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Games Like Roblox: Top Games with Player-Made Worlds

Games Like Roblox: Top Games with Player-Made Worlds

by Andrea Knezovic

If you love Roblox, you probably love it for one reason. You can open the app with zero plan… and still end up doing something totally different every time. One minute you’re messing around in a chaotic lobby, the next you’re running a café with strangers, then suddenly you’re deep in a horror map that has no business being that stressful on a Tuesday night.

That’s the magic. It’s part game, part social hangout, part “someone made this and I can’t believe it actually works.”

So if you’re in that mood again but want something fresh, this list of games like Roblox is for you. Some are all about building and sharing your own stuff. Some are giant playgrounds packed with community-made worlds. And a few are basically digital theme parks where you can just show up and see what happens.

fortnite creative mode

1. Fortnite (Creative / UEFN)

Fortnite Creative is basically a giant “games inside a game” hub, and UEFN is the beefier PC editor that lets creators build way wilder islands with Unreal tools and Verse scripting.

Fortnite Creative lets you jump into creator-made islands like tycoons, parkour deathruns, prop hunts, shooters, racing maps, and more. If you want to build, you can use Creative tools in-game for quick stuff, or use UEFN on PC when you want deeper control, custom systems, and bigger projects. UEFN also supports proper playtesting loops where your island runs in the Fortnite client so you can test fast and iterate.

How Fortnite (Creative + UEFN) is like Roblox

✅ You hop between tons of user-made experiences instead of sticking to one “main mode.”

✅ Creation is a core feature, not an extra. Building and publishing islands is the whole point.

✅ Big social energy, lots of discovery, lots of “what are we playing tonight?” vibes.

✅ Your creations can reach players on console, PC, and mobile through Fortnite’s supported platforms.

❌ It’s not a standalone app ecosystem like Roblox. Everything lives inside Fortnite, with Fortnite’s rules and vibe.

❌ The creation ceiling is higher with UEFN, but it’s also more “game dev” feeling than Roblox Studio for a lot of people.

❌ Monetization works differently. Fortnite uses engagement payouts, and Epic has also been opening up island transactions in certain ways.

My Take

If you like Roblox for the endless variety, Fortnite Creative hits that same itch, just with a slicker shooter-style feel and way flashier visuals. The only real downside is you’re always living in Fortnite’s universe, so if you want that pure “anything goes” Roblox weirdness, it’s a slightly different flavor.

minecraft build game

2. Minecraft

Minecraft is the ultimate sandbox. You build anything you can imagine, then you either chill in Creative or try to survive the night when everything wants to eat you. 😅

On mobile you’re playing Bedrock Edition, so you can do cross-play with other Bedrock friends, join servers, or run a private world with Realms if you want something simple and always online.

How Minecraft is like Roblox

✅ You can spend years in it and still find new stuff to do.

✅ You can build your own experiences and invite friends to mess around in them.

✅ Community content is a big deal, including maps and add-ons from the Marketplace.

❌ It’s not mainly a “hub of mini-games” the way Roblox is. You usually live in a world, not hop modes every two minutes.

❌ Creation is more about building and game rules, not a full-on creator platform with endless genres built into the front page.

❌ Mods and wild custom servers are a bigger thing on Java, while Bedrock is more consistent across devices.

My Take

If Roblox is your “variety night” game, Minecraft is your “main home base” game. It’s insanely cozy when you want to build and vibe, and it gets genuinely intense when you play survival with friends and things start going wrong in a funny way.

rec room game

3. Rec Room

Rec Room is a social hangout game where you bounce between tons of player-made “rooms” and mini-games, then swap to building your own stuff when inspiration hits. It’s free, and it runs across phones, consoles, PC, and VR headsets, so it’s super easy to squad up.

The vibe is very “jump in, meet friends, go do something dumb and fun.” One minute you’re in a chill hangout space, the next you’re in a chaotic community game, then you’re messing around making your own room. If you’re a creator type, Rec Room has in-game building tools, plus Rec Room Studio, which lets you publish to Rec Room from Unity and still tweak things back and forth with the in-game Maker Pen.

How Rec Room is like Roblox

✅ You get endless user-made experiences and hangout spots to explore.

✅ You can build your own rooms and share them with other people.

✅ It’s very social first, with a big “show up and see what’s going on” feel.

❌ Rec Room feels more like a live hangout space at its core, especially because it started with VR energy.

❌ Creation can feel more tool-based and constrained than Roblox Studio in some genres, even though Rec Room Studio adds serious power through Unity.

❌ The “front page” discovery vibe is different, since Rec Room is more about rooms and social spaces than a pure game platform identity.

