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- How We Ranked the Best Co-op Switch Games
- The 40+ Best Co-op Switch Games, Ranked By Gamers
- #1. Mario Kart 8 Deluxe
- #2. Overcooked! 2
- #3. Super Mario Party
- #4. Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
- #5. Luigi’s Mansion 3
- #6. Super Mario 3D World + Bowser’s Fury
- #7. Super Mario Bros. Wonder
- #8. Stardew Valley
- #9. Snipperclips – Cut it out, together! (Plus)
- #10. Cuphead
- #11. Moving Out
- #12. Moving Out 2
- #13. Overcooked! All You Can Eat
- #14. Minecraft Dungeons
- #15. Diablo III: Eternal Collection
- #16. Monster Hunter Rise
- #17. Splatoon 3
- #18. Nintendo Switch Sports
- #19. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Shredder’s Revenge
- #20. Portal: Companion Collection
- #21. Unravel Two
- #22. Spiritfarer
- #23. Lovers in a Dangerous Spacetime
- #24. Don’t Starve Together
- #25. Heave Ho
- #26. A Hat in Time
- #27. Animal Crossing: New Horizons
- #28. Among Us
- #29. Mario Party Superstars
- #30. WarioWare: Move It!
- #31. LEGO Star Wars: The Skywalker Saga
- #32. LEGO Horizon Adventures
- #33. Kirby and the Forgotten Land
- #34. Kirby Star Allies
- #35. Hyrule Warriors: Age of Calamity
- #36. Fire Emblem Warriors: Three Hopes
- #37. Shovel Knight: Treasure Trove
- #38. Untitled Goose Game
- #39. Disney Illusion Island
- #40. Cult of the Lamb (Unholy Alliance Update)
- #41. Castle Crashers Remastered
- #42. Streets of Rage 4
- How to Choose the Right Co-op Switch Game for Your Group
- Real Co-op Experiences: What It’s Actually Like Playing These Games
The Nintendo Switch was basically born with a Joy-Con in each hand, so it’s no surprise that
co-op gaming is where the console really shines. But with hundreds of titles claiming to be
“the best co-op Switch game,” digging through the eShop can feel like scrolling the Netflix
homepage forever. To save your thumbs (and your game night), we’ve pulled together a ranked
list of 40+ of the best co-op Switch games, informed by player votes, community discussions,
and critic-curated lists.
We’re talking everything from chaotic kitchen disasters and Mario mayhem to chill farming,
spooky mansions, and “we’re still friends… right?” platforming challenges. Grab your Player 2
(or 3, or 4) and let’s dive in.
How We Ranked the Best Co-op Switch Games
Rather than just tossing in our personal favorites, this ranking blends:
- Community votes and popularity – Lists where thousands of gamers voted on
their favorite co-op Switch games, giving us a solid “ranked by gamers” backbone. - Expert roundups – Editor-picked guides from major gaming outlets that focus
on couch co-op and local multiplayer on Nintendo Switch and Switch 2. - Replayability & accessibility – Games that work well for different skill
levels, from kids to hardcore players, and that still feel great to boot up in 2025.
Rankings are a mix of how often games show up at the top of player-voted lists,
overall popularity, and how well they actually play in co-op on Switch today. Think of this as
a “consensus of the internet” list, not just one person’s hot takes.
The 40+ Best Co-op Switch Games, Ranked By Gamers
#1. Mario Kart 8 Deluxe
No shocker at the top: Mario Kart 8 Deluxe is still the go-to co-op and party game on
Switch. You can play in teams, race in Grand Prix, battle with balloons, or just throw
blue shells at your loved ones until they question your relationship. It’s approachable
for new players, deep enough for obsessives, and plays beautifully both docked and
handheld.Best for: Families, parties, and anyone who wants a guaranteed crowd-pleaser.
#2. Overcooked! 2
Overcooked! 2 is what happens when co-op gaming meets controlled chaos. You and your
teammates chop, cook, plate, and serve orders in kitchens that are on fire, split in half,
or literally moving. It’s the kind of game that forces communication, teamwork, and the
occasional yelling of “WHY ARE YOU WASHING DISHES, THE SOUP IS BURNING!”Best for: Friends who like high-pressure teamwork and don’t scare easily.
