Gooooood morning (afternoon? evening?), all! We're republishing this piece in honour of Groundhog Day. Whether the groundhog saw its shadow or not, we want to celebrate the best games that throw you into an endless time loop. We've also added In Stars and Time and Outer Wilds to the list. Enjoy!
Most video games are either two-dimensional or three-dimensional. Most... but not all. Today, we're celebrating the games that dip their toes into the underappreciated and underexplored fourth dimension: Time.
Unfortunately for us 3D peasants, we are forced to experience time in a linear fashion, going from Tuesday to Wednesday like utter plebs, unable to revisit the salad days of the previous Monday and make sure that we didn't make that terrible joke at the dining table, or spill spaghetti sauce all over our nice new jumper. But hey! At least we play video games, a medium in which nothing is set in stone and everything is save-scummable — and the Time Loop sub-genre exists as a narrative framing device. Hooray!
Now, a bad time loop game — coughTwelveMinutescough — will force the player through tedious repetition and bafflingly specific branches to change the past/present/future, but a good time loop game will always provide forward momentum, constantly twisting and tweaking the loop to intrigue the player and throw unanswered questions at their quizzical face. These are the games we have put in this list — the ones that delight, surprise, shock, and are generally more twisty than headphone cables fresh out of a pocket.
Before we continue any further, please be aware that this article — by its very nature — is going to be a little bit spoilery. Some games aren't revealed to be time loops until 20 minutes in; others save it for an Act Three twist. So, be warned, because you can't go back and un-read this article!
Now, let's get stuck in before we get booted back to the start of this article to try again!
The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask (N64)
The prototypical time loop game. Of course it's on here. Majora's Mask shoves our boy Link in a forever-repeating three-day cycle until he can figure out how to stop the moon from crashing into Earth. You'd think that stopping Ganon was the highest-stakes plot for a Zelda game, but no — this self-contained adventure is one of the darkest, most heartbreaking Zeldas there is.
The Sexy Brutale (Switch eShop)
The Sexy Brutale is not as sexy as it sounds. It's gorgeous, unusual, and absolutely chocka with murders, all of which you will have to solve in (you guessed it) a time loop.
Observation and a strong understanding of the time-sensitive patterns at each stage of the game are all beneficial to progression. You have to watch characters through keyholes, slits in wardrobes, and even figure out their patterns from non-obvious clues, in order to save each one from a grisly murder... and unlock the next one. Although it runs a little jankily on Switch, it's a must-play for time loop fans.
Loop Hero (Switch eShop)
Many time loop games are narrative-based — figure out why you're in the time loop in the first place, fix things, repeat — but Loop Hero is a mechanical loop, too. Each time you set out on a new Expedition, your hero will spawn on a short, freshly generated path that takes only a couple minutes to fully traverse. Your hero simply walks forward on the loop and automatically fights anything that gets in his way, so it’s up to you to put things in his way that will make him stronger. You can make it easy on him if you want to, but then he’ll get bodied by the boss at the end of the expedition. If you make it too hard, however, he’ll never even make it that far.
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The Forgotten City - Cloud Version (Switch eShop)
In Forgotten City, a Skyrim-mod-turned-fully-fledged game, you (a modern-day person) get teleported back to 65AD, to a small Roman town that's under some kind of curse. And, this being a video game, you gotta fix it. If any one person breaks "The Golden Rule", everyone in the town will instantly be turned into a gold statue — a fact backed up by the gold statues scattered throughout the homes and streets, and the warnings they somehow had the time to carve before getting transformed. The inhabitants don't know what "The Golden Rule" is, so they're living in fear, hedging their bets, and trying not to commit any sins. And since it's a time loop game — it's your job to figure out A) what the curse is, B) how to stop breaking it, and C) how to fix everything. Off you go, now.