My Take

If you like Roblox because you can pop into weird community games with friends, Rec Room is a slam dunk. The humor is chaotic, the social vibe is strong, and VR players bring this extra level of silliness that can be either hilarious or exhausting, depending on your mood.

vrchat game

4. VRChat

VRChat is basically a giant social universe where the community makes the worlds, avatars, hangouts, events, and weird little experiences you stumble into at 2 a.m. It’s famous for VR, but you can also play without a headset, and it recently expanded to phones and tablets too.

Most of the time you’re world-hopping with friends, meeting random people, and checking out whatever looks fun. On the creator side, VRChat worlds and avatars are built with the VRChat SDK, and you can add interactivity with Udon or UdonSharp, which is basically “make this world do stuff” scripting.

How VRChat is like Roblox

✅ Tons of user-made experiences, so you’re never “done.”

✅ Avatars are a huge part of the identity and the flex.

✅ Strong social energy, with public rooms and friend groups.

❌ Way more “hangout first” than “mini-game platform first.”

❌ Creator tools can feel more hardcore, since a lot of building is Unity-based.

❌ Content can get more mature and messy than Roblox, so safety settings matter a lot.

My Take

If you want Roblox-style chaos but with a stronger “virtual hangout” vibe, VRChat is a wild pick. Just go in knowing it can swing from hilarious to awkward fast, so stick to friends-only instances early on and get comfy with the safety settings.

garry's mod game

5. Garry’s Mod

Garry’s Mod is a physics playground where you spawn props, NPCs, and tools, then mess around until something hilarious happens. There are no built-in goals, it basically says “here’s the toybox, go be a menace.”

A huge part of GMod is community game modes and addons. You can grab stuff from the Steam Workshop, then hop into servers running things like Prop Hunt or Trouble in Terrorist Town, or just build cursed contraptions with welds and constraints.

One important note, it’s a PC game, not a mobile one. It runs on Windows, macOS, and Linux.

How Garry’s Mod is like Roblox

✅ You can jump into tons of community-made experiences and servers.

✅ People make the fun, the weirdness, and the trends.

✅ You can create your own stuff and share it with others through addons and servers.

❌ No mobile version, so it’s not a phone pick the way Roblox is.

❌ It’s more “mod chaos” than “kid friendly creator hub,” so the vibe can get rough depending on the server.

❌ Setup can be messier than Roblox, since some servers expect specific content and addons.

My Take

If you like Roblox for goofy community modes, Garry’s Mod is basically that energy turned up to max. Just be ready for a little tinkering, and stick to well-run servers so it stays fun instead of cursed.

dream game ps

6. Dreams

Dreams is a PlayStation creation sandbox where you can play community-made games, then make your own games, scenes, music, and animations with surprisingly deep tools. It’s a PS4 title, and you can also play it on PS5 through backward compatibility.

The “Dreamiverse” feed is the fun part. You can bounce between short weird experiments, full mini-campaigns, and artsy stuff that feels like an interactive museum. If you like building, Dreams gives you a full toolset for logic, animation, sculpting, and audio, all built for a controller.

One heads up, live support ended in 2023, so you should not expect big new updates, but the game and community creations still exist and are playable. It also supports the original PS VR on PS4, but not PS VR2.

How Dreams is like Roblox

✅ You can hop through a huge library of user-made experiences.

✅ Making your own stuff is the main point, not a side mode.

✅ Remix culture is strong, you can share and build on ideas in a very community-first way.

❌ It’s locked to PlayStation, so you do not get that “play anywhere on any device” vibe Roblox has.

❌ Discovery feels more artsy and experimental than Roblox’s endless genre buffet.

❌ If you want to use your own creations outside Dreams, you need to follow their usage terms, especially around original work and licensed content.

My Take

If Roblox is your chaotic arcade, Dreams is your creative studio with a community gallery attached. When it hits, it REALLY hits, but you’ll enjoy it most if you like exploring strange passion projects, not only chasing the next competitive mode.

tower unite game

7. Tower Unite

Tower Unite is a PC social party hub where you hang out in a big resort-style plaza, then jump into stuff like the arcade, casino, and minigolf with other people online.

You mostly spawn into The Plaza, mess around with friends, and queue into activities or timed plaza events. The other big pillar is Condos, which are player-hosted spaces you can decorate and open to friends or the public, so it can feel like a nonstop house party with mini-games on the side. It also advertises zero microtransactions, which is honestly refreshing in this genre.

How Tower Unite is like Roblox

✅ You can spend the whole night hopping between hangouts, activities, and random community chaos.

