If your requirement is “Disney game, friends online, tonight,” the list gets thin fast. Good. Thin is better than fake. This version uses one rule only: if a game does not offer real internet multiplayer, it does not make the cut.
Most readers are really asking four things at once. Which Disney games let friends actually play together online? Which ones are easy to set up without a troubleshooting ritual? Which ones work for casual groups versus competitive groups? And which titles are still worth downloading instead of merely existing in nostalgic forum posts? Those are the useful questions. Everything else is decorative noise.
The awkward truth is that the pure Mickey-and-friends online catalog is smaller than people expect. To keep this list useful, I’m including both direct Disney-branded releases and live multiplayer games from Disney-owned universes like Marvel and Star Wars. That is not a loophole. That is the actual market.
This guide gives you five real options, spells out the multiplayer mode for each one, and flags where the setup gets annoying. If you want more browser-friendly picks after this, start with the homepage, browse the rest of the blog, or use the contact page if you want the next shortlist aimed at a specific platform.

Rule This Out First: What Counts Here?
For this article, “multiplayer” means built-in internet play you can use with other people on purpose. If a game is only local co-op, only couch party, or only “visit my village and admire my wallpaper,” it is out. The category has enough confusion already.
- Included: online races, online versus, online team battles, online co-op, or official friend-battle systems.
- Included with a label: older online games that still work but may have smaller player pools or platform quirks.
- Excluded: local-only co-op, vague social features, and single-player games with decorative community extras.
That rule changes the list a lot. It also makes the list usable, which is the point.
Top 5 Multiplayer Disney Games You Can Play with Friends
| Game | How the online play works | Best for | Reality check |
|---|---|---|---|
| Disney Speedstorm | Built-in online races and friend sessions | Fast competitive game nights | The clearest pure-Disney answer |
| Disney Tsum Tsum Festival | Switch online party and puzzle modes | Casual groups, families, short sessions | Great fit if everyone already has a Switch copy |
| MARVEL SNAP | Official Friendly Battle mode for private 1v1 matches | Quick duels and low-commitment meetups | Best when you want ten minutes of competition, not a three-hour raid |
| Marvel Rivals | 6v6 online team battles, parties, and custom options | Full squads that like voice chat and chaos | The strongest live-service option on this list |
| Star Wars Battlefront II | Large-scale online multiplayer in a Disney-owned universe | Friends who want action over cuteness | Older game, still useful, player pool varies by platform and time |
1. Disney Speedstorm
Disney Speedstorm is the easiest recommendation in the whole category. It is a fast arcade racer with real online multiplayer, recognizable Disney and Pixar characters, and enough spectacle to keep mixed-skill groups entertained even when somebody spends half the race pinballing off walls.
- Multiplayer mode: built-in online races, matchmaking, and friend-focused sessions.
- Why it works: races are short, the controls are readable, and even weaker players can still ruin your line with a well-timed ability. Friendship survives. Usually.
- Best group fit: players who want competition quickly instead of a long setup screen.
Player read: this is the game people praise when they want Disney flavor without sacrificing pace. The usual positive comments center on strong track energy, character variety, and the fact that rematches are painless. The common complaint is the live-service grind, which is worth knowing before you promise a “simple” night and accidentally invite a progression debate.
2. Disney Tsum Tsum Festival
Disney Tsum Tsum Festival is the softer, cuter, less ego-driven option. It packs party-game activities and puzzle play into a Switch release that supports online modes, which makes it one of the few directly Disney-branded games that still fits the “yes, this can happen over the internet” requirement.
- Multiplayer mode: online party activities and puzzle competition on Nintendo Switch.
- Why it works: rounds are easy to understand, younger players are not immediately flattened, and the whole thing stays light.
- Best group fit: families, casual friend groups, and anyone who wants Disney energy without shooter stress.
Player read: the game tends to land best with people who want a party setup instead of a serious ladder. Expect praise for charm and accessibility, and some pushback on platform limits because the online play is useful only if your group already overlaps on Switch. Boring constraint, real constraint.
3. MARVEL SNAP
MARVEL SNAP earns its place because the official Friendly Battle mode lets you challenge specific friends directly. That matters. A lot of multiplayer games claim to be social and then quietly dump you into anonymous matchmaking. SNAP at least understands the assignment.