Minit (Switch eShop)
Minit is a a charming black-and-white game that takes place in 60-second chunklets. The game plays with the time loop concept in interesting, novel ways — like having a character that can tell you vital information, but talks r e a l l y s l o w l y, taking up the entire 60 seconds — but doesn't stick around long enough to overstay its welcome. 60 seconds might not sound like enough, but it's actually one of the strongest suits of Minit; a rapid-fire, trial-and-error approach to progression. It’ll take you several tries to discern what’s needed for each new obstacle you face, but the beauty of it is that death hardly feels like a punishment because you’re only being set back a minute at worst.
13 Sentinels: Aegis Rim (Switch)
The gorgeous, dynamic narrative game 13 Sentinels is about ten different genres all smooshed into one video game. It's sci-fi, it's mech-combat, it's strategy, it's romantic visual novel... and it's got some time-loopy business in there too, because why not? Thank goodness for the game's comprehensive library of archived info and reminders of what the story's about, because it can get hard to follow — but this incredible ensemble narrative is worth the effort.
I Was A Teenage Exocolonist (Switch eShop)
In I Was A Teenage Exocolonist, your entire life is ahead of you. And behind you. Everything you learn on the newly-colonised planet Vertumna will help you navigate events both present and future, helping you make better choices, and a better world, too. We criticised the game for being a little too nice — not enough severe consequences, not enough jeopardy — but its niceness is also precisely why we recommend it. The generosity of spirit in the gameplay and story seeps through every pore of Exocolonist. If this world captures your imagination, you’ll get incredible mileage out of it.
Steins;Gate Elite (Switch)
Murder! Conspiracies! A phone that can text the past! All are good setups for a time loop game, and Steins;Gate has them all. This beloved visual novel, given a major polish-up for the Switch, has spawned an entire anime spin-off from its intricate decision-making, time-altering plot. It concerns a mad scientist who accidentally stumbles upon time machine technology, alerting a somewhat evil time-travelling corporation to his presence and abilities. You'll need about 25-40 hours to finish this one off, mind you!
Comments 96
Still waiting for Prince of Persia, Outer Wilds, and Braid to arrive on Switch.
This is a very specific category — are there a lot of timeloop Switch games which didn't make this 'best of' list? I haven't actually played any of these but I literally was about to start oxenfree (it's now free with Netflix) and fata Morgana, Gnosia, and 13 sentinels are all on my wishlist. I didn't realize they all involved timeloops.
@FishyS mostly just 12 Minutes 😅 honestly, I've been sitting on this article for AGES waiting for Outer Wilds to come out. I gave up waiting.
Thank you for the reminder I need to keep playing Gnosia.
Gnosia was an amazing experience. I still like to play it every now and again.
Gnosia is an underappreciated gem.
I do think the Among Us comparisons are unhelpful, though, despite the obvious surface similarities in premise that motivate people to make them in the first place. Thematically, there's a lot of similarities to something like the Zero Escape games, except with a gameplay loop that exchanges puzzles for social deduction and a light smattering of RPG elements.
Achieved the true ending when I first played it, but I'm tempted to re-experience it on my SWOLED. The art is gorgeous.
@Giowo Wait... Higurashi and Umineko games are available on Nintendo Switch?! Wow!... There are other already translated to English language games that are unavailable on English on Nintendo Switch... That's sad and stupid... There is no logical reason to not release it worldwide and keep it as Japanese exclusive...
I'd add Slay the Spire to that list, considering it does have a sort of timeloop: Death means your character is once again resurrected by a giant whale, and it's back to climbing that Spire, again and again.
@Ralizah Do Gnosia feature fully-voiced dialogues or not?
@Desa Do Gnosia feature fully-voiced dialogues or not?
Hm... About time loops... Where is BLAZBLUE CENTRALFICTION Special Edition and Guilty Gear XX ΛCore Plus R, huh!?
Wibbly-wobbly timey-wimey.
Love a good time loop. Outer Wilds is my favourite example but there’s lots in this list that I’ve yet to try out.
