setting is a refreshing change from the typical dark fantasy, and the mastery system (pick two of nine classes to combine) was ahead of its time. The Anniversary Edition includes all expansions plus quality-of-life improvements that modernize the experience without losing what made it special.

And if you dig this one, Titan Quest 2 is currently in early access on PC with a full release (including PS5 and Xbox Series X|S) planned for late 2026. The sequel has already sold over 300,000 copies in early access and looks like a worthy follow-up.


7. Torchlight II

Developer Runic Games
Release 2012
Metacritic 88
Available On PC, PS4, Xbox One, Switch

Torchlight II is Diablo with the brightness turned up. Colorful art style, four distinct classes, randomized dungeons, and a pet system that lets your animal companion sell junk loot for you while you keep fighting. It's one of those "just one more dungeon" games that eats hours without you realizing it.

The PC version has extensive mod support through Steam Workshop, which adds replayability far beyond what the base game offers. The console ports (PS4, Xbox One, Switch) are solid but don't have mod support. At its price point (usually $5-10 on sale), it's one of the best value ARPGs you can buy. If you played the original Torchlight and skipped this, you missed the better game by a wide margin.


8. Darksiders Genesis

Developer Airship Syndicate
Release 2019
Metacritic 76
Available On PS5, PS4, Xbox Series X

This one flies under the radar. Darksiders Genesis takes the franchise's hack-and-slash combat and puts it in a top-down isometric perspective that feels very Diablo. You play as Strife (guns) and War (big sword) either solo (swapping between them) or in two-player co-op. The combat is satisfying, the level design has more platforming and puzzle elements than a typical ARPG, and the co-op is genuinely well done.

It's not as deep as Grim Dawn or Path of Exile when it comes to loot and builds. Think of it more as a focused action game with Diablo-style camera and combat rather than a full ARPG. But if you want something you can finish in 12-15 hours that scratches the itch without demanding hundreds of hours, Genesis delivers.


9. Lost Ark

Developer Smilegate RPG
Release 2022 (Western)
Price Free-to-Play
Available On PC only

Lost Ark is what happens when you combine a Diablo-style isometric ARPG with an MMO. The combat is flashy and feels great, each class has a distinct playstyle, and the endgame raid content is legitimately impressive. The boss fights in this game are some of the best in the ARPG genre, full stop.

But here's the honest take: the monetization is aggressive. There's a real money auction house and pay-to-progress elements that will bother some players. The player base has also declined significantly from its massive 2022 launch, though it's still active enough to find groups. If you can stomach the F2P model and you're on PC, the core gameplay is excellent. Just go in with your eyes open about the business model.


10. Diablo III: Eternal Collection

Developer Blizzard Entertainment
Release 2012 (Eternal Collection 2017)
Metacritic 88
Available On PC, PS5/PS4, Xbox Series X

Diablo III had a rough launch. The auction house, the always-online requirement, the difficulty balance, it was a mess. But Blizzard fixed it. The Reaper of Souls expansion and the loot overhaul transformed it into one of the most satisfying ARPGs ever made. The Eternal Collection bundles everything together and it's available on every platform including Switch, which is arguably the best portable ARPG experience you can get.

The Adventure Mode with Rifts and Greater Rifts is still a fantastic endgame loop. Set bonuses that fundamentally change how a class plays, a difficulty curve that scales smoothly from casual to insane, and seasonal content that gives you reasons to start fresh. If you wrote off Diablo III years ago, it deserves a second chance. And on Switch, being able to run Rifts on the couch or on a plane is hard to beat.


11. Warhammer 40,000: Inquisitor - Martyr

Developer NeocoreGames
Release 2018
Metacritic 64
Available On PC, PS5, PS4, Xbox Series X

This one is for the 40K fans. Inquisitor Martyr puts the Diablo formula in the Warhammer 40,000 universe, which means instead of skeletons and demons you're mowing down heretics, chaos cultists, and Nurgle daemons with bolters and power swords. The atmosphere is exactly what you'd expect from 40K: grimdark, violent, and dripping with lore.

