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10 Best Games Like Dead or Alive 6: Last Round

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10 Best Games Like Dead or Alive 6: Last Round

Dead or Alive 6: Last Round is nearly here, bringing you stylish attacks and striking animations in the 3D fighting game world. But in the meantime, you can enjoy Tekken 8’s lifelike fighters, Mortal Kombat 11’s brutality, or Bayonetta 2’s stylish, angered witch. Either way, the fighting game alternatives to Dead or Alive 6: Last Round  and other entries in the series are far more plentiful than you might imagine.

10. Shadow Tactics: Blades of the Shogun

A tactical stealth game might seem a little far off from Dead or Alive 6: Last Round’s 3D fighting game. But Shadow Tactics: Blades of the Shogun satisfies the craving for beautiful Japan settings and lore, offering something fresh to continue your quest for tactical combat and evasion. 

This time, the speed is a little different, of course, where planning is crucial. You’re sneaking around castles and snowy monasteries, setting traps and poisoning enemies. You must not get spotted, set on completing your missions alongside your team of deadly specialists.

9. Lollipop Chainsaw

The iconic zombie game that stole everyone’s hearts may also not be your first pick for the best games like Dead or Alive 6: Last Round. But it sure does satisfy a specific need for brutal violence. Lollipop Chainsaw stars dearest Harley Quinn-lookalike in a cheerleader costume, smashing and bashing zombie hordes with a chainsaw. 

It’s completely mental how vicious you get, feeding on over-the-top chaos and rage. But it’s not all mindless hacking and slashing. You still chain attacks to cash in combo streaks, with the speed and attack power of your strikes increasing with every swing. 

8. Street Fighter V

And now to an actual fighting game after Dead or Alive 6: Last Round’s own heart. Check out Street Fighter V, long holding the mantle for one of the best fighting games in as many as decades. You have your pick of 40 different fighters across 34 dynamic stages and switching up over 200 stylish costumes. What more can you ask for? 

The mechanics have been refined over and over to create peak tension rounds, with offline and online options to decimate opponents. You also have varied modes, including an Arcade option, Team Battle, and lots of online battle opportunities to earn additional XP and bountiful rewards.

7. Skullgirls 2nd Encore

Perhaps a fighting game with style would be Skullgirls 2nd Encore. The characters are charismatic, hand-drawn cartoons, fully voiced and bursting with color and spice. They fit perfectly in the luscious backgrounds in which the fights take place. 

Stages so vibrant, the colors jump off the screen. But these snarky fighters and beloved characters are also fierce warriors not to be messed with. And their personality and, most importantly, abilities stand out among other best games like Dead or Alive 6: Last Round.

6. Bayonetta 2

Bayonetta 2 is an action masterpiece. No one can dare argue with that. But it’s also the game design itself that boasts a strong personality and charm. You enter a battle between heaven and hell, with Bayonetta, an ancient witch, at its center. Though calling her a witch seems like an understatement, given her, uhm, strong presence. 

Anyway, your enemies are countless angels and demons. And all thrust you into an orchestra of combat and action (if kicks and punches could sing). Plus, your abilities are far too cool to ignore: slowing down time, summoning giant demons, and my favorite, transforming into bats, snakes, crows… sweet.

5. The King of Fighters XV

You can’t go wrong with The King of Fighters XV, especially in the modern age. The visuals are now gorgeous, with impeccable detail, and the characters have received revamps and a slick polish. Since 1994, The King of Fighters has established its rule in the fighting game scene, and it continues to do so with a stream of diverse characters, a unique fighting system, and the explosive climax to its KoF story and history.

4. Mortal Kombat 11

Neither can you deny Mortal Kombat 11’s place among the best games like Dead or Alive 6: Last Round. In terms of learning and nailing combos, MK has it figured out. The timing and precision it takes to pin opponents down and finish them off with a brutal KO. 

The characters are as charming as ever, complete with their unique fatalities, brutalities, and individual skins and weapons. In the past two decades, MK has refined its craft, ensuring a smooth front-row seat to vicious skull-crashing and eye-popping popcorn moments. 

3. Killer Instinct

Often, you can feel stuck by an unending stream of combos. But Killer Instinct’s combo breakers are a game-changer. The visual appeal, for starters, is distinct in its own right. But so is the fighting system, layered with unique tactics and special attacks.

Here’s a fighting game that doesn’t just stop at mastering combo breaks. It goes a step further to test how naive you can be to mind games and how quickly you learn to pull off counterplays.

2. Soulcalibur VI

Soulcalibur VI is, indeed, closest to Dead or Alive 6: Last Round, with its stunning graphics set in the 16th century of myth and historical fantasy. It keeps up to date, though, with all-new battle mechanics, like the Reversal Edge that counters an opponent’s move on you, and the Soul Charge that temporarily gives you an upper hand mid-battle.

1. Tekken 8

Finally, Tekken 8 is most brutal for the newbie. But even with little experience, the clarity of the character models, how pristine and lifelike they look, will keep you sticking around. Over the years, the fighting system in Tekken has been top shelf. And yet, the devs continue to entice veterans with fresh updates, like the Heat system and the ultimate move, Rage Arts.

Tekken keeps evolving, much to my pleasure, as I continue to grapple with its deep control system, mixed in with powerful combos and special attacks. And yet, still remains accessible, thanks to the option of performing combos with just one button.

Evans Karanja is a video game reviewer and features writer at Gaming.net, covering game reviews, platform recommendations, and new releases across all major consoles and PC. He has played games since childhood starting with Contra on the NES and writes exclusively from first-hand experience, playing every title he covers before recommending it.

He specialises in story-driven and single-player games, indie titles, and platform-specific guides across Game Pass, PS Plus, and Nintendo Switch Online. When not writing, find him spectating the markets, playing his favorite titles, hiking or watching F1.