Undertale hit me hardest when I killed toriel, went back to try and save her and got berated by that stupid flower
Raging Loop is far superior to Gnosia. The NL review for it is just embarrassing.
I enjoyed Sexy Brutale, but the performance in the Switch version is bad. If possible, play it on a different platform.
@Vyacheslav333
No, it isn’t voiced. It would have been nice I admit though the music personally kept me from really thinking about the lack thereof as I tried to deduce who was the Gnosia each round.
I’m really enjoying Timeli(n)e at the moment, and not just because it has a playable cat in it.
I still haven’t gotten Gnosia yet even though it’s interested me since it was announced…
@KateGray,
I absolutely love the tag line nod to "All you need is kill."
I've enjoyed that book, movie, Manga in all of its iterations!
An interesting list I may have to look into these..
An interesting list I may have to look into these...
An interesting list I may have to look into these... wait..this comment section..am I in a..?
An interesting list I may have to look into these..
My comments are in a time loop! Help! Someone make it sto..An interesting list I may have to look into these..
@KateGray you must be on the wrong timeline then, it's already out on my timeline.
Okay. I'm lying. Sorry.
Minit is an awesome game though, and every time I see artwork of it, I feel a little bit of true joy.
Deponia Doomsday is also a great time loop based game
@martynstuff I hope these comments don't get removed as spam, this was a VERY good joke (and one I was going to try in the article, but couldn't make it work)
@Shadeon_Koopa Well, in that case pretty much all roguelikes/roguelites should be here too.
@KateGray Thank you 😊
the character writing in gnosia is SO GOOD. genuinely takes advantage of the time loop format in such a fun way.
edit: and not to be predictable but "you can be the third nonbinary character on the ship if you want, the other two are the best character (I would and have died for them) and the worst character (said adoringly)" was such a selling point for me
The Forgotten City deserves more praise. One of the absolute best games of last year. If not for the impeccably perfect Metroid Dread, it’s possible I’d have called it my GotY last year. Either it or Village. Outstanding narrative and characters
Does Stanley Parable count as a time loop? Because I think that deserves a mention.
Treasures of the Aegean says hello.
With its 2D comic book-style art style and, addictive parkour-based platforming it should be on this list.
Time loop is likely my favourite game mechanics out there when done well. I really wish Gnosia had a physical copy in the west. Same goes for Fata Morgana (I know LRG did a print run, don't care).
Majora's Mask is still the best time loop game out there. It's pure genius, especially given its short development window. Outer Wilds and Forgotten City are both great time loop games.
@Freek That sounds like my kinda game. How does it use time loops?
I've got a bit of a controversial opinion in regards to this actually: I don't really like time loops in general to be honest. The concept of having the exact same day(s) repeat over and over again with you being the only person knowing, while I completely understand why people like it, puts a bit of a bad taste in my mouth as it can feel like none of your choices matter until the last, you know? I'll be playing Majora's Mask for the first time ever soon and do you know why I haven't for all these years? Because of the time loop mechanic.
In short: I know why people like it, I just personally can't stand it.
Steins;Gate was an incredible game. I loved all the characters and found the story to be truly captivating.
I also really loved Minit. This game doesn't get the love it deserves. It is a seriously charming and hugely inventive little game.
Gnosia is just a masterpiece. And i'm not into visual novels. But Gnosia isn't one. Is more like... Gnosia. But damn, how good it is.
@SnowTachi
It is very good, here is my mini review 😁
It uses comic book panels to tell its story.
You have a limited amount of time before the loop restarts, at the start it is about 15 minutes but increases as you find more artifacts.
You have to use the parkour movement throughout the landscape which makes it great fun to run around, and run you will as the more you uncover with each run the better.
The ancient city is huge filled with secrets and the platforming is tight and very good. Every time you explore the city and uncover new areas, your GPS map will be updated to show those areas as your character drops her phone every time she escapes just before the time loop starts over.
It is a great game that I highly recommend if you like a mix of Prince of Persia, Tomb Raider and Mirrors Edge, rolled into a great time loop mechanic.
