Highlights

  • Australia's diverse nature inspired several iconic video games, including platformers like Kao the Kangaroo and Ty the Tasmanian Tiger.
  • Crash Bandicoot paved the way for marsupial-themed platformers in gaming, setting the stage for Australian-inspired games to follow.
  • From racing games like Forza Horizon 3 to point-and-click adventures like Beneath a Steel Sky , Australia's landscapes serve as a unique backdrop.

Video games can bring all sorts of locations to life. Like A Dragon: Infinite Wealth is great for exploring Hawaii.InFamous 2 replicated a New Orleans-like setting with aplomb. Even The Getaway managed to map London accurately. However, some other countries aren't featured in video games very often, like Australia.

Related
Tour Like A Dragon: The Real-Life Inspirations For Yakuza’s Cities

These real cities in Japan served as the major inspiration for some of the Yakuza franchise's most iconic locations.

The Land Down Under has produced a range of famous games, like Bioshock (via 2K Australia), L.A. Noire (via Team Bondi), and Way of the Exploding Fist (via Beam Software). Yet they’re not particularly Antipodean. For a real taste of the continent, fans should check out these great video games set in Australia.

8 Kao The Kangaroo

Metascore: 65

Kao the Kangaroo Key Art
Kao the Kangaroo (2022)

Released
May 27, 2022
Developer(s)
Tate Multimedia
Genre(s)
Platformer , Action

Australia became a hot property for platform games due to a certain PlayStation mascot. Hot enough to inspire at least two imitators, with one of them being Kao the Kangaroo. This boxing marsupial went through three rounds of games, plus two spin-offs, before going down for the count after the mid-2000s.

He came back for more in 2022 with the simply titled Kao the Kangaroo. In this game, he’s got to find his missing sister Kala and discover the secret his long-lost father held by taking on a series of famous fighting masters before fighting the Eternal Warrior. It’s not exactly Mario or Banjo-Kazooie quality, but it’s a solid bit of platforming fun.

7 Ty The Tasmanian Tiger 2: Bush Rescue

Metascore: 69

Games Set in Australia- Ty 2 Bush Rescue
Ty the Tasmanian Tiger 2: Bush Rescue

Platform(s)
Nintendo Game Boy Advance , GameCube , Switch , PC , PS2 , PS4 , Xbox , Xbox One
Released
October 12, 2004
Developer(s)
Krome Studios
Genre(s)
Platformer

The other Aussie Crash imitator was the Ty the Tasmanian Tiger series, though unlike Kao, it was produced within Australia by Krome Studios. They took direct inspiration from the country’s landscapes and wildlife to produce the game's levels and characters, including Ty, the last thylacine left alive. He and his boomerangs managed to swing through four games and a since-canceled TV series.

Like Kao, the games got a cool reception. They weren’t fantastic, but they were good, with Ty 2: Bush Rescue generally considered to be the best of the bunch. It took an open-world approach to its gameplay, where Ty could do sidequests for NPCs, race karts, ride ‘Bunyips’ (mech suits named after an Aboriginal cryptid), and leap from platform to platform.

6 Crash Bandicoot

Metacritic User Score: 8.2

Crash Bandicoot 1 Opening Boxes
Crash Bandicoot

Platform(s)
PS1
Released
September 9, 1996
Developer(s)
Naughty Dog
Genre(s)
Platformer

Why did publishers give marsupial-themed platformers like Kao and Ty a go? Because Crash Bandicoot got there first! Not that Naughty Dog had an easy go of it. Universal wanted them to use a more familiar animal, like a wombat if it had to be Australian, but Naughty Dog stuck to their guns and created the most popular marsupial in gaming history.

Related
Every Crash Bandicoot Spin-Off Game, Ranked

There are many Crash Bandicoot games, and that also includes a wide variety of spin-off titles.

That said, the game’s settings tended to look more Polynesian than Australian, from the tribesmen to the talking mask Aku Aku. Yet the Bandicoot’s foes were largely based on Australian fauna like kangaroos, potoroos, and koalas. The series would go to other places across space and time, but would have a few remaining Aussie connections, like the dingo-crocodile hybrid boss Dingodile and his noticeable accent.

5 Taz-Mania

GameFAQs Score: 3/5 Stars

Games Set in Australia- Taz-Mania
Taz-Mania

Platform(s)
Nintendo Game Boy , Game Gear , Master System , Genesis , SNES
Released
1992-07
Developer(s)
Recreational Brainware , NuFX , Sega , Visual Concepts
Genre(s)
Action-Adventure

Crash Bandicoot didn’t come out of nowhere. Its biggest sources of inspiration were Sonic the Hedgehog, a platformer mascot based on an animal obscure to Americans, and Taz, a Looney Toons character more familiar to fans worldwide. Based on the Tasmanian Devil, an angry, dog-sized marsupial, he’d rant, rave, and spin wildly across the landscape.

