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The best couch co-op games you can play with friends
May 15, 2026·9 min read
Good couch co-op does not just put two players on the same screen. It turns the room into a part of the game. Someone shouts too late. Someone laughs at the worst possible moment. Someone insists they had a plan, even as the whole thing collapses in front of everyone. That is the magic. The best local co-op games are not always the biggest games, but they are the ones people remember after the controllers are down.
These are the games that make playing together feel natural, tense, funny, messy, or strangely peaceful. Some are built for chaos. Some need real teamwork. Some are better when everyone is slightly bad at them. All of them understand why sharing a sofa can still beat another silent online lobby.
10. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Shredder’s Revenge

A good beat ’em up has to survive first contact with the couch. Shredder’s Revenge does that almost instantly. The screen fills with Foot Clan soldiers, pizza boxes, flying kicks, and cartoon noise, but it never becomes hard to read. Everyone can jump in, mash a little, learn a little, and still feel useful.
Tribute Games nails the speed of old arcade brawlers without making the game feel trapped in the past. Each turtle has enough personality in their movement and attacks to make swapping characters
worthwhile, and the stages keep the energy up with short gags, boss fights, and background details that feel pulled straight from Saturday morning TV. The game supports up to six players at once, which turns the whole thing into controlled nonsense when the room is full.
Shredder’s Revenge works best when nobody is taking it too seriously. It is loud, short, generous, and easy to restart with a different group. That makes it a perfect warm-up game before the night turns into something more competitive.

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Shredder's Revenge
Xbox Series X|SPlayStation 4Linux
Released
June 16, 2022
Developer
Tribute Games
Publisher
DotEmu
Systems
Xbox Series X|S
PlayStation 4
Linux
Android
PC (Microsoft Windows)
iOS
PlayStation 5
Xbox One
Nintendo Switch
9. Lovers in a Dangerous Spacetime

Lovers in a Dangerous Spacetime looks cute until the ship starts falling apart. Then everyone suddenly has a job, nobody is doing it properly, and the person on shields is somehow on the other side of the vessel firing a cannon at nothing.
The setup is brilliant because the players are not controlling separate heroes in the usual way. They are running around inside one shared spaceship, jumping between weapons, engines, shields, and map stations while enemies attack from every angle. The official site describes it as a 2 to 4 player local co-op game, with no network support because the team focused on couch co-op instead.
That choice gives the game its bite. Communication is not optional. Someone has to steer, someone has to shoot, someone has to cover the weak side, and everyone has to move before panic turns into comedy. It is sweet on the surface, but the real fun is watching a group become a tiny, frantic crew.

Lovers in a Dangerous Spacetime
PlayStation 4LinuxPC (Microsoft Windows)
Released
September 9, 2015
Developer
Asteroid Base
Publisher
Asteroid Base
Systems
PlayStation 4
Linux
PC (Microsoft Windows)
Mac
Xbox One
Nintendo Switch
8. Sackboy: A Big Adventure

Sackboy: A Big Adventure is the rare family-friendly co-op game that does not feel flat when adults play it. The platforming is gentle at first, but the levels have enough rhythm, bounce, and visual charm to keep a group engaged beyond the usual “safe pick” category.
Its best co-op moments come from small acts of helpful mischief. You can work together cleanly, or you can bump into each other, mistime jumps, grab the wrong thing, and turn a simple platforming section into a tiny disaster. The whole game is playable in local and online multiplayer with up to four players, and it includes co-op-focused levels that ask players to coordinate rather than simply run beside each other.
Sackboy is easy to recommend for mixed groups because it does not punish new players too hard. It keeps the mood light, gives everyone something to do, and still has enough craft in its levels to avoid feeling like background noise.

