N64 NSO Games Ranked
Image: Nintendo Life

Updated with Mario Party 3.

Remember, this is a dynamic, real-time ranking of every available N64 game playable as part of a Switch Online + Expansion Pack subscription. You can add (or maybe even reevaluate) your User Ratings for every game you've played at any time, even after publication.

If you're wanting to pick up a Switch Online + Expansion Pack membership to play any or all of these games, grab a subscription here:

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The library of N64 games available with the 'Expansion Pack' for the Nintendo Switch Online subscription service boasts some of the system's heaviest hitters and it's a good first pass at getting a varied catalogue of quality 64-bit games in the hands of Switch owners.

But which of the N64 games coming to Nintendo Switch Online are the very best? Well, we can answer that question with the help of Nintendo Life readers who have rated the titles on our Games Database.

The following list is compiled using the User Ratings (out of 10) given to each N64 game scheduled to arrive on Switch in the West. It should be noted that this ranking is not set in stone and will automatically fluctuate over time depending on assigned User Ratings (and new additions to the NSO library, of course).

Think a game below deserves to be higher up on the list? Simply click on the 'star' button and score it yourself — your personal rating could boost its placement in the overall ranking.

So, sit back and enjoy the best N64 games playable on Nintendo Switch...

26. Dr. Mario 64 (N64)

Dr. Mario 64 (N64)
Dr. Mario 64 (N64)
Publisher: Nintendo / Developer: Nintendo
Release Date: 8th Apr 2001 (USA)
Available On: NSO + Expansion Pack

This puzzler is essentially a 64-bit remake of the original Dr. Mario and was never released in Europe or Japan (although it did appear in the Japan-only Nintendo Puzzle Collection on GameCube alongside Panel de Pon and Yoshi's Cookie). Dr. Mario 64 is just Dr. Mario, but prettier than it had ever been; a solid puzzler with little to get too angry or excited about.

25. WinBack: Covert Operations (N64)

WinBack: Covert Operations (N64)
WinBack: Covert Operations (N64)
Publisher: Koei / Developer: Omega Force
Release Date: 20th Oct 1999 (USA) / 7th Jul 2000 (UK/EU)
Available On: NSO + Expansion Pack

We don't know about you, but games like Operation: WinBack (as this was known in Europe and Australia) and Konami's Hybrid Heaven occupied a the B-tier on our 'to get' lists back in the day — they looked interesting, but they were way down the list behind the first-party purchases and many of us simply never got around to catching up with them once the 64-bit generation came to an end.

While Koei's third-person shooter wouldn't go down in the annals of covert ops gaming as a classic, its cover system felt fresh back in 1999 and the ability to check out the game on Switch and place it in its historical context is most welcome.

24. Yoshi's Story (N64)

Yoshi's Story (N64)
Yoshi's Story (N64)
Publisher: Nintendo / Developer: Nintendo EAD
Release Date: 10th Mar 1998 (USA) / 10th May 1998 (UK/EU)
Available On: NSO + Expansion Pack

Coming after the incredible (and incredibly beautiful) Yoshi's Island on SNES, it's no surprise that Yoshi's Story rubbed some people the wrong way with its accessible, storybook approach and cutesiness. It's certainly not the strongest or most complex 2D platformer you'll ever play, but it's brimming with the Yoshi series' trademark charm and we'd say it's worthy of reassessment if you've dismissed it in the past.

The N64 wasn't blessed with an abundance of side-on platformers, but armed with the knowledge that this isn't a 64-bit Yoshi's Island, this is a great little game starring everyone's favourite fruit-munching dino.

23. Pokémon Puzzle League (N64)

Pokémon Puzzle League (N64)
Pokémon Puzzle League (N64)
Publisher: Nintendo / Developer: Nintendo Software Technology
Release Date: 25th Sep 2000 (USA) / 2nd Mar 2001 (UK/EU)
Available On: NSO + Expansion Pack

Pokémon Puzzle League is really just Panel de Pon / Tetris Attack with a Pokemon makeover. That's not bad though, because it's still the same brilliant block puzzler.

As opposed to Tetris, here the blocks slowly rise up from the bottom of the screen as you try to line up rows or columns of three identical blocks. On top of the addictive Panel de Pon puzzling, the game is based on the Pokemon anime, and aside from the obvious use of characters like Ash, Brock, and Misty, this also means that, yes, Pokémon Puzzle League has a ton of voice acting and music from the series and movies.

