With so many shooters coming out in the last 15 years, it's easy to feel shooter fatigue setting in. This feeling is made even worse by the returning focus on real military conflicts that triple-A shooters have driven into the ground. Luckily, there's one sub-genre from the past that is ever-exciting: the movement shooter.

Unlike their brown and beige military shooter counterparts, movement shooters continue to innovate, eager to throw in any off-the-wall idea and see if it sticks. Gone are realistic military skirmishes. In their place sit giant robots, ancient gods, and the most chaotic gameplay in modern gaming.

Updated December 19, 2024 By Ben Jessey: There are plenty of amazing movement shooters in the world. As such, we couldn't fit them all on this list. So, we've now updated the piece to add several more.

13 Neon White

Level filled wth water in Neon White, with a Purify Soul Card selected and a large white yacht in the distance.

Released
June 16, 2022
ESRB
T For Teen Due To Fantasy Violence, Language, Mild Blood, Mild Suggestive Themes, Use of Tobacco
Developer(s)
Angel Matrix
Publisher(s)
Annapurna Interactive
Genre(s)
FPS, Puzzle

Neon White isn’t just about moving; it’s about moving at speed, as this is an FPS designed around speed running. If you want to go really fast, though, you can’t just sprint. You need to use some parkour skills to get up and around obstacles quickly.

You can get some handy parkour abilities by picking up and discarding the soul cards that are laid around each level. However, you may not want to get rid of them immediately to unlock the special ability, as they also serve as your weapons before being discarded. So, you will need them to take out the enemies in your way. Therefore, the key to this game is choosing the right time to discard your cards. It’s a unique gameplay mechanic that works really well in this smooth and satisfying game.

12 Metal: Hellsinger

Metal: Hellsinger screenshot of a Wraith coming towards the player, while the player holds a blade.

Released
September 15, 2022
ESRB
M For Mature // Blood, Strong Language, Violence
Developer(s)
The Outsiders
Publisher(s)
Funcom
Platform(s)
PC, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X|S
Genre(s)
FPS, Rhythm

At first glance, Metal: Hellsinger looks a lot like Doom with its hellish setting and litany of demons. Where it differs from that classic shooter is in the fact that it’s an FPS mixed with a rhythm game. You move around while a heavy metal track is blasting away, and you do more damage if your attacks synchronize to the music beat.

Along with timing your shots, you’re encouraged to be in perpetual motion in this game as you move around the battlefield. This can allow you to get in good attack positions, but it can also allow you to dodge incoming fire. Your ability to double jump and dash in mid-air helps, too.

11 Halo 5: Guardians

Halo 5 screenshot of Spartan doing a ground pound.

Released
October 17, 2015
ESRB
T for Teen: Blood, Mild Language, Violence
Developer(s)
343 Industries
Publisher(s)
Microsoft Game Studios
Platform(s)
Xbox One
Genre(s)
FPS

Halo, as a series, isn't known for its movement. In fact, in the early games, you can't even run. Yet, the series has changed quite a lot over the years. So much so that Halo 5 can be considered a movement shooter.

Not only can you sprint, but you also can dash in different directions, slide, charge into things, and hover in the air. Along with that, the game offers the typical solid FPS experience that made the series famous in both the campaign and PvP multiplayer.

10 Sunset Overdrive

The main character grinding through a barrage of missiles of Sunset Overdrive.
Sunset Overdrive
Third-Person Shooter
Open-World

Released
October 28, 2014
ESRB
M For Mature 17+ due to Blood and Gore, Drug Reference, Sexual Themes, Strong Language, Violence
Developer(s)
Insomniac Games
Publisher(s)
Microsoft Game Studios
Platform(s)
Xbox One, PC
Genre(s)
Third-Person Shooter, Open-World

Sunset Overdrive is not the standard movement shooter, as it's also an open-world title. The said world is a metropolis whose populace has been mutated thanks to a toxic energy drink. At least, most of them have, as there are still survivors, including the main character, who attempts to get to the bottom of the mess.

They do so by utilizing their incredible movement skills. As them, you can run on walls, zipline, and skate around the place. This isn't just from getting from one place to another, either. You're encouraged to do all this stuff during fights, too.

9 DUSK

The player character brandishes their shotgun in a tree-filled room in Dusk.

Released
December 10, 2018
ESRB
M For Mature 17+ Due To Blood and Gore, Use of Alcohol and Tobacco, Violence
Publisher(s)
New Blood Interactive
Platform(s)
PC, Switch
Developer
David Szymanski
Genre(s)
FPS

One look at DUSK, and you may think this game is from the '90s. This is by design, as the title is a love letter to games from that period, such as Doom and Quake.

