
Eurogamer’s run-down of Day of the Devs confirmed Super Yooka-Laylee Kart, the duo’s spin into the kart racing genre, and reminded everyone how few 3D collectathons actually shipped this decade. The original Yooka-Laylee divided people on launch and Yooka-Replaylee softened the edges, but the genre that built Banjo-Kazooie barely has a working pipeline. The seven Yooka-Laylee alternatives below are the games that did the work. Each one understands what a chameleon-and-bat duo, or their nearest equivalent, is supposed to feel like.
Quick comparison
| Game | Best for | Length | Free plan | Starting price |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| A Hat in Time | The category’s strongest overall pick | 10-12 hours | No | $29.99 |
| Cavern of Dreams | N64-era nostalgia done seriously | 8 hours | No | $14.99 |
| Demon Turf | Skill-based platforming with stamina | 12 hours | No | $24.99 |
| Toree 3D | Bite-sized arcade collectathon | 1-2 hours | No | $0.99 |
| Kao the Kangaroo | Family-friendly mascot platformer | 8 hours | No | $29.99 |
| Psychonauts 2 | Story-led platformer with memorable worlds | 15-20 hours | Game Pass | $59.99 |
| Spiny & Chilly | Cell-shaded collectathon throwback | 6-8 hours | Demo on Steam | $19.99 |
Why people leave Yooka-Laylee
The original Yooka-Laylee carried a few specific complaints into Yooka-Replaylee and the broader fanbase still trades them today.
- The camera fought back. Tight corridors and skinny ledges did not pair well with the unaided third-person camera, especially on launch. Replaylee patched a lot of this, but the muscle memory stuck.
- The worlds felt sparse. The big open levels invited exploration but did not always pay it back, leaving players collecting Pagies without a clear reason.
- The humor leaned on talking heads. Long static dialogue boxes broke the flow that should have been all motion.
The seven games below each address at least one of those issues directly.
The alternatives
1. A Hat in Time — best overall pick
A Hat in Time is the closest thing the 3D platformer revival has to a default. Hat Kid sews “hats” that act as power-ups (sprint, ice, brewing) and the world chapters lean hard into their themes (a movie studio, a mafia-run town, a haunted forest). The community workshop is huge, with hundreds of player-made chapters. Two-player co-op was added years ago.
Where it falls short: the camera still bumps into geometry in tight spaces. The Death Wish hard mode is divisive.
Pricing:
- Free: no
- Paid: $29.99 ($59.99 for the Ultimate Edition with the Seal the Deal and Nyakuza Metro DLCs)
- vs Yooka-Laylee: comparable money, tighter design, smaller but denser worlds
Migrating from Yooka-Laylee: the cleanest transition. Same collectathon DNA, sharper level design, friendlier camera.
Download: Steam
Bottom line: the genre’s reigning champion and the first recommendation for any Yooka-Laylee fan who wants more.
2. Cavern of Dreams — best for N64-era nostalgia
Cavern of Dreams is the rare game that imitates the N64 look without cutting corners. Fynn the dragon recovers his unhatched siblings across a connected overworld that recalls the Banjo-Tooie school of level design. The 60-fps low-poly art is a love letter, but the controls and economy are modern.
Where it falls short: short. Eight hours to credits is the upper end. The low-poly look puts off some players regardless of the design behind it.
Pricing:
- Free: no
- Paid: $14.99
- vs Yooka-Laylee: half the price, half the length, all the atmosphere
Migrating from Yooka-Laylee: the puzzle-collectathon loop feels almost identical, only sharper.
Download: Steam
Bottom line: the best pick for anyone who wishes Yooka-Laylee had committed harder to the N64 aesthetic.
3. Demon Turf — best for skill-based platforming
Demon Turf swaps double jumps for a stamina-based traversal system. Beebz, the demon at the centre of the story, hops, paddles, and air-dashes through neighbourhoods controlled by rival turf bosses. The cel-shaded art is striking and the punishing optional collectibles give the game a long tail.
Where it falls short: the stamina system is divisive, and a couple of bosses spike in difficulty.
Pricing:
- Free: no
- Paid: $24.99
- vs Yooka-Laylee: similar price, much tougher platforming
Migrating from Yooka-Laylee: the platforming layer is the standout. Players who liked Yooka-Laylee’s open worlds but wanted more challenging traversal land here.
