
Bandai Namco revealed Gundam Rogue Orbit at Summer Game Fest 2026 — a mech action game where you hunt giant robots in an Armored Core-flavoured combat system. The trailer made the comparison obvious, and the studio has gone on record acknowledging Armored Core VI as a design influence. Until Rogue Orbit ships, here are seven Armored Core alternatives for PC that already deliver the build-your-mech, melt-the-target loop.
We picked seven games across pure mech action, mech-pilot simulators, and one tabletop RPG hybrid. Each one captures something specific about Armored Core: the assembly-and-tuning loop, the high-speed combat, the lonely-against-the-system tone, or the strategic mech command layer that the original AC games occasionally flirted with.
Why Armored Core VI players want alternatives
Armored Core VI is great, but it’s a finished game.
- The story is done. Three endings, NG+ and NG++ unlocks, and the PvP arena. After 80 hours, most players have seen the variety.
- PvP is a niche scene. The Garage versus mode is fun but matchmaking is thin outside peak Western hours, and the meta has crystallised.
- No major DLC announced. FromSoftware has been clear that AC6’s post-launch support was the patches and balance updates, not a Shadow-of-the-Erdtree-scale expansion.
- The mech genre is finally getting attention again. Gundam Rogue Orbit, the Steel Hunters beta, and a wave of indie mech games make the next 18 months unusually rich.
So we’re not telling you AC6 is finished. We’re telling you that there’s a fuller mech-and-pilot ecosystem in 2026 than at any point since the late 2000s.
Quick comparison
| Game | Best for | Price (approx.) | Armored Core similarity |
|---|---|---|---|
| Titanfall 2 | Fast-paced FPS with Titan combat | Around $30 | Medium (movement and Titan feel) |
| Daemon X Machina | Anime-styled mech action with deep customisation | Around $60 (or via Game Pass) | High (assembly and feel) |
| MechWarrior 5: Mercenaries | First-person BattleMech simulator and mercenary career | Around $20 with Heroes of the Inner Sphere | High (sim feel) |
| Gundam Rogue Orbit | New Bandai Namco mech action game | TBD at launch | Highest when released |
| BattleTech | Turn-based mech tactics with mercenary management | Around $20 on sale | Medium (tactical layer) |
| Hawken Reborn | Free-to-play mech FPS | Free | Medium (combat tempo) |
| Lancer | Tabletop mech RPG, ruleset and adventure module | One-time PDF cost; printed at premium | Niche but distinctive |
The 7 best Armored Core alternatives on PC
Titanfall 2 — best mech-meets-FPS movement
Titanfall 2 (Respawn Entertainment, 2016) is the easiest entry point for AC6 players who loved the speed and weight of the boost-and-dash combat. The single-player campaign, “BT-7274 and Cooper”, is consistently named among the best FPS campaigns of the past decade — six hours of inventive, low-padding level design that nails the pilot-and-Titan partnership. Multiplayer is still running on official servers as of 2026, with a recovering population after the DDoS issues were addressed.
Where Titanfall maps to Armored Core: the Titan combat is the closest analogue to the AC pace any first-person game has shipped. The dash-around, lock-on, drop-the-payload rhythm feels designed by the same hands that did AC6’s combat tempo.
Where it falls short: Customisation is much shallower than AC’s parts ladder. You’re picking a Titan chassis, not building one. Story is short — you’ll finish the campaign in a long weekend.
Pricing:
- No free tier
- Around $30 at full price; frequently around $5-10 on Steam and Origin sales
- vs Armored Core VI: dramatically cheaper, faster moment-to-moment
Platforms: Windows, PlayStation 4, Xbox One.
Bottom line: The best campaign on this list and the closest FPS-side echo of AC6’s combat. Almost criminally cheap on sale.
Daemon X Machina — best anime-styled mech action
Daemon X Machina (Marvelous, 2020 on PC) is the most direct stylistic descendant of pre-AC6 Armored Core — fast aerial combat, modular Arsenals (this game’s word for mechs), and a loose plot involving rogue AI and a fragmented post-disaster world. The combat carries the same chunky, weight-and-momentum feel that AC fans miss when they try other mech games.
The sequel, Daemon X Machina: Titanic Scion, was announced for 2026 by Marvelous, which has kept the franchise current. The first game is the right entry point — it’s affordable, complete, and runs cleanly on modern hardware.
Where it falls short: Story is thin compared to AC6’s structured narrative. Some mid-game padding before the final mission arc.
