Games Like High School: Dreams
The most direct descendants of High School Dreams are the open-ended social sandboxes. These games prioritize player agency, systemic interaction, and the slow, rewarding process of building relationships from the ground up. The undisputed titan of this sub-genre is the Persona series, particularly Persona 4 Golden and Persona 5 Royal .
The most iconic of these is the Bully (Canis Canem Edit) by Rockstar Games. You play as Jimmy Hopkins, a delinquent sent to the corrupt Bullworth Academy. While High School Dreams encourages you to be a well-liked overachiever, Bully encourages you to rule the school through pranks, fistfights, and political maneuvering between cliques (Nerds, Preppies, Greasers, Jocks). You can attend classes to learn new moves and gadgets, but you can also skip them to spray graffiti, shoot marbles under teachers' feet, or kiss every girl (and boy) in the schoolyard. It is the dark, satirical inversion of the High School Dreams fantasy. games like high school dreams
Finally, no exploration of high school games is complete without acknowledging the rebellious shadow self of High School Dreams . For every game about making friends and finding love, there is a game about breaking the rules, humiliating the jocks, and burning the school to the ground (metaphorically, and sometimes literally). The most direct descendants of High School Dreams
Similarly, Yandere Simulator (in development) takes the obsessive crush trope to its logical, horrifying extreme: eliminate all rivals for your senpai’s affection by any means necessary, from social sabotage to murder. Katawa Shoujo , while a heartfelt and respectful visual novel about a school for disabled students, includes routes that deal with trauma, jealousy, and deeply dysfunctional relationships. Even The Sims 4: High School Years expansion allows players to be a rebellious prankster, cheat on exams, or start a rumor mill. These rebellious sandboxes serve as a crucial counterpoint to the earnestness of High School Dreams . They remind us that the high school fantasy is not just about belonging—it’s also about power, chaos, and the thrill of transgression. The most iconic of these is the Bully
A third category of games shares the setting but prioritizes the "grind" of self-improvement over social chaos. These are life-skill simulators, where the goal is to transform the awkward protagonist into a renaissance teenager. High School Dreams has elements of this—raising intelligence, charm, or athleticism—but other games make this the entire focus.