- Multiplayer mode: private Friendly Battles and regular online competitive play.
- Why it works: matches are short, deckbuilding is fun without being unreadable, and you can get a full session in before someone’s dinner gets cold.
- Best group fit: pairs or small circles who like one-on-one competition and quick rematches.
Player read: people usually stick with SNAP because the match length respects adult schedules. The usual praise is speed, smart card interactions, and the ability to squeeze in friend battles without turning the evening into a second job. The complaint is predictable: collectible card games always tempt you into “just one more deck tweak” territory.
4. Marvel Rivals
Marvel Rivals is the loudest option here and probably the best one for a full squad that wants a genuine team game. It is a 6v6 online hero shooter with parties, team-up abilities, and enough visual nonsense on screen to satisfy anyone who believes subtlety is for other people.
- Multiplayer mode: online 6v6 matches, party play, and custom-game support.
- Why it works: friends can coordinate roles, rescue weaker teammates, and treat each match like a shared problem instead of six separate tantrums.
- Best group fit: voice-chat groups who enjoy teamwork, hero swapping, and a little controlled chaos.
Player read: the praise usually lands on hero variety, flashy team-up mechanics, and the simple fact that the game is built for groups instead of pretending after the fact. The friction point is also obvious: if your friends do not like shooters, this recommendation dies on contact.
5. Star Wars Battlefront II
Star Wars Battlefront II stays on the list because it is still one of the most recognizable online multiplayer games in a Disney-owned universe, and it remains practical for friends who want large battles instead of kart racing or card duels. No, it is not “Disney cute.” It is still Disney umbrella, still multiplayer, and still usable.
- Multiplayer mode: large-scale online battles and team-based modes in the Star Wars universe.
- Why it works: it supports bigger groups, recognizable heroes, and the kind of immediate action that does not need much explanation.
- Best group fit: friends who want a more traditional action game and do not mind a title that has been around a while.
Player read: players still come back for scale, iconic locations, and the straightforward thrill of jumping into a giant Star Wars battle with friends. The honest warning is age: matchmaking quality can vary depending on platform and when your group logs on. Old games do that. Reality remains rude.
How to Pick the Right One for Your Group
- Pick Disney Speedstorm if you want the cleanest straight-up Disney online recommendation.
- Pick Disney Tsum Tsum Festival if your group wants something lighter, friendlier, and less competitive.
- Pick MARVEL SNAP if you only need two players and want short direct battles.
- Pick Marvel Rivals if you have a proper squad and want the most active team-based option.
- Pick Star Wars Battlefront II if your group wants large online action and does not mind using an older game.
The diagnosis is simple. If “online with friends” is the non-negotiable, start with Speedstorm, SNAP, or Marvel Rivals. Tsum Tsum Festival works best for Switch-owning casual groups, and Battlefront II is the older but still practical fallback for action-focused friends.
Tips for Coordinating Online Play Without Wasting an Hour
Most failed game nights are not caused by bad games. They are caused by people skipping the boring checks, which is how you end up with one person on Switch, one on Steam, one still downloading a patch, and one asking whether “online multiplayer” meant couch co-op over video call. Check the boring thing first.
- Confirm platform overlap before you pick the game. This avoids fantasy scheduling.
- Decide the mood early. Racing chaos, card duels, and hero shooters are not the same social event.
- Use one voice channel. Discord or platform chat is enough. You do not need an enterprise communications strategy.
- Choose a backup title. If servers wobble or one platform refuses to cooperate, switch fast instead of turning the night into tech support.
- Start with the game that has the lowest setup friction. Momentum matters more than theoretical perfection.
A practical formula works better than optimism: one primary game, one fallback game, one start time, one person handling invites. That is enough structure to make online play feel easy instead of strangely administrative.
Final Take
The short version: Disney Speedstorm is still the best direct answer if you want a genuine Disney game to play with friends online. Disney Tsum Tsum Festival is the lighter Switch-friendly option. MARVEL SNAP is excellent for fast one-on-one battles, Marvel Rivals is the best squad-based pick, and Star Wars Battlefront II remains a solid older choice when your group wants bigger action. Before you download anything, rule out the false lead first: does your group want racing, party play, cards, team shooting, or large-scale battles? Once that symptom is clear, the right game usually stops hiding.