Pricing:
- No free tier
- Around $60 at full price; Steam sales drop it to around $20-30; Xbox Game Pass has had it on rotation
- vs Armored Core VI: comparable launch price; cheaper on sale
Platforms: Windows, Nintendo Switch.
Download: Steam
Bottom line: The closest “Armored Core but faster and anime-flavoured” experience available. The sequel is worth watching, but the first game is the immediate fix.
MechWarrior 5: Mercenaries — best mech simulator with a career
MechWarrior 5: Mercenaries (Piranha Games, 2019) is the BattleTech-universe first-person mech sim. The cockpit-view combat, the heat management, the dozens of mech variants and pilot-loadout decisions — this is the most mechanical, “every-button-on-the-HUD-matters” mech experience on the list. The mercenary career layer (negotiating contracts, repairing mechs, paying pilots) gives the game a strategic frame that AC’s mission-by-mission structure does not.
The 2024 sequel, MechWarrior 5: Clans, is the more visually impressive entry, but Mercenaries with its DLC packs is the deeper one for AC fans who want to spend hours in the garage tuning loadouts.
Where it falls short: Combat tempo is slower than AC6 — these are 50-ton war machines moving with proportional weight, not Coral-powered ACs. Some mission variety issues despite the procedural campaign generation.
Pricing:
- No free tier
- Around $20 base, with the four DLC packs typically around $10 each; the whole bundle around $40 on sale
- vs Armored Core VI: cheaper, more hours, slower combat
Platforms: Windows, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X|S.
Download: Steam · Epic Games Store · GOG
Bottom line: Pick MW5 if you want the simulator side of mechs. Bring patience — this is closer to a war story than an action game.
Gundam Rogue Orbit — best incoming mech action
Gundam Rogue Orbit (Bandai Namco, revealed Summer Game Fest 2026) is the game that prompted this list. The trailer made the AC6 comparison explicit — high-speed boost dashes, modular Mobile Suit loadouts, and the Mobile Suit-versus-giant-robot hunt loop that the Gundam franchise has never quite committed to in an action game before. Release window is “2026”, which we’ll politely treat as “watch for delays.”
We’re flagging it because the trailer is one of the clearest design statements from Bandai Namco in years and because Gundam fans on PC have been chronically underserved (the licensed Gundam games rarely release in the West). Wishlist it. If it ships in 2026 it will be the most direct AC alternative available, full stop.
Where it falls short: Not playable yet. Bandai Namco’s Western release timing has historically been uncertain.
Pricing:
- TBD; expect around $60 at launch based on the publisher pattern
- vs Armored Core VI: TBD — but the design lineage is the clearest of any game on the list
Platforms: Windows announced; PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X|S likely.
Download: Wishlist on Steam (search “Gundam Rogue Orbit”)
Bottom line: Wishlist now. If it ships clean, it slides into the top of this list.
BattleTech — best turn-based mech tactics
BattleTech (Harebrained Schemes, 2018) is the turn-based mech experience for AC players who want to step laterally into the tactical layer. The single-player campaign is a mercenary-company sim — you assemble mechs from parts, hire and lose pilots, negotiate political alliances, and fight through hex-grid combat where every action has heat-management consequences. The Flashpoint, Urban Warfare, and Heavy Metal expansions add significant late-game depth.
The community-maintained BattleTech Extended modpack pushes the game into a much larger map and timeline, with hundreds of additional mechs. The modded experience is the closest the genre gets to an “endlessly tunable mercenary sim”.
Where it falls short: Turn-based combat is a different rhythm — there are no boost dashes here. The campaign pacing in vanilla can feel slow before the merger of the DLC content.
Pricing:
- No free tier
- Base game around $20 on sale, full DLC bundle around $30-40 on sale
- vs Armored Core VI: cheaper, completely different combat shape
Platforms: Windows, macOS, Linux.
Bottom line: Pick BattleTech if the tactical layer is what you want. Different muscles, same universe-level mech-and-mercenary fantasy.
Hawken Reborn — best free-to-play mech FPS
Hawken Reborn (505 Games, early access 2023, full launch 2025) is the resurrection of the cult mech FPS Hawken from the 2010s. The 2025 release added a PvE campaign, a co-op horde mode, and a substantially improved progression system. PvP remains the focus, with 6v6 mech FPS battles that emphasise vertical movement and chassis customisation.
This is the easiest free game to try out the mech FPS shape, and the customisation is reasonable for a free-to-play title — you earn most chassis through play, with cosmetic monetisation and a battle-pass-style season system on top.
