Open-world creature-collection games have become a niche in modern gaming, blending exploration, combat, and creature management into addictive loops. Palworld set a high standard with its combination of monster collecting, crafting, and dynamic environments that are not always present in similar Steam games. Still, a new title called Axima could emerge as a dark horse hit, offering familiar thrills with its own unique spin. Steam’s official page for Axima reveals several gameplay mechanics that show how the game might differentiate itself in 2026 compared to Palworld and other monster-catching games.

Brand New Creature Collector on Steam Feels Like Pokemon & Palworld Finally Agreed to Get Along

Creature collecting games are having a major moment right now, but one upcoming title feels especially promising in the wake of Palworld.

How Palworld and Axima Compare as Creature-Collection Games

axima

Axima shares several core design philosophies with Palworld, particularly in terms of exploration and creature collection:

  • Creature collection and training: Players capture creatures called Axi and develop their abilities and stats, similar to how players manage Pals in Palworld.
  • Open-world exploration: The game features diverse biomes with unique Axi and resources to discover, encouraging players to roam freely.
  • Crafting and equipment: Players can create tools, gear, and buildings in Palworld and Axima alike. In Axima, this serves to enhance creatures and unlock new gameplay opportunities.

Drag weapons to fill the grid




Drag weapons to fill the grid

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While it shares the exploration and collection framework, Axima differentiates itself in key ways:

  • Turn-based combat: Unlike Palworld‘s real-time battles, Axima emphasizes strategy, requiring players to carefully plan moves and utilize Axi abilities in battle.
  • Settlement building and progression: Players develop towns and facilities that support their creatures, adding a structured progression layer that Palworld does not focus on.
  • Focus on strategy over survival: Steam does not indicate traditional survival mechanics like hunger, environmental hazards, or physics-driven interactions, making Axima more about management and planning than reactive survival.

Visually, Axima also uses a vibrant, semi-realistic style, blending playful creature designs with more grounded environments, creating a sense of familiarity for fans of Palworld while maintaining its own identity. Yet, their distinctions position Axima as a creature-collection game on Steam with a more tactical, structured approach, appealing to fans who enjoy strategic planning and world-building alongside creature management.

Axima’s Gameplay Loop Explained

Based on what is currently known about the game, including Axima‘s Steam page, the core gameplay loop seems to be based on exploration, capturing and training Axi, optimizing abilities and stats for combat, developing settlements to provide new tools for Axi and unlock new content, and engaging in turn-based battles founded on strategic thinking. Unlike Palworld, this loop emphasizes strategy, creature management, and progression, rather than reactive survival, building structures, or farming strategies.

Why Axima Could Succeed as a Monster-Collecting Game

Several factors could help Axima carve out its niche, such as a fresh approach to the genre, where combining creature collection with turn-based combat and settlement building offers a unique alternative to Palworld and Pokemon. Then, it has an accessible and replayable loop where exploration, collection, and strategic battles can create a clear, engaging experience for casual and dedicated players alike. Finally, its visual and thematic appeal are strong thanks to bright, stylized creatures and varied biomes that can attract fans of both family-friendly and strategy-focused creature games.

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Axima is More Pokemon Than Palworld

While it lacks Palworld‘s survival-focused mechanics and emergent sandbox interactions, its focus on strategy, structured growth, and charming creature design positions it as a compelling alternative for players seeking a new twist on the genre. With its home-building features including heavy customization, crafting, and trading, it could even feel a bit like the gameplay of Pokemon Pokopia, which just released on the Switch 2. Not only that, but the Virtual Pet App could be a bit like Pokemon Home for the game, allowing fans to transfer any Axi to or from the app, which could make it feel more adjacent to the old Pokewalker from Pokemon HeartGold and SoulSilver. Whether this is enough to make Axima a hit remains to be seen, but at least, it doesn’t seem like it’s going to be just yet another brick in the wall of monster-collecting games.


Palworld

Released

January 19, 2024

ESRB

T For Teen Due To Violence

Developer(s)

Pocket Pair, Inc.

Publisher(s)

Pocket Pair, Inc.


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