Like those games, DUSK is a shooter where you're encouraged to be in perpetual motion. So, this isn't an FPS where you hide in cover and peek out occasionally to fire some shots. You take on all sorts of enemies simultaneously while running around and shooting them.

8 Super Cloudbuilt

Screenshot of Super Cloudbuilt soldier wall-running with rockets.

Super Cloudbuilt is a parkour-platformer first and a shooter second. That's not a bad thing, though, as its extreme focus on fluid movement makes running and jumping just as satisfying as gunplay.

Tearing through Super Cloudbuilt's lonely world makes for a solemn experience when you're not shooting everything, and the marriage of these two very different vibes is what makes it so special. Super Cloudbuilt is a uniquely existential movement shooter and should be recommended for anyone who likes to feel things while they blow everything up.

7 Bulletstorm

Character in Bulletstorm shooting a gun with their foot close up in the foreground.
Bulletstorm
First-Person Shooter

Released
February 22, 2011
ESRB
M For Mature 17+ due to Blood and Gore, Game Experience May Change During Online Play, Intense Violence, Partial Nudity, Sexual Themes, Strong Language, Use of Alcohol
Developer(s)
People Can Fly
Publisher(s)
Electronic Arts
Platform(s)
PS3, PS4, Xbox One, Xbox 360, PC
Genre(s)
First-Person Shooter

In the build-up to Bulletstorm's release in 2011, the phrase "kill with skill" was used a lot. This is because the game is all about eliminating people in wild and unusual ways. You even gain extra points for unique kills. Therefore, you're discouraged from simply hiding behind cover and picking people off.

You have to be out in battle, running and sliding around while using your varied set of weapons to rack up some kills. All the while, you get to experience some cheesy but humorous dialogue.

6 Ultrakill

V1 Fires Two Guns In Ultrakill.

Released
September 3, 2020
ESRB
t
Developer(s)
Arsi "Hakita" Patala
Publisher(s)
New Blood Interactive
Platform(s)
PC
Genre(s)
FPS

Ultrakill is a game that revels in its own absurdity. Every design decision was made to make the game as cool as possible, and you can feel this over-the-top energy throughout the entire campaign. Gore flies out of every PS1-esque character model, and high-speed movement cannonballs you toward unsuspecting enemies at hilarious speeds. Hell, even the name is awesome.

It feels like Ultrakill is constantly pushing you to shoot faster, move faster, and learn faster. It's an exhilarating, if exhausting, game to experience. Play Ultrakill, but only if you have a comfy place to lie down and relax once you're done.

5 Apex Legends

Apex Legends characters about to shoot at each other.
Apex Legends
Battle Royale
First-Person Shooter

Released
February 4, 2019
ESRB
T for Teen: Blood, Violence
Developer(s)
Respawn Entertainment
Publisher(s)
Electronic Arts
Genre(s)
Battle Royale, First-Person Shooter

Apex Legends is an almost-sequel to the excellent Titanfall 2. Rather than creating another tight single-player experience, Respawn Entertainment decided to try its hand at the battle royale genre. And through some bizarre miracle, they actually ended up with a great game.

By melding hero shooter gameplay with battle royale mechanics, Apex Legends picks and chooses the best parts from each of the modern shooter crazes of the 2010s, leaving their rough spots at the door. Add in some expertly tuned movement and the most adorable robot friend ever, and you have the recipe for the best battle royale on the market.

4 Vanquish

Vanquish promo image of character sliding.
Vanquish
Action
Third-Person Shooter

Released
October 19, 2010
ESRB
m
Developer(s)
Platinum Games
Publisher(s)
Sega
Platform(s)
PS4, PS3, Xbox One, Xbox 360
Genre(s)
Action, Third-Person Shooter

Vanquish might be the most movement-obsessed shooter ever. It begs you to dash, jump, flip, and slide in the way only a space soldier with a robot suit could. Add in bullet time mechanics, and you have a uniquely extreme experience. As well as Matrix-style slow-motion acrobatics, Vanquish also offers a feeling of all-out war, with dozens of soldiers and robots fighting on the same battlefield as you. It's nothing short of a miracle that Vanquish came out on PS3.

Vanquish's story is a weak one, but that's easily forgotten once a cutscene ends, and you're back to taking down an evil robot army as sci-fi John Wick. Vanquish is a six-hour stint of intergalactic mayhem, and it's a crime that it never got a sequel.