
The best Monster Hunter games make the most of the wonderfully simple premise: join up with friends to take on some absolutely massive and dangerous creatures. Now going over two decades strong, the series pioneered its compelling loop back on PS2. Partying up, felling monsters, then using their bits and pieces to craft shiny loot all leads back around on itself as you hunt better and better gear to go up against stronger and stronger foes. Other series may have been inspired by it, but few can real nail the formula quite like Monster Hunter, let alone pull of its unique oddball charm.
Yet with its idiosyncrasies, it's also been a series where popularity had been confined to Japan until more recent years. Given how Capcom has kept iterating with each entry, including re-releasing "ultimate" versions with even more content, to make it more approachable to newcomers, you might then assume that ranking the games would be quite straightforward. Yet some have their own unique ideas, while purists might find that more recent instalments have diluted some of the essence a bit too much. With Monster Hunter Wilds, the latest entry, having just released, we've reconsidered them all with that context. So join us now as we run down the best Monster Hunter games of all time.
10. Monster Hunter Now

Developer: Niantic, Capcom
Platform(s): iOS, Android
Release date: September 14, 2023
Basically Monster Hunter's answer to Pokémon Go, Monster Hunter Now is an augmented reality game played on your smartphone where you fight monsters as you have a walk out in the real world. It's naturally a more stripped-down affair, with hunts rarely longer than about a minute whereas in the mainline series you might take as long as 50 minutes. It does a pretty decent job of translating the core Monster Hunter loop, including hunting with others, for short bursts of fun that has visuals matching what you see in the mainline series, while it's also a lot more fleshed out than when Pokémon Go originally launched. Still, in this condensed and casual format, it's missing a lot of the depth and strategy that seasoned hunters are used to.
9. Monster Hunter Freedom

Developer: Capcom
Platform(s): PSP
Release date: May 12, 2006
Sure, Monster Hunter Freedom is essentially a port of the first Monster Hunter that includes its expanded "G-rank" mode adding even tougher monsters and challenges after the base campaign – a formula that Capcom has followed with all subsequent mainline entries. But that would undermine just what a game-changer putting the game onto the PSP was. Whereas the PS2 game's potential was lost on those who didn't have an ethernet adaptor, the PSP featured local wireless multiplayer, allowing fellow hunters to meet up and play together on their own handhelds. In Japan where playing portably was and continues to dominate, it was transformative. Unfortunately, with no online mode, it also meant you were out of luck if you didn't know anyone nearby, considering the harder missions here required assistance even more than with the original.
Learn more in our Monster Hunter Freedom review where we said the game "makes for a lot of frustrating-as-hell battles as you try to probe your enemies' weaknesses, but it's just that much more rewarding when you finally bring them crashing to the ground."
8. Monster Hunter Stories 2: Wings of Ruin

Developer: Capcom, Marvelous
Platform: Switch, PC, PS4
Release date: July 9, 2021
While the series is already an action RPG, this spin-off series embraces all things turn-based, having you play not as a hunter but a rider who shares bonds with monsters, or "Monsties" (don't roll your eyes, it's at least a little bit cute!). While the first entry on 3DS felt a bit too childish, its sequel, Monster Hunter Stories 2: Wings of Ruin, is a significant improvement. With an anime style that takes a leaf from Breath of the Wild, and featuring more monster types from the at-the-time recent entries, this felt like a rich and well-judged side-story. Balancing a rock-paper-scissor battle system with quicktime button-mashing, it's almost as tactical and riveting as the mainline hunts. It's just a shame the Switch hardware often buckles under the technical demands, so you're better off checking it out on PC or the more recent PS4 port.
7. Monster Hunter Freedom Unite

Developer: Capcom
Platform: PSP, iOS
Release date: June 22, 2009
Monster Hunter Freedom Unite really cemented the series' strength as a portable powerhouse, though for us in the West, that's also the only way to experience it since the PS2 release, a sequel to the first Monster Hunter, never actually made it out of Japan. But with G-rank included from the off, it's the most complete package you can hope for, even though the frustratingly tedious busywork remained in between the hunts you actually came for. But this was also the entry that introduced Palicos, cat helpers who accompany you on your hunts, making the solo grind just a little more bearable. It may still be a game that was only a phenomenon in Japan, but when it sinks its teeth into you, it's hard to let go despite all the ways it can frustrate you, and became a must-have on PSP for those who loved the PlayStation handheld.
Learn more in our Monster Hunter Freedom Unite review where we said "few games demand such tedious tasks for so little reward and still keep us playing"
6. Monster Hunter 3 Ultimate

Developer: Capcom
Platform: Wii U, 3DS
Release date: March 19, 2013
The third main instalment is a turning point as Capcom switched development of the series to Nintendo platforms, starting with Monster Hunter Tri on Wii. However, the expanded edition, released on Wii U and 3DS a few years later, is where it's at. This version doesn't only include tougher monsters like the absolute brute that is Brachydios, but is also the series' HD debut on Nintendo's home console. Better yet, if you owned both the Wii U and 3DS version, you could even transfer your save data between the two so that you could take your progress from your living room to anywhere you wanted. It felt like a real revolution, essentially gunning for Nintendo Switch style functionality before that hardware existed. Monster Hunter is often a little ahead of the curve.
Learn more in our Monster Hunter 3 Ultimate review where we said "its high learning curve may dissuade some players inexperienced with the series, but with enough patience and resourcefulness, you’ll be able to get through any problem and feel proud that you accomplished it"
5. Monster Hunter Generations Ultimate

