Games with "adult" themes but that aren't really "adult" games

Lweo4

New Challenger
Level 0
80%
Joined
Dec 4, 2024
Messages
20
Level up in
5 posts
Reaction score
24
Points
52
Location
Brazil
This year I'm on a binge of playing the Tales Of games that I didn't play yet, which is my favorite series, and I realized that almost every game has an "adult" theme even though they're aimed at younger audiences, I finished Xillia 1 and 2, and it touched a lot on themes like discrimination etc, I played Symphonia right after and it also features themes about this, and the same was for Rebirth (I still need to finish). Games like this that I can remember are ones like FF7 and FF Tactics.

I would like games, in preference JRPGS, that touch on themes normally considered more "mature", but that aren't "adult" per se. Normally, I feel that when a game is for "adults" it dwells too much on gore, violence, etc. I feel that the subtlety of a game touching on mature themes but without trying to be adult feels refreshing.

It can be on ANY platform or genre (even visual novels).
 
Megaman 9 has robots being discarded merely by a "Expiration law" and then scrapped, Wily used it as a ploy to make himself an army, but in the end Mega admits they has a point
 
Earthbound
Mother 3
Popolocrois (not sure about this one, i guess it does grasps some adult elements, but very few)
Final Fantasy 9
Legend of Mana
 
I find the Dragon Quest games can get pretty bleak and mature sometimes even though the games themselves seem whimsical and cheerful. Some of the smaller town vignettes are downright depressing and deal with some pretty mature themes. Death, dealing with loss, regret, things like that. There's a few of them in DQVI and DQVIII I remember being particularly depressing.
 
Grandia II

Questions the validity of religion, social control etc. Many of the themes are Nietzschean but presented in a lighthearted way. The "romance" is unconventional as well.
1759114472461.png
 
I'm surprised that Xenogears and Xenosaga trilogy are very mature to be T-rated games that even shows more graphic scenes than Megaten games(which during PS2 era all of them were M-rated and CERO B or C)
 
I find the Dragon Quest games can get pretty bleak and mature sometimes even though the games themselves seem whimsical and cheerful. Some of the smaller town vignettes are downright depressing and deal with some pretty mature themes. Death, dealing with loss, regret, things like that. There's a few of them in DQVI and DQVIII I remember being particularly depressing.
V's Main character make Lucas from Mother 3 look like a privileged kid
 
Last edited:
Ratchet & Clank series. It has a lot of adult humor and subtle innuendos.

Metroid Prime Quadrology.

Ocarina of Time

Twilight Princess

Majora’s Mask. It dives into the stages of grief. Also the impending apocalypse.

Super Paper Mario. Has themes of loss and despair.

Paper Mario Thousand Year Door. Has a literal Pianta Mafia, has themes of war in one part of the game, has a transgender character and Rougeport is portrayed as a ghetto town.

Crash 4 its about time. Has adult humor in it.

Shadow the Hedgehog. Self-explanatory.

Sonic 06.

SA2. Rouge.

Super Mario Strikers and Strikers Charged. A more grittier take on the Mario series.
 
I mean, yeah, most of the Tales games do this very well:
Graces f deals with growing up and growing apart from your friends, and what happens when you end up on conflicting sides of a war.
Berseria is about grief, revenge and what it really means to be a family. It was honestly a more mature and nuanced revenge story than something like the Last of Us II.
Zestiria explores religious idealism, how heavy the weight of expectations placed upon a "chosen one" really are and the sacrifices such a title requires to be lived up to.

Also, Ni No Kuni II. It has what could be the start of a very basic revenge story, but ultimately tells a story of rebuilding from loss, of building a better future for everyone.
 
Final Fantasy 6 had to have certain elements changed and censored I think because they were too dark. Suicide, a woman being beaten half to death, etc.

Valiant Hearts: The Great War looks like a cartoon but tells a story about war and even has historical anecdotes about war.

Valkyria Chronicles has a pretty art style and silly anime characters, but the story touches on war, prejudice, and other serious issues.

The Mega Man franchise touches on the ramifications of robots and AI. It's all silly and fun in the original Mega Man games but gets a bit darker and more serious with each subsequent series like the Mega Man X series, the Mega Man Zero series, etc, etc, etc.

The Dynasty Warriors and Samurai Warriors games have characters that are over top anime type characters, but those characters are based off of real life historical figures who dealt with war, violence, betrayals, and all kinds of other drama in real life.

The Sexy Brutale - You just have to play this one, I won't spoil anything.

