Because you enjoyed Four Elements Trainer
Games Like Four Elements Trainer
Four Elements Trainer is one of those games that defines a subgenre. Mity took the Avatar universe — the bending, the factions, the larger-than-life characters — and built a trainer around it that somehow works on every level. Each of its four arcs gives you a different character to corrupt, seduce, or dominate, and each arc plays differently enough that you’re essentially getting four games in one. The sandbox structure gives you room to explore at your own pace, the turn-based combat keeps things interesting between story beats, and the 2DCG animation carries a personality that most adult games can’t touch. It’s funny, it’s dark when it needs to be, and it nails the thing that matters most in a trainer: the feeling that your choices compound into something meaningful.
If you’ve played through all four arcs and want more games that blend parody, corruption, fantasy, and genuine mechanical depth, these six deserve a spot on your list.
1. Something Unlimited

Gunsmoke Games took the DC Comics universe and did exactly what Mity did with Avatar: turned it into a trainer with real teeth. You play as Lex Luthor running a covert operation to corrupt and recruit the heroines of the Justice League. The management layer is surprisingly deep — you’re balancing resources, running missions, and deciding which characters to pursue across branching storylines. The 2DCG art is clean and expressive, and the humor lands in the same tongue-in-cheek register that makes Four Elements Trainer so enjoyable. If parody trainers are your thing, this is the closest sibling FET has. Four arcs of bending versus one corporate villain empire — either way, you’re playing the long game.
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2. Rogue-like: Evolution

Oni’s take on the X-Men universe hits a lot of the same notes as Four Elements Trainer: a beloved franchise reimagined through a corruption lens, with sandbox mechanics that let you set your own pace. You’re navigating a school full of superpowered characters, building relationships, and slowly pulling people toward outcomes they wouldn’t choose on their own. The 2DCG art has a polished comic-book quality that suits the source material, and the game has been in active development long enough to have serious depth. Where FET gives you four contained arcs, Rogue-like gives you a sprawling school to explore with dozens of characters. If you loved the parody angle and the slow-burn corruption, this scratches the same itch from a different franchise.
3. Corruption of Champions II

If Four Elements Trainer’s fantasy setting was what hooked you more than the parody, CoC2 takes that thread and runs with it into one of the deepest fantasy worlds in adult gaming. Savin and Salamander Studios built a text-heavy RPG where corruption is baked into every system — your character’s body, desires, and reputation shift based on hundreds of decisions. The turn-based combat is more involved than FET’s, and the writing quality is genuinely excellent. It trades FET’s animated art for imagination-driven prose, but the mechanical loop — explore, fight, be changed by the outcomes — will feel immediately familiar. The character creator alone offers more customization than most full games.
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4. Peasant’s Quest

Tinkerer’s Peasant’s Quest shares Four Elements Trainer’s DNA in a way that few other games do: a fantasy world, a male protagonist working to build influence and relationships, sandbox exploration with combat woven in, and a corruption system that rewards patience. You start as a nobody in a medieval fantasy setting and gradually build a harem through quests, favors, and the occasional morally questionable decision. The 3DCG art is detailed and the world is surprisingly large, with multiple factions and storylines that branch based on your choices. It’s less comedic than FET but more ambitious in scope — if you wanted Four Elements Trainer’s progression loop dropped into a proper open-world RPG, this is what that looks like.
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5. Corrupted Kingdoms

ArcGames recently launched a full remake of Corrupted Kingdoms, and the result is a fantasy sandbox that will feel right at home for Four Elements Trainer fans. You play a character who discovers mind-control abilities and has to decide how to wield that power in a world full of characters with their own agendas. The corruption mechanics are central — every relationship can be nudged, manipulated, or outright controlled, and the game tracks how you use your powers across a branching narrative. The 3DCG art is clean and the writing balances humor with genuine stakes. Where FET gives you one character per arc, Corrupted Kingdoms gives you a full roster to corrupt simultaneously in an interconnected fantasy world.
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6. Nymphomania Priestess

TechnoBrake’s Nymphomania Priestess flips the script on Four Elements Trainer’s dynamic: instead of corrupting others, you’re fighting to keep your protagonist from being corrupted herself. You play a priestess navigating a fantasy RPG world where defeat in turn-based combat has explicit, escalating consequences. The Japanese-influenced 2DCG art is detailed and expressive, and the mechanical connection between combat and corruption is tighter than almost anything in the genre. Multiple endings and a reputation system mean your choices carry real weight across the full game. If what you loved about Four Elements Trainer was the turn-based combat feeding into a corruption system with stakes, Nymphomania Priestess delivers that from the opposite perspective — and the tension of trying not to fall makes it genuinely compelling.