Loopers ... easiest one, lol
@Giowo Loopers should definitely be on this list. It's from the same writer as Higurashi. I own a physical copy from PlayAsia.
@VoodooTrumpet i didn't like it a lot
Would Shovel Knight Dig count?
Gnosia, steins gate, the house in Fata Morgana....wow. 3 masterpieces
@KateGray "spill spaghetti sauce all over our nice new jumper"
Only recently have I learned, I believe the UK definition of a "jumper" (as an article of clothing) is something different than the US. It's what we'd call a "sweater".
I had always thought (in the US) a "jumper" as sort of overalls/dress type of female garment.
Gnosia! I got it when it released on my Switch, and played for a bit, then bought it on my Lite when it arrived and have reached at least 100 loops, and still not done with the story. I need to go back and keep going with it, because I'd love to see how it ends and what the deal is.
I never thought of Undertale as a time loop game, but I suppose it could be considered one. Still love it dearly either way.
Majora's Mask 3DS is such quality gaming. I like Gnosia, 13 Sentinels, Steins Gate, House in MF. A quality sub-genre in a way
@Desa Oh, okay. Thanks for the info!
@Giowo Wow, Switch version have some exclusive content... Well... There is even more reasons to release it worldwide. Or release Switch version's exclusive content as paid-DLC for PC version, at least...
Must shout out to (and, spoilers for a ten year old game) the original Bravely Default on 3DS — I can see why that backend time loop thing divided a lot of players, but I'd been having so much fun with the game up to that point (and was suitably levelled up enough that it wasn't THAT much of a slog) that I managed to squeak by without throwing in the towel, but by the fourth time around I was pretty close...
13 Sentinels and Gnosia are both amazing games.
What we need is another Time splitters. That is my favorite time mechanic game. Along side blinx the time sweeper on og Xbox which is a 3d platformer. Usually I'm not a fan of Loopers outside movies. Just too repetitive for me.
I'm not Bri'ish, but I do get that timey wimey reference. 🙂
@FishyS Raging Loop is a spectacular game that specifically did not make it. Nintendo Life's review rated it so low that I think the reviewer didn't understand it or speed read through everything.
I suppose Sonic CD isn't included because it's part of a game compilation and not available as a standalone.
It's a shame the fantastical plot device that most people associate with Groundhog Day is time loops rather than a giant rodent that can inexplicably predict the future, because I feel like the latter has a lot more untapped potential.
Ugh I was ok until I saw 12 minutes. That game could have been good. But nope...that STORY...ugh that story.
Steins;Gate the best
Gnosia is a masterpiece and i don't even like visual novels. (It isn't one, really, but it feels like one)
Some games I'll need to look into. Meanwhile, one of my fave games is missing simply because Zero Escape: Virtue's Last Reward is not on Switch. Worth playing on gamepass or 3DS or Vita though.
Steins;Gate is a masterpiece. But if you're going to play it, play the original VN on Steam and skip Elite. It being fully animated is nice, but it cuts out content (like the entire first half of Faris' chapter) and it railroads you into one path instead of giving the player more agency (outside of the obvious end of chapter choices that give you different endings) Elite is still great. But the original VN is better imo.
And very soon the Switch will also have GrimGrimoire (Once More), which if memory serves is also a time loop game.
Loop Hero is great and addictive!
How is Into the Breach a time loop game? Unless every roguelike/lite is?
There's another game on the list that is definitely NOT a time loop game, although it makes you think something timey-wimey-wibbly-wobbly is going on at first. You mentioned (dare I say spoiled?) that for Fata Morgana though, so I won't say which one.
Ohhhh, you think it's "sexy" that's offputting, not "brutale". How strange.
Ah... Brilliant.
@Magician Wait, what?? You're a voice from the past man. It's good to have hearing you now.
I see what you did here. It’s brilliant.