#3. Super Mario Party
Super Mario Party turns your living room into a cartoon board game where anything can
happen. Work together in team mini-games, sabotage each other for stars, and use those
sneaky ally dice blocks to swing the game at the last second. It’s accessible even to
total non-gamers, which makes it perfect for family nights.Best for: Group nights, family gatherings, and people who enjoy friendly betrayal.
#4. Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Yes, Smash can be brutally competitive, but it’s also secretly one of the best co-op games
on Switch. Team up in 2v2, tackle Classic Mode co-op, battle raid bosses, or join forces
in chaotic eight-player matches. The huge roster means everyone can find a favorite
fighter, from Mario and Link to Sephiroth and Isabelle.Best for: Groups that love fast action and don’t mind falling off the stage a lot.
#5. Luigi’s Mansion 3
Luigi’s Mansion 3 combines light horror, slapstick comedy, and co-op puzzle solving in a
haunted hotel. In two-player mode, one person controls Luigi and the other controls
Gooigi, his gooey clone who can slip through grates and spikes. The mix of exploration,
puzzle-solving, and ghost vacuuming makes this a surprisingly cozy co-op adventure.Best for: Duos who enjoy puzzles and charming spooky vibes, not jump scares.
#6. Super Mario 3D World + Bowser’s Fury
Super Mario 3D World is a four-player platforming playground where chaos is half the fun.
You can cooperate to clear stages or “accidentally” pick each other up and throw friends
off ledges. The Bowser’s Fury bonus adventure is mostly a single-player or two-player
experience but adds serious value to the package.Best for: Groups who love classic Mario platforming with a modern twist.
#7. Super Mario Bros. Wonder
Wonder brings side-scrolling Mario back with trippy “Wonder” effects that transform
levels in bizarre wayspipes crawl, the level tilts, or Mario becomes a spiky ball. Local
co-op lets players help revive each other and experiment with new power-ups together,
making it a standout modern co-op platformer.Best for: Fans of classic 2D Mario who want something fresh and surprising.
#8. Stardew Valley
Stardew Valley co-op turns a relaxing farming sim into a shared life. Build a farm
together, divide roles (one fishes, one mines, one socializes like a small-town diplomat),
and slowly turn your rundown plot into a thriving community hub. The slower pace is
perfect for couples or friends who want low-stress co-op.Best for: Cozy gamers, couples, and players who’d rather farm than fight.
#9. Snipperclips – Cut it out, together! (Plus)
In Snipperclips, you and your partner are paper characters who literally cut pieces out of
each other to solve puzzles. It sounds dark, but it’s adorable and hilarious. The
solutions often feel like improvrotate, snip, and experiment until everything somehow
works.Best for: Puzzlers, couples, and anyone who likes “aha!” moments and silly shapes.
#10. Cuphead
Cuphead is gorgeous, brutal, and incredibly satisfying in co-op. Styled like a 1930s
cartoon, it throws you into tough boss fights and run-and-gun levels that demand sharp
reflexes and clean communication. Two-player mode lets one revive the other, but it also
doubles the chaos on-screen.Best for: Skilled players who love a serious challenge and stunning animation.
#11. Moving Out
Imagine Overcooked, but instead of food you’re yeeting couches out of windows. Moving Out
is a physics-based moving simulator where up to four players haul furniture through
increasingly ridiculous houses. The “just throw it” strategy is both effective and
extremely funny.Best for: Friends who love co-op chaos but want something less intense than Overcooked.
#12. Moving Out 2
Moving Out 2 takes the original’s goofy physics and adds more inventive levels, portals,
and multi-dimensional moving jobs. It tightens the controls and adds more variety, making
it one of the best “laugh until you cry” party co-op games.Best for: Groups who burned through the first game and want a more polished sequel.
#13. Overcooked! All You Can Eat
If you want the complete Overcooked experience, this bundle remasters Overcooked 1 and 2,
adds all DLC, and includes accessibility options. It’s the ultimate edition for long-term
co-op fans and game-night regulars.Best for: Serious co-op fans who want the definitive Overcooked package.
#14. Minecraft Dungeons
Minecraft Dungeons turns the Minecraft universe into a more streamlined, family-friendly
Diablo-style action RPG. Up to four players can loot, level up, and smash mobs together,
with simple controls and lots of gear to chase.Best for: Kids and families who want co-op dungeon crawling without complex systems.
