Best Co-op Games to Play With Friends
The best gaming sessions are shared ones. A great co-op game creates stories you tell for years — the impossible rescue in DRG, the catastrophic kitchen fire in Overcooked, the split-second plan that somehow worked in Baldur's Gate 3. This list covers every flavor of co-op: couch co-op for same-room play, online co-op for distance, and the games that are specifically, deliberately designed to be played with someone else.
The Co-op-First Games — Built for Two or More
These games aren't multiplayer modes bolted onto a solo experience. They're fundamentally designed around cooperation — mechanically, narratively, and structurally. Playing them alone either isn't possible or removes the entire point.
It Takes Two
The best co-op game ever made. Hazelight's Hakim-directed masterpiece is a 12-hour adventure that introduces an entirely new gameplay mechanic approximately every 30 minutes — and every single one of those mechanics is used brilliantly and then discarded. A nail-throwing platformer becomes a time-freezing puzzle becomes a space shooter. The narrative about a failing marriage is surprisingly affecting. Mandatory for any two-player household. One purchase covers both players via Friend's Pass.
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Split Fiction
Hazelight's follow-up somehow exceeds It Takes Two's ambition. Two writers trapped inside their own stories — one sci-fi, one fantasy — must cooperate across genres to escape. The mechanical invention per hour is staggering: mech combat, dragon riding, bullet-time sequences, pipe-organ puzzles. The story is sharper and funnier than anything the studio has made. Friend's Pass included.
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Overcooked! All You Can Eat
The best couch co-op chaos machine. Overcooked puts you and up to three friends in increasingly absurd kitchens — on ships, in space, on moving trucks — and asks you to coordinate under pressure. The moment communication breaks down is the moment the game becomes hilarious. This collection includes both games plus all DLC. Perfect for mixed-skill groups.
See full verdict →The Online Co-op Essentials — Best Games for Playing With Friends Online
Not everyone can share a couch. These games are built for online play and maintain their co-op magic across any distance.
Deep Rock Galactic
The model for what co-op games should be. Four distinct classes — Scout, Driller, Gunner, Engineer — each with genuinely different playstyles and responsibilities. Missions require each class to contribute uniquely. The community is legendary for its positivity. 'Rock and Stone' isn't just a phrase; it's a social contract.
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Baldur's Gate 3
Four-player co-op D&D that actually works — each player controls their own character and makes their own choices, which leads to the most chaotic, memorable gaming sessions available. When two players each roll a Deception check to convince an NPC of opposite things simultaneously, magic happens. The co-op implementation is technically impressive and creatively extraordinary.
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Left 4 Dead 2
The king that hasn't been dethroned in 15 years. Valve's co-op shooter uses an AI Director that monitors every session and adjusts enemy frequency, item placement, and special infected appearances to maintain optimal tension. No two campaigns play the same. The workshop keeps fresh content arriving constantly. Free on PC if you already own it from an older sale.
See full verdict →The Couch Co-op and Party Game Tier
These games are for sharing a screen, a couch, and the emotional experience of something going completely wrong together.
Hades
The primary solo roguelite on PC, but watching someone else play — calling out boon options, cheering during boss attempts — creates a co-op-adjacent experience that few games replicate. Hades II adds actual co-op support. Worth experiencing together regardless.
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Valheim
The best co-op survival game on PC. Ten friends sharing a dedicated server, building a Viking longhouse together, and dying dramatically to trolls in the second biome creates the kind of shared gaming history that gets referenced for years. The dedicated server is free. The memories are priceless.
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Risk of Rain 2
Four-player co-op roguelite chaos at its most exhilarating. Risk of Rain 2's escalating difficulty means that games always end — but they end spectacularly, in a crescendo of screen-filling effects and increasingly insane character builds. The moment one player becomes a god-tier Artificer while another is barely surviving on Engineer turrets is quintessential co-op magic.
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