The character came back in style in the 1990s via his own showTaz-Mania, which got its own platformer for the SNES, Genesis, and other consoles. Like the Bandicoot, players had to spin Taz into foes and through obstacles to reach the end of each level. They could also make him eat random items, like chili peppers and stars for power-ups, but if they ate the wrong stuff, they’d lose health.

4 Webbed

Metacritic User Score: 8.3

0_0005_Webbed
Webbed

Platform(s)
PC , Nintendo Switch , PS4 , Xbox One
Released
September 9, 2021
Developer(s)
Sbug Games
Genre(s)
Platformer , Puzzle

While Taz-Mania was set in Tasmania, it didn’t really resemble the island. It was a Looney Toons show after all, not cinéma verité. But there are some Aussie-themed platformers that went for a more realistic depiction of the country's nature and physics, like Webbed. Made by the Brisbane-based Sbug Games, it follows a peacock jumping spider called Buddy trying to save her boyfriend from a Satin Bowerbird.

It’s a non-linear puzzle platformer where the player gets around via their webbing skills. It has a few fanciful elements, like a skateboarding-themed minigame, and laser eyes, but they’re all there to show off the game’s physics, where Buddy can swing from her webs, pull objects with them, glide on air currents, and get help from other bugs. It even comes with an Arachnophobia mode to make Buddy and friends less scary to look at.

3 Forza Horizon 3

Metascore: 93

Forza Horizon 3 black car parked on a beach
Forza Horizon 3

Platform(s)
Xbox One , PC
Released
September 27, 2016
Developer(s)
Playground Games
Genre(s)
Racing

When looking up ‘games set in Australia,’ people will find a lot of driving and racing games. The nation's diverse nature, ranging from jungles to deserts, grassland to cities, etc., has been a boon for developers needing a good backdrop for players to race through. But one Outback track feels like meager pickings for this list.

3:20
Related
Best Open-World Racing Games Of All Time

There have been plenty of excellent open-world racing games over the years, but which among them are the greatest of all time?

Forza Horizon 3 goes beyond one or two tracks by taking place entirely within Australia, where the player must race, perform stunts, and do other challenges to get enough fans to attend the Horizon Festival. On top of a wide, customizable range of cars and options, players can race around an open-world version of Australia. While it’s a fictional version of the country, it’s a close recreation of the real deal.

2 Beneath A Steel Sky

Metascore: 82 (Remastered Edition)

Beneath A Steel Sky walking through industrial scene
Beneath a Steel Sky

Platform(s)
PC , Mobile
Released
March 1, 1995
Developer(s)
Revolution Software

Made by a pre-Broken Sword Charles Cecil, with art by a post-Watchman Dave Gibbons, Beneath a Steel Sky is widely regarded as one of the best point & click games ever made. At a glance, players might see it as another Blade Runner-esque story with its urban dystopia, and they’re not wrong, as it’s up to Robert Foster to expose the corruption lurking at the center of Union City.

What might get overlooked is that it’s all set in Australia. The orphaned Robert Foster was brought up in ‘the Gap’ (a massively reduced Outback) and got his surname from the (in)famous Aussie brand of lager. Union City is the second-largest city-state within Australia but is about to be taken over by Tasmania’s Hobart Corporation. If players want a more serious Aussie game, BaSS is the one to go for.

1 The Adventures Of Down Under Dan

MyAbandonware Score: 4/5 Stars

Games Set in Australia- Down Under Dan
The Adventures of Down Under Dan

Platform(s)
PC
Released
1995-00-00
Developer(s)
PowerVision
Genre(s)
Point-and-click

Admittedly, The Adventures of Down Under Dan isn’t in Beneath a Steel Sky’s league. It’s also a point-and-click game, but it hasn’t aged as well as BaSS with either its pixellated, digitized graphics or odd item-based puzzles. However, it’s arguably one of the better depictions of Australia in gaming, albeit with its tongue firmly in its cheek.

Made by Aussie developers PowerVision, it’s a parody of Crocodile Dundee, where its lead suffers amnesia following a plane crash and must survive in the Outback by doing a range of odd jobs and scenarios. It’s got some funny bits of dark humor (watch out for meat-eating ants!) and has a hint system for beginners. Though it’s still best suited for players used to the genre’s moon-logic puzzles.

More
7 Most Iconic Australians In Games

Known for their down-to-earth personalities, these Australian mascots are viewed as icons among the gaming community.