Sony’s first handheld gaming system has been replaced by a younger, shinier model. But it’s still a good gaming system, cheaper than ever and offering plenty of great games. Maybe you’ve waited this whole time to get one, or maybe you’ve inherited one from a friend who bought a new Vita. Either way, now you need some games to cement your relationship.
Below, find our list of the 12 best games on the PSP. We’ve bumped it up in honour of the fact that the handheld came out in North America nine years ago today.
Vita owners get a special bonus: All of the games on this list can be downloaded and played on the Vita, with the exception of Lumines 2, Every Extend Extra and Tekken Dark Resurrection. Note, however, that you can’t buy the physical copies from the links in this post; you’ll have to download digital copies from the PlayStation store.
The chattier, shorter partner of the Jak & Daxter games gets the spotlight on a platform that’s just his size. Daxter’s turn as a cosmic exterminator provides him the spotlight in a platformer game that’s as funny as it is well-tuned.
A Good Match for: Looney Tunes buffs. Jak’s sidekick shares the insecure bluster of Daffy Duck and is animated with such detail and charm that he could be related to Bugs or Pepe Lepew.
Not for Those Who Want: Bad-assery. It makes sense to focus Daxter on primarily platforming since Jak tends to handle all the action hero stuff in the J&D games, but fans expecting more high-octane action will be disappointed.
Watch it in action.
This handheld game re-developed by Rez creator Tetsuya Mizuguchi can only be called an un-shooter. You are the bullet — or bomb, more accurately — fired by a button press and your attacks are actually chained explosions of the game’s enemy swarms themselves. There’s no story here; EEE‘s focused on experience, pushing you to detonate ever bigger explosion sequences to get higher scores, ranks and levels.
A Good Match for: People who like to push themselves. Peppered with items to ramp up the speed and difficulty, this title’s levels are actually dynamic, ever-mutating puzzles that demand patience. If you do it right, self-detonation rewards you with increased playtime and increased lives. Underneath the feast of colour, design and sound that EEE offers, the rigid algorithmic nature of the PSP action/puzzle hybrid is where it finds its true beauty.
Not for Those Who Want: Clear progression. The arcane mechanics of EEE will stymie even its most ardent fans and it’s all the more frustrating knowing that more levels — filled with awesome music and visuals — are waiting to be unlocked.
Watch it in action.
Don’t trust that name fully. Jonathan Mak’s idiosyncratic creation is a shooter but its experimental synaesthetic design melds sound and visuals in a way that’s anything but everyday. One minute, you’re shooting amoebic shapes in what looks like a neural network, the next you’re blasting back robot hordes in a trippy mech nightmare. But, the whole retina-sizzling experience is so tightly-tuned that you’ll be hypnotized and hungry for templates that come next.
A Good Match for: Abstract art enthusiasts. Everyday Shooter splashes hues and shapes across the screen and brings them to life in surprisingly creepy and breathtaking ways.
Not for Those Who Want: A relaxing ramble. Everyday‘s beauty gets married to a nerve-wracking difficulty that forces you back to the first stage when you run out of lives.
Watch it in action.
Purchase from the PlayStation Store.
When the antihero of Sony’s God of War games got shrunk down for a portable prequel, Kratos lost none of his formidable fury. Chains of Olympus translates the series’ signature combat flair and mythological scale to the handheld, raising the stakes of what was possible on the PSP.
A Good Match for: Riders of public transportation. Chances are, your daily commute offers plenty of opportunities to get good and pissed-off. Thankfully, this title lets you take out your anger on the monsters of Greco-Roman myth, not fellow passengers.
Not for Those Who Want: Comfortable hardware. A few crucial quicktime sequences require precision movement on the PSP’s nubby thumbstick and, yeah, it’s just not built for that. The sketchy input from this part of the hardware must be why Kratos is so angry.
Watch it in action.
Simultaneously a send-up and an homage to old-school RPGs that laid down the roots of the genre’s dogma, this commute-friendly title demands that you finish its quests in 30 seconds. Thankfully, there are ways to pad your time, but there’s still a huge amount of stress and fun packed into Half-Minute Hero‘s short bursts.
A Good Match for: Efficiency experts. Not only does this quirky Atlus title provide an extra-lean cut of RPG in the Hero 30 mode, it also riffs on other genres, too. You can get your concentrated side-scrolling shooter fix in Princess 30 or do eyeblink-quick RTS planning in Evil Lord 30.
Not for Those Who Want: Level Grind. While hilarious, the super-compressed hi-jinx of HMH will have no appeal for RPG fans who like to farm their way through a world and accrue XP at a more leisurely pace.
Watch it in action.