Sackboy: A Big Adventure
PlayStation 4PC (Microsoft Windows)PlayStation 5
Released
November 12, 2020
Developer
Sumo Digital
Publisher
Sony Interactive Entertainment
Systems
PlayStation 4
PC (Microsoft Windows)
PlayStation 5
7. Diablo IV

Diablo IV becomes a different kind of game when two people are sitting in the same room chasing loot together. The grim world, endless dungeons, and skill trees are still there, but couch co-op turns the grind into a running conversation about builds, bad drops, terrible decisions, and whether one more dungeon really means one more dungeon.
The action works well because both players stay busy. One player can dive into mobs while the other controls space, melts enemies from range, or keeps pressure on elites. Console couch co-op gives Diablo IV a more social pace than solo play, especially when both players are comparing gear and arguing over which objective is worth chasing next. Blizzard lists couch co-op as part of Diablo IV’s console feature set alongside cross-play and cross-progression.
It is not the cleanest party game on this list, and it asks for more time than most. But when the loop clicks, Diablo IV gives couch co-op a long-term hook: the next level, the next legendary, the next build that might finally make your character feel broken in the right way.

Diablo IV
Xbox Series X|SPlayStation 4PC (Microsoft Windows)
Released
June 6, 2023
Developer
Blizzard Entertainment
Publisher
Blizzard Entertainment
Systems
Xbox Series X|S
PlayStation 4
PC (Microsoft Windows)
PlayStation 5
Xbox One
6. Baldur’s Gate 3

Baldur’s Gate 3 sounds like a strange couch co-op pick until the first argument breaks out over a dialogue choice. Then it makes perfect sense. This is not a game about two people moving through levels together. It is a game about sharing bad ideas and living with the consequences.
Split-screen play gives each player room to wander, talk, steal, fight, romance, or ruin the plan from another part of the map. Larian’s PS5 updates improved couch co-op with dynamic split screen, letting the display merge when players are close and separate again when they head off in different directions.
The joy is in how personal every session becomes. One player might be trying to role-play carefully while the other starts a fight with a merchant. A serious quest can become slapstick because someone clicked the wrong option. Baldur’s Gate 3 is dense, talky, and sometimes slow, but with the right friend it becomes one of the funniest and most unpredictable co-op games around.

Baldur's Gate 3
rpgRPGD&DStory
Released
August 3, 2023
Developer
Larian Studios
Publisher
Larian Studios
Systems
PC (Microsoft Windows)
macOS
PlayStation 5
Xbox Series X|S
5. Stardew Valley

Stardew Valley does not create couch co-op chaos by throwing enemies at the screen. It does it with time. Morning starts, the clock moves, and suddenly everyone has a different idea of what the farm needs. Someone waters crops. Someone goes fishing. Someone disappears into the mines and comes back half-dead with a backpack full of rocks.
The co-op works because the game gives players shared goals without forcing everyone into the same routine. A farm can become a tidy business, a messy group project, or a quiet hangout where progress happens almost by accident. Stardew Valley supports multiplayer through split-screen, LAN, and IP connections, with the official wiki listing 1 to 8 players across supported modes.
It has a slower pulse than the other games here, but that is the appeal. Few couch co-op games are this comfortable with silence. You can talk the whole time, or barely talk at all, and still feel like you built something together by the end of the night.

Stardew Valley
PlayStation 4LinuxNintendo Switch 2
Released
February 26, 2016
Developer
ConcernedApe
Publisher
Chucklefish Games
Systems
PlayStation 4
Linux
Nintendo Switch 2
Android
PC (Microsoft Windows)
iOS
Mac
Wii U
PlayStation Vita
Xbox One
Nintendo Switch
4. Cuphead

Cuphead in co-op is a friendship test disguised as a cartoon. The art is gorgeous, the music swings, and then a boss deletes both players in seconds because someone jumped too early and someone else forgot where the parry button was.
Two players do make the game more forgiving in one important way: revives. A quick save can keep a run alive, but only if the surviving player is brave enough to jump into danger for it. That single mechanic changes the whole mood. Every near-death becomes a small negotiation between heroism and self-preservation. Local co-op lets a second player join as Mugman alongside Cuphead, making the game’s boss fights feel even more frantic.
Cuphead is difficult, but it is rarely dull. The best couch sessions are full of blame, laughter, instant restarts, and the weird silence that falls over the room when both players know they almost had it.