Developer: Capcom
Platform: Switch
Release date: August 28, 2018
"Generations" is an apt part of this title, which essentially draws a line under the series’ legacy that Monster Hunter: World would blow apart and rebuild anew. Once again, the Ultimate edition is the definitive way to go, adding even more missions and new monsters to the roster that was otherwise more of a greatest hits package – although the flashy Hunter Arts were still a worthwhile addition to freshen up the weapon types. The major problem though, is that outside of Japan this released after Monster Hunter: World had already shaken up expectations too much. So, for us, it'll always be in its shadow.
4. Monster Hunter Rise

Developer: Capcom
Platform: Switch, PC, PS5, PS4, Xbox Series X, Xbox One
Release date: March 26, 2021
You could almost call Monster Hunter Rise a more arcadey spin-off. Certainly, compared to any other mainline entry to date, we’ve never had missions that trim out the fat and get us to the good stuff so fast. That’s down to having monsters visible on the map from the off, but also having the dependable Palamutes you can ride to catch up to your hunts in speedy fashion. Thanks to the incredible Wirebugs, verticality is even more fun as you swing yourself into the air whenever you want, which also adds new aerial skills to an already huge weapon roster. Purists might lament that it's streamlined to an extent that some of the original essence is lost, while the tower defense-style Rampage mode is a less interesting addition, but it brings so many wild ideas and a charming feudal Japan aesthetic that you couldn't call it lightweight in the slightest.
Learn more in our Monster Hunter Rise review where we said it was “a great debut for Capcom’s franchise on the Nintendo Switch, smartly providing new tools to the established arsenal like the Wirebug, and acting as a welcoming point of entry for newcomers”
3. Monster Hunter 4 Ultimate

Developer: Capcom
Platform: 3DS
Release date: February 13, 2014
The Western release of Monster Hunter 4 Ultimate once again arrived belatedly while skipping the base game straight onto the expanded version. In any case, it felt like no expense was spared for the first exclusively handheld instalment, as at the time it was also one of the most gargantuan entries. Hunts were elevated, literally, as the game was designed with much more verticality, from new weapon the Insect Glaive allowing your hunter to vault in the air, to being able to even mount monsters. Perhaps what made this entry even more appealing for newcomers was an improved localisation effort that better appealed to a global audience, honing on the game's charms, even if you still had to put up with some old systems quirks. For one of the best 3DS games of all time, look no further.
Learn more in our Monster Hunter 4 Ultimate review where we said "the reason even the smallest reward feels like an achievement, more than most other games, is because of how every one of the game’s systems feeds into getting into it"
2. Monster Hunter: World

Developer: Capcom
Platform: PS4, Xbox One, PC
Release date: January 26, 2018
By rebuilding the core experience from the ground-up for current-gen home consoles, Monster Hunter: World was the seismic game-changer that finally transformed the series from a distinctly Japanese phenomenon into a global apex predator. The new world's flora and fauna never felt more alive, with seamless maps no longer broken up with loading screens, while monsters, from the classic Rathalos to the new Anjanath, could even start scrapping with one another in turf wars. Most crucially was an overhaul to its core systems, as everything from gathering materials to tracking monsters to calling help from other hunters was simpler and more intuitive. Which all adds up to Monster Hunter: World being a far more approachable entry point for new players than its often intimidating predecessors. Arriving in the era of the live-service game, it's had all kinds of bizarre collaborations – you can even play as Geralt from The Witcher – not to mention the mammoth Iceborne expansion that's undoubtedly the best Master Mode/G-Rank expansion in the series to date, which just went to show everyone else hopping on the loot train just how it's done.
Learn more in our Monster Hunter: World review where we said it "makes it significantly more approachable, without in any way stripping it down or diminishing it"
1. Monster Hunter Wilds

Developer: Capcom
Platform: PS5, Xbox Series X, PC
Release date: February 28, 2024
As is often the case in this series, the freshest leads the pack. Monster Hunter Wilds is simply the most fully-formed evolution of this beastie battler to date. The seamless maps introduced in the last entry are even bigger and more varied, and incorporating the base camp within them, so you no longer have to load into the map, does a lot to make the environments feel alive. The huge selection of monsters combine some stellar new designs with returning favorites to create a varied menagerie of hunting delights (stick around post-credits for oodles of content too). All 14 weapons feel like they're at their best too. Intuitive to handle and fight with, every attack chain is slick and polished, making the older games feel downright clunky in comparison. Sekirets, raptor-like bird mounts, make navigation a breeze too, able to use shortcuts and auto-target selected monsters to track down. If that's not enough, crossplay makes this easily the best Monster Hunter to play online. Now that's alpha.
Learn more in our Monster Hunter Wilds review where we called it: "The new peak of the series and an early contender for game of the year"
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