This puzzle game’s predecessor singlehandedly justified the existence of the PlayStation Portable when Sony dove into the handheld gaming scene in 2006. Crafted by the dev studio founded by Tetsuya Mizuguchi — the designer behind cult fave Rez — Lumines 2 adds glorious sound-and-colour syncopation to Tetris’ falling-block formula against the backdrop of a killer soundtrack.
A Good Match for: Club kids. You’ll hear tunes linked to almost every sub-genre of electronic music, from sprightly techno-pop to ominous dub. If you ever waved glowsticks at a dance party, Lumines will make you happy.
Not for Those Who Want: Predictability. The mechanics of playing a Lumines game never change but they will speed up or slow down from level to level. So, sometimes the timeline that wipes matched cubes away will be extra speedy and sometimes it will be an agonizingly slow sweep across the screen.
Watch it in action.
When Metal Gear Solid 4 — the last major console outing for Hideo Kojima’s beloved franchise — met a mixed reaction, many wondered when and how the next unequivocally great entry in the storied stealth series would arrive. Almost everyone was taken by surprise when it arrived on the PSP, especially as the system was entering its twilight. But Peace Walker hit great emotional highs and evolved the gameplay around co-operative play and with strategy elements.
A Good Match for: Triplets. This Metal Gear lets players team up through its campaign and delivers new weapons and mechanics so that multiple Snakes can effectively sneak and shoot through the Costa Rican jungle.
Not for Those Who Want: To play solo. It’s possible to complete Peace Walker — which was built with multplayer in mind — by yourself but the gruelling boss battles will make you wish friends were playing alongside you.
Watch it in action.
Developed under the auspices of the Sony Japan dev collective, the game merges real-time strategy elements — creating different types of soldier units, managing attack, defence and retreat tactics — with the rhythm-based controls of games like Dance Dance Revolution. The result’s a singularly unique experience with insanely catchy mechanics.
A Good Match for: Ant farm owners. There’s an entire sub-genre of video games built around amassing and deploying little virtual creatures — Overlord and Pikmin are recent examples — but Patapon ranks amongst the most unique. Pressing certain button combos in time with the beat will prod your little minions into charging enemy factions, throwing spears or taking cover under their shields. So it’s funky and think-y at the same time.
Not for Those Who Want: To skip memorizing things. The button-mashing in Patapon‘s not the kind of mindless combat found in so many other games. You need to pay attention to what you’re hearing and pressing, and will wind up with some “pon-pon-pata-pon” earworms before you’re done.
Watch it in action.
Not much was wrong Persona 3 the first two times publisher Atlus released it. But the general consensus is that the PSP version of the RPG originally made for the PS2 surpasses its forebears. Combat’s improved and it’s got a bit more content than the first two iterations, impressive for a portable title.
A Good Match for: People who want more video game heroines. The biggest addition to P3P is the all-new option to play as a female protagonist, which tweaks several plot elements in the game. For a game set in a high school that lets you call on friends as support characters, it’s a welcome addition.
Not for Those Who Want: An entirely different Persona 3. Good as it is, there’s no getting around the fact that a lot of this game still feels like something made for the PS2. Worse yet, the superbly executed cutscenes get cut from Portable due to the PSP’s technical limitations.
Watch it in action.
Namco’s martial arts series was synonymous with PlayStation platforms ever since the PS1, driving sales and loyalty with its intricate movesets. Dark Resurrection continued the trend on the PSP and provided an almost perfect duplicate of its console counterpart.
A Good Match for: Roommates. Friends in close proximity could compete wirelessly with surprisingly little lag, giving co-habitants an enticing way to procrastinate from cleaning up.
Not for Those Who Want: Wifi multiplayer. Unlike the big-boy PS3 version, you can’t play online with players all over the world. If your archenemy’s not in your living room, you’re out of luck.
Watch it in action.
Purchase from: Amazon [GameStop]
In 2006, the return of the lance-throwing Arthur in a new PSP game took folks by surprise in two ways. Few expected any kind of reappearance from the B-list Capcom franchise and, in the age where most video games get rendered in 3D, fewer expected a 2D experience to be as entertaining as Ultimate Ghosts N’ Goblins was.
A Good Match for: Side-scroller fanatics. UGnG follows the length-x-width lineage of games like Rygar and the original Ninja Gaiden. And like those predecessors, it’s an attack/jump adventure with a bruising difficulty that will test all comers.
Not for Those Who Want: Ease. This game gets tough. Plus, Arthur can only hold one weapon at a time, and one of the hoariest game mechanics from the old school lives another day to frustrate players everywhere.
Watch it in action.
Futuristic combat racing. Peerless techno soundtracks. Sleekly dangerous design. These elements piloted almost every Wipeout to the winner’s circle of gamers’ hearts and the portable Pulse was no different. New tweaks like an customisable progression system and
A Good Match for: Recycling advocates. This handheld Wipeout lets you race on its tracks backwards and forwards, with subtle differences in each orientation to make it more than just going the wrong way.