#15. Diablo III: Eternal Collection
For a deeper loot grind, Diablo III remains one of the cleanest couch co-op ARPG
experiences on any console. Four players hack, slash, and loot their way through huge
campaigns and endgame rifts, with character builds that can get wildly powerful.Best for: Groups who love optimizing builds and watching numbers go up.
#16. Monster Hunter Rise
Monster Hunter Rise is all about teaming up to take down massive monsters with precise
combat and deep weapon systems. While you can play solo, the game really opens up when you
hunt online or locally with friends, coordinating traps, buffs, and clutch saves.Best for: Players who enjoy mastering complex combat systems together.
#17. Splatoon 3
Splatoon 3 is best known for its online PvP, but its Salmon Run co-op mode is a standout
horde mode where teams ink, carry golden eggs, and fend off waves of funky fish bosses.
It’s frantic, colorful, and weirdly strategic.Best for: Squads who like fast-paced, objective-based co-op.
#18. Nintendo Switch Sports
Nintendo Switch Sports updates the Wii Sports formula with bowling, tennis, chambara, and
more. It’s simple motion-control co-op where you can pair up in doubles, challenge AI, or
rotate players through for casual game nights.Best for: Families, casual players, and nostalgic Wii Sports fans.
#19. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Shredder’s Revenge
Shredder’s Revenge is a love letter to classic TMNT beat-’em-ups, with up to six players
teaming up to bash Foot Clan goons. The controls are modernized, the pixel art is
gorgeous, and the difficulty feels fair but punchy in co-op.Best for: Retro fans and anyone who ever yelled “Cowabunga!” unironically.
#20. Portal: Companion Collection
The Portal: Companion Collection bundles Portal and Portal 2, including Portal 2’s
legendary co-op campaign. Two players control robots who must solve timing-based,
physics-heavy puzzles using cleverly placed portals and a lot of trial and error.Best for: Puzzle lovers who enjoy breaking their brains together (in a good way).
#21. Unravel Two
In Unravel Two, you both play as yarn creatures tied together, literally connected by a
thread. You need each other to swing, climb, and solve platforming puzzles, with a gentle
tone and gorgeous environments backing it all up.Best for: Duos who like thoughtful, beautiful puzzle platformers.
#22. Spiritfarer
Spiritfarer is a “cozy management game about dying,” where one player runs the ship as
Stella and the other can join as Daffodil the cat. Together you care for spirit passengers
by cooking, building, and exploring until it’s time to say goodbye.Best for: Players who want emotional storytelling and gentle, reflective co-op.
#23. Lovers in a Dangerous Spacetime
Four players share one spaceship, but each stationshields, thrusters, weapons, mapneeds
someone to operate it. The result is pure co-op chaos as you scream “WHO’S ON SHIELDS?!”
while trying to rescue space bunnies.Best for: Groups who love frantic, communication-heavy co-op.
#24. Don’t Starve Together
Don’t Starve Together is a survival sandbox where the world is trying to kill you in
dozens of creative ways. On Switch, it emphasizes online co-op, with players taking on
roles like farmer, explorer, or monster-kiter to keep the group alive.Best for: Fans of survival games and long-term co-op worlds.
#25. Heave Ho
In Heave Ho, you’re disembodied heads with stretchy arms trying to swing across gaps while
clinging to each other. It’s incredibly simple to control and instantly hilarious, with
plenty of “we almost had it!” moments.Best for: Party nights where laughter matters more than progression.
#26. A Hat in Time
This 3D platformer has an optional co-op mode where a second player joins as Bow Kid.
It’s colorful, charming, and surprisingly old-school in the best ways, with creative
levels and fun movement.Best for: Players who miss classic 3D platformers like Banjo-Kazooie.
#27. Animal Crossing: New Horizons
While not a traditional co-op game, Animal Crossing’s local and online multiplayer lets
friends visit islands, trade items, fish together, and help decorate spaces. It’s more
“parallel play” than structured co-op, but for many players this is their chill social
game of choice.Best for: Relaxed hangouts and creative island-building sessions.
#28. Among Us
Among Us is technically about deception, but when you play in private lobbies with
friends, crewmates effectively co-op their tasks and information to catch impostors.
Playing on the couch with voice chat can be even more intense than online play.Best for: Groups who love social deduction and dramatic accusations.