Where it falls short: Free-to-play progression nudges toward spending if you want to skip grinds. Population is healthy but concentrated in NA and EU peak hours.
Pricing:
- Free to play
- Founder’s Packs around $20-50 with cosmetics and progression boosts
- vs Armored Core VI: free entry, less depth, comparable second-to-second feel
Platforms: Windows.
Download: Steam
Bottom line: Pick Hawken Reborn if you want the cheapest possible “mech FPS now” hit. The free price is its strongest argument.
Lancer — best tabletop mech RPG
Lancer (Massif Press) is the outlier on this list — it’s a tabletop role-playing game, not a video game. We’re including it because it’s the deepest mech-customisation system in any current property, the writing is the closest thing the genre has to AC6’s tone in a non-Soulslike package, and Massif Press has been clear that a video game adaptation by Strix Beta is in development for 2026 release.
If you’re an AC6 player with a group of three to five friends, Lancer fills the same mental space — building mechs, assigning pilots, navigating moral conflict around the people you fight for. The Comp/Con companion app handles all the bookkeeping for you, which removes the usual pain of playing a crunchy tabletop RPG.
Where it falls short: Tabletop only right now. The video game adaptation is in development; the Steam page has been quiet for several months.
Pricing:
- Free: the Core Book PDF is free or pay-what-you-want from Massif Press
- Paid: print editions around $40-60; the No Room for a Wallflower campaign module around $20
- vs Armored Core VI: completely different medium, lowest possible buy-in
Platforms: Tabletop (anywhere); Comp/Con is a web app and runs on Windows, macOS, Linux, mobile.
Download: Massif Press itch.io · Comp/Con
Bottom line: Pick up Lancer if you have a tabletop group and want the deepest mech-customisation hobby outside Armored Core itself. The video game adaptation is worth watching.
How to choose
Pick Titanfall 2 if you want the cheapest possible great game on this list. Six-hour campaign, killer Titan combat, and the multiplayer is still alive.
Pick Daemon X Machina if you want anime-flavoured Armored Core. The closest stylistic match for pre-AC6 fans who loved the assembly-and-melee loop.
Pick MechWarrior 5: Mercenaries if you want the simulator side of mechs — heat, ammo, cockpit awareness. Bring patience.
Wishlist Gundam Rogue Orbit if you want the next AC-lineage action game. Earliest pickup if it ships clean.
Pick BattleTech if the tactical, turn-based mercenary-company layer is what you want.
Pick Hawken Reborn if you want the cheapest mech FPS to try right now. Free entry, polish has improved.
Pick up Lancer if you have a tabletop group. The deepest mech-customisation system outside a video game.
Stay on Armored Core VI if you haven’t done NG++ yet. The third loop unlocks some of the best secret encounters in the game.
Frequently asked questions
What is the best Armored Core alternative on PC?
Daemon X Machina is the closest stylistic match — fast aerial mech combat with deep parts customisation. Titanfall 2 is the most polished FPS-side echo of the combat tempo. MechWarrior 5: Mercenaries is the best simulator pick if you want a cockpit perspective.
Is there a free Armored Core alternative?
Hawken Reborn is the only meaningful free-to-play pick. It’s a mech FPS rather than a third-person action game, but the moment-to-moment combat feel and the customisation depth are closer to AC than any other free title.
Will there be an Armored Core VII?
FromSoftware has not announced an Armored Core VII. The studio’s focus has been Elden Ring (Shadow of the Erdtree in 2024, plus the recently revealed Elden Ring Nightreign multiplayer spinoff) and the unannounced next Soulslike. AC6 sold extremely well, so the franchise is unlikely to be retired, but no follow-up is currently announced.
What is Gundam Rogue Orbit?
Gundam Rogue Orbit is an upcoming third-person mech action game by Bandai Namco, revealed at Summer Game Fest 2026. The trailer leaned into Armored Core-style combat, modular Mobile Suit loadouts, and a hunting loop where you stalk giant robots. Release window is announced as 2026; we’d treat that with the usual scepticism.
Is Titanfall 2 still worth playing in 2026?
Yes. The campaign is the single strongest argument for any game on this list at the price. Multiplayer is healthier than it was during the worst DDoS years and the Frontier population is still active during EU and NA evenings.
Is MechWarrior 5: Clans better than Mercenaries?
Clans is visually more impressive and tells a tighter linear story. Mercenaries with all four DLC packs has more content and a deeper career layer. For an AC6 fan looking to spend dozens of hours in the garage, Mercenaries is the better fit.