Not for Those Who Want: A Sunday drive. Some of the speed classes go as fast as 793km/h, making the memoridation necessary to learn where the blind turns are and when to break really, really hard.
Watch it in action.
Want more of the best games on each system? Check out our complete directory:
The Best PC Games • The Best PS4 Games • The Best Xbox One Games • The Best Wii U Games • The Best 3DS Games • The Best PS Vita Games • The Best Xbox 360 Games • The Best PS3 Games • The Best Wii Games • The Best iPhone Games • The Best iPad Games • The Best Android Games • The Best PSP Games • The Best Facebook Games • The Best DS Games • The Best Mac Games • The Best Browser Games • The Best PC Mods
Comments
24 responses to “The 12 Best Games On PSP”
No Grand Theft Auto love? I guess I can see the angle your coming from, but it was a technical marvel on a handheld, and had a really long campaign, not to mention the very first Multiplayer inclination of GTA.
I’m going to go with the Syphon Filter games, I can only hope they are making more for the Vita/PS4.
love the Best Buy, Wal-Mart and Gamestop links 🙂 localisation FTW!
Kingdom Hearts: Birth By Sleep would be great candidates to be among this list. Great game, along with Ogre Tactics.
I had to make sure Persona was on the list.
Lumines II is so good.
No Pursuit Force or Dissidia?
Lumines & Lumines II were crack to me. Once you get hooked it’s so hard to let go….
Lumines 2 is the closest a game has ever come to being an addiction for me.
wow no LBP?
I guess it really depends what you wanted from the system. I’ve got a lot of PSP games and I think about three of these would make a top 20 list for me.
Really sucks that several of the best games on the platform (eg FF Type-0, Valkyria Chronicles 3) never made it out of Japan as well.
wha? no Monster Hunter?
SHAMEFUR DISPRAY.
For me I still to this day play the DJ Max Portable series (import) and Project Diva 1 & 2 (import). Patapon 2 was much better than the first I think. as well, they fixed a few issues and added a couple of gameplay improvements. Can’t exactly say how many hours of my life I invested into the Monster Hunter series on PSP as well. If only the Vita was more popular than the 3DS in Japan -pines-
DIssidia 012 and Kingdom Hearts Birth By Sleep deserve a mention as well!
I’m surprised Dissidia isn’t on the list.
So far as Fighting games go it is honestly one of the best I’ve ever played.
this, many of the best psp games came from squeenix .
No FF Tactics? Joan D’Arc was a great game too if you liked turn based RPGs
Why isn’t the *the game I like the best on PSP* on here!?
No Valkyria Chronicles 2? I’m surprised that FF Tactics: War of the Lions wasn’t on here either given that it comes up so often on Kotaku.
War of the Lions was so good, was good fun to go back to tactics.
Other top titles for me include Monster Hunter Unite, Dissidia, Gundam Vs, Valhalla Knights. I am sure there are more but I just can’t remember them off the top of my head.
And where is Tactics Ogre?
Opinions and stuff.
I did say for me…
Final Fantasy: War of the Lions > Tactics Ogre
All good games, but my favourites were:
– Chilli Con Carnage
– Exit
– Echochrome
And Tekken: DR, which is on the list. I would hate to work out how many hours I spent playing that game.
Wow, the PSP had a lot of crap.
Portables have had more of the content I enjoy than gen 7 home consoles with my love of non voiced or not heavily voiced jrpgs, vns and srpgs. PSP had some amazing titles, given, many were ports (Improved ports done very well in my opinion sometimes with substantial extra content; ports none the less.)
Tactics Ogre with its lovely branching story, FFT: WOtL, The main Disgaea games. The Final Fantasy and Persona ports are excellent as are the Ys games (all ports except seven but it was oaths first english localisation.)
For some exclusives, add ZHP for some crazy fun, Jeanne D’Arc Had some interesting mechanics and was very well presented. The Legend of Heroes Trails in the Sky, FFVII Crisis core, Valkyrie Profile: Lenneth, Valkyria Chronicles 2, Monster hunter are all great quality games.
Also because the system was essential open to anyone with google access from day one I am going to include the games I love with english patches: Danganronpa, Project Diva Extend and VC 3. FF Type 0 coming october! Also pokemon blue because emulators.
Its a great system…I really hope that as ps3/ps4 owners with psplus start to accumulate titles for psp and vita it will justify a system purchase for them because it would be sad to see sony p0ushed out of the portable space (then again…phones and tablets exist…)
Wow. I don’t know what world you live in, but in mine MGS4 was met with universal acclaim…