#29. Mario Party Superstars
Mario Party Superstars remixes classic boards and mini-games from older Mario Party games,
making it a nostalgia-packed co-op/competitive hybrid. Like Super Mario Party, it works
fantastically with mixed-age groups.Best for: Mario Party veterans and anyone who wants a “greatest hits” board game night.
#30. WarioWare: Move It!
WarioWare: Move It! strings together absurd motion-controlled microgames that last just a
few seconds each. In co-op and party modes, players scramble to pose, shake, and twist in
sync, often ending in a pile of tangled humans.Best for: High-energy groups who aren’t afraid to look ridiculous.
#31. LEGO Star Wars: The Skywalker Saga
This massive LEGO game covers all nine main Star Wars films with drop-in, drop-out co-op.
The humor is on point, the amount of content is huge, and the open-structure hubs let you
wander and explore together.Best for: Star Wars fans and families who like lighthearted action-adventure.
#32. LEGO Horizon Adventures
LEGO Horizon Adventures shrinks the Horizon universe into a more approachable, co-op
friendly action-adventure. One player controls Aloy while a friend can join as another
hero, with co-op on one system or online. Think: big machines, light puzzles, and LEGO
chaos.Best for: Players who want a lighter, family-friendly take on a big AAA universe.
#33. Kirby and the Forgotten Land
Kirby and the Forgotten Land lets Player 2 join as Bandana Waddle Dee after the first
stage, turning this 3D platformer into a charming two-player adventure. Kirby handles
transformations and copy abilities while Waddle Dee supports with spear attacks.Best for: Kids and parents, or any duo who wants something cute, forgiving, and fun.
#34. Kirby Star Allies
Kirby Star Allies supports up to four local players, turning almost any enemy into a
friend-controlled ally. Combining abilities leads to flashy team attacks and special
transformations, making this a great “everyone grab a controller” game.Best for: Younger players, families, and Kirby fans who want maximum teamwork.
#35. Hyrule Warriors: Age of Calamity
While not a pure co-op-focused title, Age of Calamity’s split-screen mode lets two players
slice through armies as champions of Hyrule. The musou-style combat is flashy and
satisfying, especially when both players coordinate special attacks and map objectives.Best for: Zelda fans who want big, dramatic battles together.
#36. Fire Emblem Warriors: Three Hopes
Three Hopes mixes Fire Emblem’s characters and story flavor with Warriors-style combat.
Co-op lets a friend join missions, swapping between units to cover objectives and hold the
line in large-scale battles.Best for: Fire Emblem fans who want action instead of tactics, but still love the cast.
#37. Shovel Knight: Treasure Trove
Shovel Knight’s main campaign supports local co-op, letting a second player jump in as a
second knight. Tight platforming, strong retro design, and multiple campaigns give this
surprisingly deep replay value for duos.Best for: Retro platformer fans who want precise controls and chunky pixel art.
#38. Untitled Goose Game
Honk twice as hard. Untitled Goose Game’s free update added full two-player co-op, letting
both of you play as horrible geese tormenting an unsuspecting village. Coordination is
optional; chaos is guaranteed.Best for: Duos who want pure mischief and low-stress hijinks.
#39. Disney Illusion Island
Disney Illusion Island is a co-op platformer starring Mickey and friends, with up to four
players helping each other using shared abilities like rope drops and leapfrogs. It’s
designed to be approachable for kids but still entertaining for adults.Best for: Families and Disney fans looking for a polished, wholesome co-op platformer.
#40. Cult of the Lamb (Unholy Alliance Update)
With its Unholy Alliance update, Cult of the Lamb now lets a second player join as the
Goat in full local co-op. You’ll build and manage a cult together, then dive into roguelike
dungeons side by side, mixing cozy base-building with darkly cute action.Best for: Duos who want something weird, stylish, and slightly cursed.
#41. Castle Crashers Remastered
Castle Crashers Remastered brings classic side-scrolling beat-’em-up fun to Switch with
four-player co-op, silly humor, and tons of unlockable characters. It’s easy to pick up
and still satisfying after many runs.Best for: Groups who want old-school arcade vibes with modern polish.
#42. Streets of Rage 4
Streets of Rage 4 modernizes the iconic brawler series with slick animation, deep combat,
and an excellent soundtrack. Up to four players can team up locally to clear stages,
juggle enemies, and chase high scores.Best for: Beat-’em-up fans and anyone who appreciates a good combo.