Narita Boy - The flashback stories get very serious, don't want to spoil anything

13 Sentinels - There's a lot to unpack here, just play the game yourself. It has a cutesy art style, but the story deals with many mature themes.

Nier Automata - LOTS of mature themes in this game, even fourth wall breaking stuff targeting you the player
 
Disco Elysium probably fits here since you said any platform or genre. Go for the final cut version and say hi to Cuno for me.
 
This isn't really what you're looking for, I just wanted to bring them up.

Metroid2_boxart.jpg
Smetroidbox.jpg
Metroid_Fusion_box.jpg


Motherhood is a consistent motif in these games and the idea of "the call of motherhood" is revisited several times - it's a topic that's incredibly foreign to younglings but I think they handle it in a way that's very easy to grasp. They also manage to express this theme without being too overbearing or straight-up misogynistic like in Other M
 
I find the Dragon Quest games can get pretty bleak and mature sometimes even though the games themselves seem whimsical and cheerful. Some of the smaller town vignettes are downright depressing and deal with some pretty mature themes. Death, dealing with loss, regret, things like that. There's a few of them in DQVI and DQVIII I remember being particularly depressing.
DQV has you ending a generation with both parents turned to rock, which the kids then have to go look for.
 
I wouldn't so much call those adult stories as I would call them actual, or potentially even good stories. As opposed to the entertainment equivalent of hot air the industry likes to serve up these days. The death of ambitious storytelling in the majority of the mainstream by way of market research is a fairly recent thing.

For some random examples that I haven't seen mentioned yet - the Shining Force 3 trilogy, Shin Megami Tensei I and II, Ogre Battle, Tactics Ogre (this one might be skirting the line with how "adult" it gets honestly, could be a bit much), Vagrant Story - the list goes on.
 
Last edited:
Shadow the Hedgehog. Self-explanatory.

Sonic 06.

SA2. Rouge.
Can you please explain? I can't play these games well to save my life, and you have me curious.

Anyways, I'd go with Cyberpunk 2077 and The Witcher 3. While they do have a lot of edgy stuff, they have a lot to say. Cyberpunk 2077 for example despite not actually being Cyberpunk(punks aren't bounty hunters for the cops, and you can't start a revolution just by yourself.) has a very big anti-capitalistic message.

On a related note, if you want actual Cyberpunk, check out Cloudpunk.
Post automatically merged:

Final Fantasy 6 had to have certain elements changed and censored I think because they were too dark. Suicide, a woman being beaten half to death, etc.
What suicide was censored in the US version of FF6? I know that there's the famous scene with
Celes
, but she fails. I believe you, but what do you know that I don't?
Post automatically merged:

I wouldn't so much call those adult stories as I would call them actual, or potentially even good stories. As opposed to the entertainment equivalent of hot air the industry likes to serve up these days. The death of ambitious storytelling in the majority of the mainstream by way of market research is a fairly recent thing.
I hear ya, and I agree for the most part. That said, there's a lot of games and movies and tv shows that still have a lot to say.
 
Last edited:
Can you please explain? I can't play these games well to save my life, and you have me curious.

I put shadow the hedgehog because it tries to be mature and edgy by having guns and mild swearing in it.


Sonic 06 because of themes of apocalypse.


In Sonic Adventure 2, Rouge was sexually designed. Even having jiggle physics and a panty line on her model (no im not joking when I said that) also having an unlockable skimpy outfit.
 
Regarding FF 6, if you save Cid the suicide scene doesn't happen. Also, the scene of Celes being beaten was toned down when the game was released.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Connect with us

Support this Site

RGT relies on you to stay afloat. Help covering the site costs and get some pretty Level 7 perks too.

Featured Video

Latest Threads

RGT Nostalgia Society #5 Nominations

Its nearly October so its nearly time for another RGT Nostalgia Society.

Each month we play...
Read more

Does anyone know why Konami made this sudden shift back into outputting games again?

Did they start losing money on the gambling side? Did they get a new CEO who's more into the...
Read more

Star Ocean Thread

Welcome to the world of Star Ocean
whos-your-favorite-star-ocean-protagonist-v0-g1em7n7thmwb1.jpg
Read more

Games with "adult" themes but that aren't really "adult" games

This year I'm on a binge of playing the Tales Of games that I didn't play yet, which is my...
Read more

Any extremely short games on Switch?

Something that's an hour or two at most, replay value aside. Example: I bought Toree Saturn for...
Read more

Online statistics

Members online
88
Guests online
2,107
Total visitors
2,195

Forum statistics

Threads
13,453
Messages
326,321
Members
879,002
Latest member
user76

Advertisers

Back
Top