✅ Social-first vibe where meeting people and messing around is half the point.

✅ Personal spaces you can host and customize, similar to having your own “place” friends can join.

❌ PC-only, so it does not hit that play-anywhere Roblox convenience.

❌ Less about making totally new games from scratch, more about partying in a shared hub with built-in activities.

❌ The vibe skews older and more chaotic depending on the server crowd, so your experience can vary a lot.

My Take

If you like Roblox for the social chaos and goofy mini-games, Tower Unite is a great fit. Think “virtual amusement park hangout” more than “endless genre platform,” and you’ll have a blast.

blockman game

8. Blockman GO

Blockman GO is a mobile “mini-game hub” where you hop between a bunch of blocky games, customize your character, and hang out with other people in chat. It’s basically aiming straight at that Roblox vibe, just with a more Minecraft-looking style.

You’ll spend most of your time picking a mode and jumping in fast, like Bed Wars, Sky Block, Egg War, parkour, and hide and seek style modes, plus a bunch of rotating community stuff. It also pushes social features hard, with built-in chat and a lot of “join friends, form a squad, queue again” energy.

How Blockman GO is like Roblox

✅ Lots of bite-sized community games in one app.

✅ Strong social vibe with chat and quick matchmaking.

✅ Character cosmetics and showing off your look is a big part of the loop.

❌ It’s more “pick a mode and grind” than “build your own game world from scratch” for most people.

❌ Monetization feels more in-your-face than Roblox sometimes, since it’s packed with ads and in-app purchases.

My Take

If you want Roblox-style variety on your phone and you’re cool with a grindy arcade feel, Blockman GO is a solid time. Just be picky about which modes you stick with, because some feel surprisingly fun and others feel like filler.

kogama game

9. KoGaMa

KoGaMa is a creator platform where you can play thousands of user-made 3D games, or make your own and publish it for everyone to try. It’s best known as a browser game, and it also has a mobile app on Android.

Most KoGaMa experiences feel like quick multiplayer maps you can jump into fast, like parkour, shooters, racing, hangouts, and puzzle rooms. If you want to build, KoGaMa has a 3D editor plus visual game logic, so you can set up rules and interactions without writing code.

How KoGaMa is like Roblox

✅ You bounce between tons of user-made games instead of sticking to one “main” mode.

✅ Creation is a core feature, and publishing your own game is part of the loop.

✅ It’s multiplayer and social, with a lot of hangout and “try this map” energy.

❌ The vibe is more old-school web sandbox, so it can feel rougher around the edges than Roblox in presentation and polish.

❌ Discovery is less “algorithm-fed front page,” more “go looking for good rooms and creators.”

❌ The mobile version exists, but the overall ecosystem feels more PC-browser-first compared to Roblox’s big app-first feel.

My Take

KoGaMa is a fun pick if you want Roblox-style variety but with a simpler, blocky “jump in and go” vibe. The best way to enjoy it is to follow good creators and favorite the modes you like, because the quality swings a lot from map to map.

play together game

10. Play Together

Play Together is a cozy social world where you hang out in a big town, dress up your character, decorate your home, and jump into a bunch of quick mini-games with other people.

You’ll spend a lot of time bouncing between activities like party-style mini-games, fishing, home parties, and seasonal events, then chilling in the plaza to meet people or mess around with friends. It’s very “log in, see what’s happening today, do something cute or chaotic for 20 minutes” energy.

How Play Together is like Roblox

✅ You can jump between lots of different mini-games and activities inside one app.

✅ Social hangouts are a huge part of the fun, not just an extra.

✅ Customizing your avatar and showing off cosmetics scratches that same “look at my fit” itch.

❌ You are not really making brand new games like Roblox Studio creators do, it’s more about playing and decorating within the game’s systems.

❌ The vibe is more life sim and hangout, less “infinite weird genre roulette.”

My Take

If you like Roblox for the social chaos but want something cuter and more chill, Play Together is a great switch-up. The mini-games are fun, but the real hook is the daily routine stuff and hanging out with friends in your own space.

Final Thoughts

If Roblox is your comfort game, it’s usually because you want options. You want to jump between mini-games, hang out with friends, or stumble into some weird community-made world you didn’t even know existed.

The good news is there are plenty of games like Roblox that hit the same vibe, just in different ways.

If you mainly want endless creator-made content, start with Fortnite Creative, Rec Room, or VRChat.

If you care more about building and making your own stuff, Minecraft is still the easiest place to lose whole weekends.

And if you want something you can play anywhere, Blockman GO and Play Together are solid “open it and see what happens” picks.

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