The 10 Best Video Game Movies of All Time
Mario, Sonic, Lara Croft, Nathan Drake, Scorpion and other favorite game greats made the leap to the big screen... successfully, as it turns out. These are our picks for the best video game movies of all time!


You'd think pulling together a "best video game movies" list would be fairly easy given the meager amount of qualifying flicks... so we made it a bit more challenging with a Top 10! The question you should have now isn't "Oooh, which movies made the cut?" but instead "Wow, there are actually 10 decent movies based on video games?"
Yes, effectively translating games to film has always been one of Hollywood's biggest challenges, even as games became more and more story-focused, acting like long-form movies in their own right. It's understandable why old school cabinet games and platformers, with scant narratives, would be tough to adapt but modern games come almost automatically assembled for the big screen. How hard is it to make an Uncharted movie when the Uncharted games feel like movies? As it turns out? Super gd difficult.
So games-to-movies is still a heck of a nut to crack, apparently, but in recent years we've been seeing some marked improvement. (And we didn't even cheat by including all three Sonic the Hedgehog movies... though maybe we should have!)
And a note: This list is made up of movies that are based on real games. It does not include movies that are about video games (The Wizard, Pixels) or the many movies that feature a made-up game (Free Guy, Ready Player One, Wreck-It Ralph, Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle, etc.).
With A Minecraft Movie landing on our doorstep this week, here's our Top 10 Video Game Movies of All Time!
10. Street Fighter (1994)

Our official crap entry here, since we have to admit that some video game movies are brilliant schlock, is the goofy guilty pleasure of 1994’s Street Fighter. Look, most video games at the time were either platformers or fighting games so… not a lot of narrative was unfolding. And Street Fighter was kind of exactly what you wanted from a Street Fighter movie.
Popping up right toward the end of Jean-Claude Van Damme’s heyday (he’d still have the underrated Peter Hyams’ movies Timecop and Sudden Death to unleash), Street Fighter has now meandered over into beloved cult movie territory, with a crazed cast that included Ming-Na Wen, Kylie Minogue, Wes Studi, and the late great Raul Julia (in what would be his final film role). Written and directed by screenwriter Steven E. de Souza (Die Hard, The Running Man, Richochet), Street Fighter was transformed into a Van Damme vehicle, making Colonel Guile the central character and guaranteeing a ton of roundhouse spin kicks.
9. Rampage (2018)

This is most definitely the best movie you could have whipped up based on the 1986 arcade game featuring Godzilla and Kong-esque monsters, and their best pal -- a giant Werewolf -- climbing buildings, eating people, swatting planes, and then reducing said buildings to rubble. For 2018's Rampage, however, the battle lines were a little different. It was Lizard and Wolf vs. Ape and... Rock.
Yes, Dwayne Johnson re-teamed with director Brad Peyton (following Journey 2: The Mysterious Island and San Andreas) for a smash-em-up disaster flick all about mutant beasts tussling in, and subsequently leveling, Chicago.
8. Uncharted (2022)

Asked in the intro: How hard could it be to make a good Uncharted movie? Putting aside, of course, how hard it is to make any movie, in general.
The Uncharted games not only play like action movies, with eye-popping interactive cutscenes that are basically stunt spectaculars (one of which even wound up kinda/sorta in Mission: Impossible - Dead Reckoning), but the games themselves were also influenced by classic action-adventure flicks like the Indiana Jones films.
The choice to have stars Tom Holland and Mark Wahlberg played aged-down versions (that's Hollywood, baby!) of hero Nathan Drake and mentor Victor "Sully" Sullivan soured some fans of the game franchise while also robbing the film of Uncharted's heart and lived-in appeal, but the action was decent (particularly the third act set piece) and there was enough charisma on set to allow this mixtape of Uncharted characters and lore to persevere.
7. Resident Evil (2002)

With overall quality up for spirited debate, the single most resilient video game movie franchise is the Paul W. S. Anderson Resident Evil series. Spanning two decades, with six movies, Resident Evil became the little Umbrella Corporation engine that could with its own brand of cheese-tastic action and horror.
Representing the entire run -- and even the more recent Resident Evil: Welcome to Raccoon City reboot in 2021 and the separate Netflix series in 2022 -- is the 2002 original, featuring The Fifth Element's Milla Jovovich as amnesiac heroine Alice, who joins up with a band of warriors to battle the sinister Umbrella Corporation and the scourge of the zombie-creating T-virus.
Mixing up various parts of the first two Resident Evil games, this first movie nicely set the stage for 25 more years of RE films. With 28 Days Later and the Dawn of the Dead reboot helping popularize zombie horror at the start of this century, Resident Evil found itself in a sweet spot being able to pull from games filled with undead monsters and tons of dystopian lore.
Oh, and the franchise isn't done reinventing itself either, as a brand new version from Barbarian's Zach Cregger is slated for 2026.
6. Mortal Kombat (2021)
With this list we're trying to strike a balance between old and new when it comes to video game movies, honoring old adaptation attempts and previous big swings while also saluting the newer grittier and grounded reboots. 2021's Mortal Kombat, which gets a much-buzzed-about sequel in 2025, hit all the right notes when it came to world building, bone-crunching action, and occasional wit. It took the iconic, pivotal fighting game and gave it a new sheen, showcasing our heroes' quest to save Earth from Outworld hostiles while using the revenge story between Scorpion and Sub-Zero as the film's... er, spine.
But we'll also throw some love to Paul W. S. Anderson's original 1995 adaptation. Yes, before he cracked the Resident Evil code, Anderson had a nice '90s hit with the first Mortal Kombat movie - a fun, campy crash course in throwing a fighting game up on the big screen.
5. Tomb Raider (2018)