I played the Skyrim mod and loved it, is Forgotten City much different? I'd love to play it, the mod was so moody, tense and dark
Animal Crossing! 😝
Okay, okay, it is just a seasonal loop. 😊
I want to scream Dragon’s Dogma but it is a cycle, like the Dark Tower Saga, and not a time loop.
Silver Falls 3 Down Stars (New 3DS) has a unique take on this.
Dead Cells,one of the characters even references the fact that you're messing up the whole time loop by repeatedly running the game
Oxenfree is the best one imo. And we get a sequel this year too.
@FishyS if you like VN, buy fata morgana first
@JustMonika steins gate and fata morgana
@BananaMetallurgica Ironic because I'm playing Fata Morgana right now for the first time. I'm nearing the end of door 2. Luckily, I have a decision guide straight to the true ending. I'm actually really excited to see Reincarnation once I'm done with the main game and Requiem because it looks like quite the contrast to the rest, lol. I own a physical copy which ran me $95 on eBay. Right now I'm waiting on Limited Editions for Miracle Snack Shop, Aokana: Four Rhythms Across the Blue and Witch on the Holy Night. Also scored a sealed copy of The Grisaia Trilogy for only $55 off some sap on Mercari, lol. I've already owned The Grisaia Trilogy and Aokana so those are repeat buys. I also own the 18+ versions of Aokana and the original Grisaia Trilogy on my laptop.
How did you miss the Stanley Parable?
@BananaMetallurgica You could argue Island could be time related by it's more like a repeating cycle in that. I can't say much more though and gotta keep it vague because that would be a spoiler, lol. Island is the best experience I've had in 35 years of gaming, tbh. The story is just mind-blowing.
As honorable mention should be Bayonetta 1 and 2
@JustMonika so glad that there's someone who loves VN in occident. I loved 2nd door in fata Morgana. I have a lot VN bought to play too and I'm waiting sales for grisaia phantom trigger. I give you my code friend: 8329-6637-4490
@JustMonika are you that girl that played world end syndrome?
@BananaMetallurgica I think alot of girls have played World End Syndrome, lol. I know one woman in the Netherlands that says it's her favorite game. Rei is my favorite from that. I'm just an average 40 year old Texan who's an Army veteran and worked in Healthcare for 18 years as a PCA. And I own the world famous "Mizucara" as well, lol .. I'll add you after my shift ends in the morning, lol
https://twitter.com/Solidgearmara/status/1550626218764079104?t=VtT71SnOalSWXy4-eepzDQ&s=19
@JustMonika wow....i love your car,🤩. I'm a 41 old Italian
@BananaMetallurgica Been rearranging my room!
https://twitter.com/Solidgearmara/status/1622456228013133827?t=9s7MlsiM-ZXwIWqNEBTTfQ&s=19
@JustMonika wow😻😻😻
@JustMonika I want a room like your full of my beautiful Japanese things
@JustMonika did you see Seventh Liar?
@BananaMetallurgica No I haven't seen that. Been watching Softenni! though, lol
Just bought MINIT yesterday, so glad to see it here! I'll be starting it up today!
For Steins;Gate, it's just 25-40 hours to get just a single ending! Have fun trying to get all of them, it'll take your whole life!
Minit is gold.
I wish it got a true sequel. "Minits"?
Reminds me a little of Links awakening on the Game Boy.
Seems Minit would be a great fit for the Playdate.
Too bad they don't send these to Norway..
N64 titles does age somewhat. I would recommend the 3DS version of Majoras Mask over the N64 one.
I got you babe.
Thank you. This article finally acknowledges how bad 12 minutes is.
I swear Raging Loop needs a re-review, this site never seems to give it its due when for a lot of people it's considered a classic.
Add Cobalt Core to this list!!
@Lizuka I enjoyed Raging Loop, but the ending was pretty rough, imo. It really had a lot of odd twists towards the end, and left several things fully unexplained (and put several explanations behind the optional "post-game" chapters).
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