Cuphead
PlayStation 4PC (Microsoft Windows)Mac
Released
September 29, 2017
Developer
Studio MDHR
Publisher
Studio MDHR
Systems
PlayStation 4
PC (Microsoft Windows)
Mac
Xbox One
Nintendo Switch
3. Overcooked! All You Can Eat

Overcooked! All You Can Eat understands that kitchens are already stressful, then adds moving floors, burning pans, impossible orders, and friends who keep chopping onions when the soup is on fire.
The genius of Overcooked is how quickly simple tasks become group failure. Chop this. Cook that. Wash plates. Serve the order. None of it sounds hard until four people are blocking each other in a kitchen built like a trap. All You Can Eat brings together Overcooked, Overcooked 2, and additional content in a remastered package, with hundreds of levels and online multiplayer integrated across the collection.
It is one of the best couch co-op games because it creates stories every few seconds. A perfect round feels like a miracle. A bad round is usually funnier. Either way, the room is never quiet for long.

Overcooked! All You Can Eat
Google StadiaXbox Series X|SPlayStation 4
Released
November 12, 2020
Developer
Team17
Publisher
Team17
Systems
Google Stadia
Xbox Series X|S
PlayStation 4
PC (Microsoft Windows)
PlayStation 5
Xbox One
Nintendo Switch
2. It Takes Two

Hazelight built It Takes Two around one rule: both players must matter. That sounds obvious, but plenty of co-op games still let one person carry the other. Here, Cody and May constantly receive different tools, different jobs, and different perspectives, which means both players have to stay awake and involved.
The game keeps changing shape. One chapter plays like a platformer, another like an action game, another like a puzzle box, and another like a tiny competitive sideshow hidden inside the larger journey. PlayStation describes it as an adventure built purely for two, playable in couch or online co-op with split-screen, where working together is the only way forward.
It Takes Two is messy as a story about marriage, but as a co-op game it is unusually generous. It keeps handing players new toys, new problems, and new reasons to talk. Most games on this list are great with friends. This one barely exists without one.

It Takes Two
Xbox Series X|SPlayStation 4PC (Microsoft Windows)
Released
March 25, 2021
Developer
Hazelight Studios
Publisher
Electronic Arts
Systems
Xbox Series X|S
PlayStation 4
PC (Microsoft Windows)
PlayStation 5
Xbox One
Nintendo Switch
1. Split Fiction

Hazelight did not follow It Takes Two by playing smaller. Split Fiction goes bigger, weirder, and faster, bouncing between sci-fi and fantasy ideas with the confidence of a studio that knows exactly what couch co-op can do when the whole game is built around two people.
Mio and Zoe’s worlds give the game a sharper contrast than Hazelight’s previous work. One moment throws players through slick sci-fi spaces, the next drops them into fantasy chaos, and the best sections use that split to keep both players reacting instead of settling into routine. EA calls it a split-screen adventure tailored for two, built around coordinated timing and shared challenges, with Friend’s Pass support that lets one owner invite a friend to play for free across supported platforms.
Split Fiction takes the best lesson from modern couch co-op: players do not just want to stand next to each other. They want to interrupt, rescue, betray, panic, recover, and somehow clear the level anyway. This is the rare co-op game that feels designed for the noise in the room as much as the action on screen.

Split Fiction
Xbox Series X|SNintendo Switch 2PC (Microsoft Windows)
Released
March 6, 2025
Developer
Hazelight Studios
Publisher
Electronic Arts
Systems
Xbox Series X|S
Nintendo Switch 2
PC (Microsoft Windows)
PlayStation 5
Tagged In
couch co-opco-op gamesmultiplayer games