The Metacritic score is mediocre but the game has been substantially improved since launch through updates and the Prophecy expansion that added a new class. It's not going to compete with Path of Exile on build depth, but if you love 40K and want an ARPG set in that universe, this is the only real option and it's a decent one. The Ultimate Edition on PS5/Xbox Series includes all the DLC and runs well.


12. Victor Vran Overkill Edition

Developer Haemimont Games
Release 2015
Metacritic 75
Available On PC, PS4, Xbox One, Switch

Victor Vran does something different with the ARPG formula. Instead of picking a class, your playstyle is determined entirely by your weapon loadout. Swap between swords, hammers, rapiers, shotguns, and magic tomes on the fly, and your abilities change with them. It adds a level of flexibility that most ARPGs don't have.

There's also a jump button and dodge roll which makes combat feel more action-oriented than the typical click-and-hold approach. The Overkill Edition includes two wild DLC expansions, one of which is a Motorhead-themed adventure (yes, the band) with guitars as weapons and levels set to their music. It's weird, it's fun, and it's usually dirt cheap on sale. Solid pick for co-op too.


13. Torchlight Infinite

Developer XD Inc.
Release 2023
Price Free-to-Play
Available On PC, iOS, Android

Torchlight Infinite takes the Torchlight formula and turns it into a live-service free-to-play game with seasonal content. The art style is colorful and the classes (called Heroes) each have distinct playstyles with branching talent trees. Cross-platform between PC and mobile means you can grind on your phone during lunch and pick up where you left off on PC at home.

The seasonal model keeps content fresh with new mechanics and hero traits rotating in every few months. Season 11 (Vorax) launched in January 2026. The monetization is mostly cosmetic with a battle pass structure. It's not as deep as Path of Exile and the mobile DNA shows in some of the UI decisions, but for a free ARPG you can play anywhere, it's solid. Just know that it's PC and mobile only. No console versions exist.


14. Undecember

Developer LINE Games
Release 2022
Price Free-to-Play
Available On PC, iOS, Android

Undecember is a classless ARPG that uses a Rune system for character building. Instead of picking a class, you slot Skill Runes and Link Runes to create your build from scratch. Want to make a summoner who also throws fireballs? Go for it. The system gives you a ton of freedom, and the current Season 10 (New Age) brought the biggest balance update to date with over 100 runes rebalanced.

It's free-to-play with cross-platform support between PC and mobile. The monetization has been criticized for being a bit aggressive, particularly around inventory management and convenience features. If you can deal with that (or just play casually), the core gameplay loop is satisfying and the build variety is genuinely impressive for a free game. Like Torchlight Infinite, it's PC and mobile only with no console ports.


15. Hades

Developer Supergiant Games
Release 2020
Metacritic 93
Available On PS5, PS4, Xbox Series X

If you haven't played the original Hades yet, do that before jumping into the sequel. It won Game of the Year from a dozen outlets for a reason. The roguelike structure means you're dying and restarting constantly, but each run gives you new story bits, new weapon upgrades, and new ability combinations. The Greek mythology setting is perfect for this kind of game, and the voice acting and character writing are phenomenal.

The boon system from the Olympian gods creates build diversity that rivals dedicated ARPGs. Get Ares' blade rift combined with Artemis' crit chance and Hermes' speed? You're an untouchable buzzsaw. Every run feels different, and the "one more run" pull is as strong as any ARPG's "one more dungeon" loop. Available on literally everything, usually on sale for $10-15. No excuses.


What to Watch: Upcoming Diablo-Like Games

A couple of ARPGs worth keeping on your radar for 2026 and beyond:

Titan Quest 2 is in early access on PC right now and already looking strong with over 300,000 copies sold in its first three days. The full 1.0 release, including PS5 and Xbox Series X|S versions, is targeting late 2026. If you're a fan of the original Titan Quest or mythology-themed ARPGs, this one has potential.