22. Pokémon Stadium (N64)

Pokémon Stadium (N64)
Pokémon Stadium (N64)
Publisher: Nintendo / Developer: Nintendo EAD
Release Date: 29th Feb 2000 (USA) / 7th Apr 2000 (UK/EU)
Available On: NSO + Expansion Pack

Pokémon Stadium was a home console companion piece that used the Transfer Pak to bring your Pocket Monsters over to your television, showcasing all 151 monsters from the original Game Boy titles in full-fledged 3D. Bringing a host of minigames to the party should you get bored of battling — hey, it can get a bit repetitive and lengthy — the awesome visuals, animations, and commentary here keep things lively. A previous iteration launched in 1998 in Japan which had only 40 Pokémon available to battle, but this version (released as Pocket Monsters' Stadium 2 in Japan) launched internationally and featured the lot.

Pokémon Stadium is far tougher to recommend to anyone who doesn't have a collection of critters on a Game Boy cart, but there's plenty to love here if you're an OG fan.

21. Excitebike 64 (N64)

Excitebike 64 (N64)
Excitebike 64 (N64)
Publisher: Nintendo / Developer: Left Field Productions
Release Date: 30th Apr 2000 (USA) / 8th Jun 2001 (UK/EU)
Available On: NSO + Expansion Pack

Canadian developer Left Field Productions, the team behind the fondly-remembered NBA Courtside games, was responsible for this brilliant entry in Nintendo's motocross series. Shifting the gameplay from side-on to behind-the-rider 3D, it melded the careful pitch and throttle control of the original game with the subtle mechanics of N64 stablemates Wave Race 64 and 1080° Snowboarding to produce something just as deep, rewarding and addictive as those racers.

20. Kirby 64: The Crystal Shards (N64)

Kirby 64: The Crystal Shards (N64)
Kirby 64: The Crystal Shards (N64)
Publisher: Nintendo / Developer: HAL Laboratory
Release Date: 26th Jun 2000 (USA) / 22nd Jun 2001 (UK/EU)
Available On: NSO + Expansion Pack

In Kirby 64: The Crystal Shards, HAL Laboratory managed to keep the core structure many knew and loved about the Kirby series while glossing it up with a shiny coat of polygonal paint for the new console generation.

Kirby's 64-bit foray into the third dimension (well, kinda — it's 2.5D, or on-rails 3D, if you prefer) stands out as one of the more unique entries in the series, feeling somewhat fresh in comparison to the many, many 2D Kirby platformers and still pleasurable to play to this day.

19. Mario Party (N64)

Mario Party (N64)
Mario Party (N64)
Publisher: Nintendo / Developer: Hudson Soft
Release Date: 8th Feb 1999 (USA) / 9th Mar 1999 (UK/EU)
Available On: NSO + Expansion Pack

The game that started it all! The series got off to a raucous start with Mario Party, and without it, we wouldn't be able to keep holding the most almighty of Nintendo parties at NL Towers. Conspiracy theories that Nintendo created this game solely to force the purchase of additional controllers after Aunt Susan and Uncle Stan destroyed your analogue sticks are spurious, and feuds that have lasted a lifetime may have spawned from this very day in 1998. It's an all-timer for those things alone.

But Mario Party's slate of minigames truly shines, with Bumper Ball, Face Lift, and Mushroom Mix-Up helping to cement a legacy. No one knows how to party like Mario, and they never have done, as proven right here.

18. Pokémon Snap (N64)

Pokémon Snap (N64)
Pokémon Snap (N64)
Publisher: Nintendo / Developer: HAL Laboratory
Release Date: 30th Jun 1999 (USA) / 15th Sep 2000 (UK/EU)
Available On: NSO + Expansion Pack

The whole concept of catching Pokémon and making them battle each other doesn't bear thinking too deeply about, but the idea of going out on a safari and shooting the critters was never going to wash. Switch a gun for a camera, though, and you've got yourself a fun little 'mon-filled rail-shooter.

Pokémon Snap might have only had 63 Pocket Monsters available, but the outpouring of love shown for the original game when the long-awaited sequel came to Switch in 2021 is testament to its charm. The act of hunting down Pokémon arguably wouldn't be bettered until years later when Niantic caught the world's attention with Pokémon GO.