While the debate around whether or not Die Hard counts as a Christmas movie rages on, people now eagerly hunt for other content set during Christmas despite having little to do with the holiday season, and video games are no exception to this. Currently, there are many festive games, but these range from shovelware and free-to-play titles to underwhelming adaptations of classic Christmas movies like The Grinch or The Nightmare Before Christmas. The availability of well-developed, fully-fledged Christmas games is limited unless players take the Die Hard approach.

Approaches to Christmas within AAA games, however, tend to underserve festive content as little more than DLC or seasonal updates, such as Hitman 3's Holiday Hoarders level or Sonic Frontiers' free Christmas DLC. But if players want an actual Christmas game at its core that won't fall short of expectations, then the scope should expand to the Die Hard model. Though Die Hard saw plenty of gaming adaptations, fans are looking to other games that are set during the holidays to herald as the gamers' own Die Hard parallel.

RELATED: 5 Unconventional Christmas Movies (Other Than Die Hard)

Parasite Eve

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Released in 1998 as a sequel to the novel of the same name, Parasite Eve was well-received but broadly compared to Resident Evil which had debuted just two years prior. Though there were some departures between gameplay and combat, the two games were alike due to focuses on scientific experimentation, biological evolution, and body horror. But being an industry-first in revitalizing horror, Resident Evil outpaced Parasite Eve despite the latter becoming a cult classic over time, with fans even calling for the Parasite Eve series to be remastered.

Importantly though, Parasite Eve is set during Christmas in 1997, with the game's dramatic opening sequence occurring during Christmas Eve where protagonist and rookie cop Aya Brea comes face-to-face with the titular mitochondrial "Eve." There are possible religious allusions connecting Parasite Eve to Christmas, like Eve evoking Genesis or contrasting evolution to ultimate beings, but these aren't outright central to the game as a biopunk survivalist horror. Between its action, iconic New York settings, and Aya-Eve rivalry, Parasite Eve is one possible Die Hard Christmas game.

Batman: Arkham Origins

Arkham Origins Christmas

While it connects to Rocksteady's Batman: Arkham trilogy, Batman: Arkham Origins is an outlier to the series. Not only did this prequel replace classic Batman voice actors, but it was also developed by WB Games Montreal instead of Rocksteady. Between this and the average reception from critics, many players aren't surprised that Batman: Arkham Origins is overlooked among Batman games.

But like Parasite Eve, Batman: Arkham Origins is set on Christmas Eve, though this too has little to do with the game's plot. Besides the occasional seasonal puns from Joker and the festive backdrop, its Christmas setting was probably chosen to contrast the ordinarily happy holidays with the Batman: Arkham series' brutality and darkness. As Batman overall has more in common with Die Hard as an action-adventure where the protagonist single-handedly fends off charismatic terrorists and their henchmen, it could be players' answer for gaming's Die Hard parallel.

Bayonetta 2

Bayonetta 2 Christmas

Following the recent release of Bayonetta 3 and Bayonetta Origins reveal, fans of the Umbra Witch have had plenty to enjoy and might have even replayed the Bayonetta series. Consequently, players will recall that 2014's Bayonetta 2 is also set during the holiday period. This is made explicitly clear by the game's whirlwind opening which sees Bayonetta out Christmas shopping, joined by Enzo finding gifts for his kids. But one angel-jet fighter attack later and the seasonal shopping spree is abruptly brought to a close.

RELATED: How Bayonetta Origins is Following Bayonetta 3 So Quickly

After this, Bayonetta 2 mostly overlooks the holiday period, but then so does Die Hard which only uses the Christmas party hosted at Nakatomi Plaza as a backdrop to its story. However, for the brief opening that does acknowledge the season, it does so in full force, where Enzo reflects every parent's worst nightmare of getting the perfect present for their children to Rodin cosplaying Santa Claus and bearing gifts for Bayonetta. Even Bayonetta's ongoing development of its style of tongue-in-cheek humor and over-the-top moments could reflect Die Hard's own yippee-ki-yay absurdity.

Dead Rising 4

Dead Rising 4 Christmas

Arguably the most explicit Christmas game, Dead Rising 4 uses its Christmas backdrop to greater effect, bringing fresh social commentary on holiday commercialism and people's consumerism. But for the most part, it was, as all other Dead Rising games, a zombie-smashing romp with ever-outlandish ways of killing the undead. Following the same format the series had long established, Dead Rising 4 saw Frank West's return as he uncovered a burgeoning news story while surviving among zombie hordes in a season-ready shopping mall.

However, Dead Rising 4's position as a Die Hard parallel is tenuous. Not least because the game was set after Christmas Day itself, but that the zombie outbreak seen in-game began during earlier Black Friday sales. Dead Rising 4's Christmas-centric marketing was prominent though, likely due to not just its content, but also its early December 2016 release date. This is probably the best example of an AAA game explicitly framed as a Christmas game, which might be a better alternative than repeatedly referring back to Die Hard.

Spider-Man: Miles Morales

Spiderman Miles Morales Christmas

While Batman: Arkham Origins was DC's Christmas, Spider-Man: Miles Morales is Marvel's holiday counterpart. But unlike the gloom of Gotham, Spider-Man: Miles Morales saw players swing through the streets of Manhattan in an upbeat take on the season. This festive backdrop could have been done to reflect the differences between it and 2018's Spider-Man, such as the time elapsed between the two to justify Miles' improved abilities as a second Spider-Man. It also works, narratively, as the first Christmas since his father's death and how it influences the character development of Miles and his family.

Like Batman: Arkham Origins or Parasite Eve, the Christmas backdrop does little to the game overall as Miles faces a range of classic Spider-Man villains from the Rhino to a reimagined Tinkerer. However, due to the many festive decorations across the open world and certain story beats, it can be argued that Spider-Man: Miles Morales is a Christmas game. Between the parallels of terroristic organizations seeking personal vendettas to high-octane action and comedic back-and-forth, Spider-Man: Miles Morales could be the Die Hard Christmas game.

MORE: 12 Best Games Set During Christmas