Path of Exile 2 at 1.0 will be free-to-play and represent the biggest shake-up in the ARPG genre in years. Grinding Gear Games is targeting a full release by end of 2026, though delays are possible.


Platform Availability at a Glance

Here's where you can play each game. Console availability matters when you're picking your next ARPG, and some of these are frustratingly limited to certain platforms.

Game PC PS5/PS4 Xbox Switch Free?
Path of Exile 2 Yes PS5 Series X S No
Diablo IV Yes PS5/PS4 Yes No No
Grim Dawn Yes No Yes No No
Hades II Yes No No Yes No
Last Epoch Yes Announced No No No
Titan Quest AE Yes PS4 Yes Yes No
Torchlight II Yes PS4 Xbox One Yes No
Darksiders Genesis Yes PS5/PS4 Yes Yes No
Lost Ark Yes No No No Yes
Diablo III Yes PS5/PS4 Yes Yes No
WH40K Inquisitor Yes PS5/PS4 Yes No No
Victor Vran Yes PS4 Xbox One Yes No
Torchlight Infinite Yes No No No Yes
Undecember Yes No No No Yes
Hades Yes PS5/PS4 Yes Yes No

Best for PC gamers: You get access to everything. Path of Exile 2, Last Epoch, Grim Dawn, Lost Ark, and the free-to-play options are all here.

Best for PlayStation: Diablo III and Diablo IV are your safest bets. Hades is excellent too. Last Epoch PS5 is coming but no date yet.

Best for Xbox: Grim Dawn on Xbox is an underrated pickup. Diablo III, Diablo IV, and Warhammer 40K Inquisitor round out a solid lineup.

Best for Switch: Diablo III Eternal Collection is the best portable ARPG. Hades, Torchlight II, and Titan Quest are also available. And Hades II just launched on Switch and Switch 2.


FAQ: Games Like Diablo

What is the best free game like Diablo?

Path of Exile 2 will be the best free ARPG once it hits 1.0 (currently paid early access). Right now, Lost Ark is the best free option on PC if you can stomach the monetization. Torchlight Infinite and Undecember are decent free alternatives available on both PC and mobile.

What is the best game like Diablo on Nintendo Switch?

Diablo III: Eternal Collection is the best ARPG on Switch. It runs great, supports local co-op, and the complete package with all expansions is regularly on sale. Hades and Hades II are close seconds if you're open to roguelike structure.

Is Path of Exile 2 better than Diablo 4?

They're different experiences. Path of Exile 2 has deeper character building, more complex itemization, and a steeper learning curve. Diablo 4 has smoother moment-to-moment combat, better production values, and is more accessible. If you want depth and theory-crafting, go PoE2. If you want something you can jump into and enjoy immediately, go Diablo 4.

What is the best offline ARPG like Diablo?

Grim Dawn is the best offline-capable ARPG. It can be played entirely offline with no internet requirement, has mod support, and offers hundreds of hours of content. Titan Quest Anniversary Edition and Torchlight II also support offline play.

What ARPG has the best co-op?

Diablo III still has the smoothest co-op experience with up to 4 players locally on console. Diablo IV supports couch co-op on consoles and online co-op on all platforms. Darksiders Genesis has excellent 2-player co-op both locally and online.


Track Prices on All of These Games

Half these games go on sale constantly. Diablo III drops to $15 or less during major sales. Grim Dawn hits under $10 regularly. And the free-to-play ones are, well, free.

Instead of checking six different storefronts every week, Vaulted.Games tracks prices across PlayStation, Xbox, Nintendo, and Steam in one place. Add these games to your wishlist, set a price alert, and we'll tell you when they drop. Save your time for actually playing instead of price shopping.

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