How to Choose the Right Co-op Switch Game for Your Group
With 40+ options, how do you pick the right one for tonight? A few quick filters:
- Skill level: For mixed skill levels or kids, lean toward Mario Kart 8 Deluxe,
Super Mario Party, Super Mario Bros. Wonder, Stardew Valley, Kirby titles, or Nintendo Switch
Sports. - Chaos vs. chill: Want chaos? Overcooked! 2, Moving Out, Lovers in a Dangerous
Spacetime, and Heave Ho deliver high-energy mayhem. Want chill? Stardew Valley, Spiritfarer,
Animal Crossing, and LEGO games are your best bet. - Number of players: Two-player duos shine in games like Luigi’s Mansion 3,
Unravel Two, Kirby and the Forgotten Land, Cult of the Lamb, and Cuphead. Larger groups should
look at Mario Kart, Smash, TMNT: Shredder’s Revenge, Mario Party, and Kirby Star Allies. - Online vs. couch: If you can’t share a sofa, focus on games with strong online
modes such as Monster Hunter Rise, Splatoon 3, Diablo III, Mario Kart 8 Deluxe, and some LEGO
titles.
If you’re unsure where to start, Mario Kart 8 Deluxe, Overcooked! 2, and Super Mario Bros.
Wonder are three of the most broadly loved co-op experiences on the systemand they hit very
different vibes.
Real Co-op Experiences: What It’s Actually Like Playing These Games
Rankings are helpful, but co-op games really live or die on the stories you make with the
people sitting next to you. Here’s what the experience of playing some of these titles actually
feels like in practice.
In Overcooked! 2, even well-functioning adults regress into pure instinct the
moment the kitchen catches fire. One person is calmly chopping onions for soup until the level
starts shifting, the floor disappears, and suddenly someone is shouting, “WHO LEFT RICE ON THE
STOVE?!” It’s equal parts teamwork drill and relationship stress testbut when your squad finally
nails three stars on a tough stage, that high-five hits different.
Stardew Valley is the exact opposite energy. A typical co-op day: one player
heads to the mines to fight slimes, another waters crops and rearranges the farm, and someone
else spends the day fishing at the beach. The group might regroup at night, dumping a day’s
haul into the shipping bin and planning what to build tomorrow. It feels less like “playing a
game” and more like sharing a gentle, pixelated life together.
In Luigi’s Mansion 3, couch co-op often becomes an improv comedy routine. Luigi
panics at ghosts, Gooigi oozes through grates to unlock shortcuts, and someone inevitably
vacuums up a rug or a potted plant just to see what happens. The difficulty is low enough that
kids and adults can genuinely play together, but the puzzles are clever enough that no one
feels bored.
Monster Hunter Rise brings a different kind of satisfaction. Early on, hunts can
be sloppyeveryone swinging wildly at the monster, drinking potions at the wrong time, and
forgetting to sharpen weapons. But a few hunts later, the group starts to click: one player
sets traps, another uses a horn for buffs, and someone else mounts the monster for huge damage.
When everything comes together, it feels like running a perfectly executed raid, but with giant
angry dinosaurs.
Untitled Goose Game in co-op is pure improv comedy. Two players sneak, honk,
and sabotage a tiny British town with zero pressure. One goose distracts the groundskeeper
while the other steals his keys. You will absolutely create your own mini “sketches” without
even tryinglike carefully planning a stealth operation, then blowing it instantly because
someone accidentally hit the honk button too early.
And then there’s Cult of the Lamb with its co-op update. It’s a strangely cozy
experience to build a cult with a friendone person decorates the base and manages followers,
while the other dives into dungeons, slaying enemies and bringing back resources. It’s a mix of
“dark cute” and actual strategy, and it works surprisingly well for duos who want something more
unusual than a standard platformer.
The big takeaway: the “best” co-op Switch game isn’t just the top-ranked oneit’s the one that
fits the vibe of your group right now. Some nights you’ll want tight, technical combat
in Monster Hunter Rise; other nights you’ll just want to honk at people as a goose or plant
pumpkins in Stardew Valley. The magic of the Switch ecosystem is that you can have all of those
experiences on one system.
Whether you’re starting with a classic like Mario Kart 8 Deluxe or trying something newer like
LEGO Horizon Adventures or Disney Illusion Island, the real win is simple: you’ve got a reason
to hand someone a Joy-Con and say, “Okay, we have to beat this together.”