And here's another legendary game franchise that has been running for so long we've gotten into reboot territory. So much so that the Tomb Raider movie from 2018 was based on an entirely different rebooted game series -- the Survivor Trilogy -- than the previous two Angelina Jolie films, which had big action directors at the helm in the form of Simon West and Jan de Bont.
The new Tomb Raider, starring Ex Machina's Alicia Vikander, was a thoughtful, exciting reworking of the 2013 game, the first of the new trilogy, and included the island of Yamatai adventure that helps transform young Lara Croft from an aimless heiress into globe-trotting adventurer. Or, survivor, if you will, as this origin story portrays Lara as a scrappy, skin-of-her-teeth type more than a confident action hero.
A sequel was in the works for a while until COVID delays stalled everything up so much that MGM wound up losing the film rights to the game franchise in 2022. Such a pity. Trinity's definitely behind this.
4. The Super Mario Bros. Movie (2023)
The less said about the original Super Mario Bros. film from 1993 the better, though it is a fascinating study from a blockbuster disaster standpoint. And the film's now wandered into "so bad it's good... but it's still bad" territory. Overall, it was a live-action miscalculation of epic proportions.
That first attempt to bring Mario and Luigi was so abysmal that it basically stamped out all future tries. Nintendo essentially stopped licensing its characters for movies. Almost 30 years later, the Super Mario curse was broken with a vibrant, delightful animated film that basically printed money at the box office. The Mario Bros. world was just too ridiculous and disjointed -- plumbers, princesses, mushrooms, Bowsers -- for live-action and needed to thrive in a cartoon environment. This fantastical story needed a fantastical presentation. And while the casting of Chris Pratt as Mario became a sticking point for the internet, no one ultimately gave a s***. Everything worked here.
3. Detective Pikachu (2019)
The live-action/animation hybrid Detective Pikachu was a clever, heartfelt dive into the vast world of Pokemon, with Ryan Reynolds voicing a smart, sleuthing Pikachu who teams with Justice Smith's forlorn former Pokemon trainer, Tim, who's the only person who can hear this particular Pikachu talk. Together they investigate the death of Tim's estranged father in Ryme City. This energetic, offbeat take on the unique game world led to box office gold, making Detective Pikachu the highest-grossing video game movie of all time (at the time). Great character arcs, surprising story twists -- the film clearly understood the assignment. As of now, a sequel is supposedly still "in the works."
2. Werewolves Within (2021)

The least-watched film on this list for sure, and based on the least-known game on the list (a VR game for Oculus Rift from 2016), Josh Ruben's Werewolves Within is a hilarious, freaky monster mystery starring Sam Richardson (Veep, The Detroiters) as a new park ranger in a small town full of feuding citizens who are either being bumped off by their own neighborly rivals or... a gruesome beast stalking from the woods. Filled with funny, accentuated by co-stars Milana Vayntrub (our lost Squirrel Girl), Michaela Watkins (Heart Eyes), and George Basil (Severance), Werewolves Within is a great watch and a must-add to all Spooky Seasons marathons.
1. Sonic the Hedgehog 3 (2024)

We already told you that the Sonic movies weren't taking up three spots, so here stands Sonic the Hedgehog 3 -- the best of the three movies to date and also the rep for the new Sonic franchise as a whole. The Sonic the Hedgehog movies have gotten better with each installment, with the series as a whole having truly perfected the way to bring Sega's bonkers console-launching speedy platformer to life with animation and live-action.
It's high-octane family fun that managed to find the perfect voice for Sonic in Ben Schwartz, balancing snarky and sweet. It's also responsible for bringing Jim Carrey out of blockbuster retirement, gifting a whole new generation with his incomparable comedic antics. It feels like a modern cinematic miracle that we've now managed to get Sonic and Mario up in movie theaters in big, successful ways. And Sonic the Hedgehog 3 was the deepest, most effective movie so far. The chemistry between Sonic, Tails, and Knuckles in the film is spot-on and Keanu Reeves voicing Shadow was impeccable casting.
So what are your favorite video game movies? What would you have liked to have seen represented here? Vote in our poll and let us know below!
And if you're looking for all the Upcoming Video Game Movies and TV Shows, follow the link. Or, if you're in the mood for something a little more analytical, check out our Dream Video Game Movies and TV Shows Wishlist, and also this op-ed about why it might be so dang hard to make a good video game movie.