Download: Steam
Bottom line: the pick when we want a 3D platformer that punishes sloppy hops.
4. Toree 3D — best bite-sized arcade collectathon
Toree 3D is a tiny dollar-store throwback that does in 90 minutes what most platformers do in 30 hours. Six short levels, each shaped like a Banjo-style chunk of geometry. The sequel, Toree 2, is a similar size and equally cheap.
Where it falls short: very short. There is no story to speak of.
Pricing:
- Free: no
- Paid: $0.99 each
- vs Yooka-Laylee: a thirtieth of the price for one tenth of the length
Migrating from Yooka-Laylee: the closest thing to an “appetiser” for the genre.
Download: Steam
Bottom line: spend a dollar, get an evening’s worth of grinning.
5. Kao the Kangaroo — best family-friendly mascot platformer
Kao the Kangaroo is the 2022 reboot of the Polish boxing-glove mascot from the early 2000s. Four worlds, four runes, a moveset built around the elemental gloves. The tone is soft enough for kids and the platforming is well within reach of newer players.
Where it falls short: the camera occasionally drifts. Some of the levels feel safer than the genre’s standouts.
Pricing:
- Free: no
- Paid: $29.99 (frequently on sale at half)
- vs Yooka-Laylee: comparable money, easier difficulty curve
Migrating from Yooka-Laylee: the right pick when there is a younger player on the couch.
Download: Steam
Bottom line: the safest pick for a family co-op evening.
6. Psychonauts 2 — best for story-led platforming
Psychonauts 2 is the genre’s most narrative-heavy entry. Raz brain-dives into a cast of characters and each level is a literal mindscape with its own visual rules. The platforming is solid but the worlds are why we are here.
Where it falls short: the largest game on this list. $59.99 at full price, ten hours before the levels really open up. Free with Game Pass.
Pricing:
- Free: included in Game Pass and PS Plus on rotation
- Paid: $59.99
- vs Yooka-Laylee: twice the money, three times the run time, far more storytelling
Migrating from Yooka-Laylee: less collectathon, more directed puzzle-platformer. The leap is bigger than the others on this list.
Download: Steam
Bottom line: the right pick when the worlds matter more than the collectibles.
7. Spiny & Chilly — best cell-shaded throwback
Spiny & Chilly is the newest game on the list, a cell-shaded collectathon that pulled in good early word at Steam Next Fest. The duo (a hedgehog and a snowman) trade off through pun-heavy worlds that hit the Banjo-Tooie sweet spot. Steam has a demo.
Where it falls short: still early in its life. Some collectibles are placed without much wit.
Pricing:
- Free: demo on Steam
- Paid: $19.99
- vs Yooka-Laylee: cheaper, fresher, less polished
Migrating from Yooka-Laylee: the closest match in spirit and the freshest of the seven.
Download: Steam
Bottom line: the bet on the genre’s newest serious attempt.
How to choose
Pick A Hat in Time unless something below speaks to a specific need. Pick Cavern of Dreams for N64 nostalgia done right. Pick Demon Turf for the toughest platforming. Pick Toree 3D for under a dollar. Pick Kao the Kangaroo for younger players. Pick Psychonauts 2 when the writing matters more than the collectibles. Pick Spiny & Chilly to back the next promising genre entry. Stay on Yooka-Replaylee if we have not yet finished the Playtonic re-release.
FAQ
Is A Hat in Time better than Yooka-Laylee?
For tight level design, yes. A Hat in Time’s chapters are smaller and denser, and the camera is friendlier. Yooka-Laylee’s worlds are larger and freer, which some players prefer.
Can I play A Hat in Time co-op?
Yes. Local couch co-op was added in a free update, and the Steam Workshop carries dozens of co-op-ready chapters.
What is the cheapest Yooka-Laylee alternative on Steam?
Toree 3D at $0.99. It is short, but it captures the genre’s core in under two hours.
Are there any Yooka-Laylee alternatives on Steam Deck?
Most of the games above run on Steam Deck. A Hat in Time, Cavern of Dreams, Demon Turf, and Kao the Kangaroo all carry Verified or Playable ratings.
Will Super Yooka-Laylee Kart be on Steam?
Yes. Playtonic announced Super Yooka-Laylee Kart for Steam alongside other platforms. A release date has not yet been set.