And what specifically makes it special, appealing, or interesting to you?

  • balerion@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I enjoyed Spore when I was a kid. It was legit fun evolving and designing your creature.

    • alyaza [they/she]@beehaw.orgM
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      1 year ago

      I enjoyed Spore when I was a kid. It was legit fun evolving and designing your creature.

      oh, what i would give for someone to try and make an AAA-backed Spore-like game. it scratches such a specific itch that nothing else really does

    • Strawberry@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      Spore was really cool… Until space stage which was just too boring!

      I was extremely invested in spore pre release and with how much was cut, it could never live up to my expectations…

    • SevenSwell@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      I played SO much spore back in the day. I even created a sort of OC in the game with a whole backstory and cast of characters and everything. Totally just had a blast from the past looking at my creations on the “sporepedia” (it still exists!)

  • Computer Guy@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Tacoma. Incredible game, barely has any gameplay, though, and is very short if you don’t actively look for side-content, which is the main focus of the game. It’s mostly storytelling through holographic logs of an abandoned station. Your goal is to salvage previous data in there and an abandoned AI, that your company needs to reclaim.

    • Opteryx@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      I enjoyed Tacoma very much. Fullbright always has such great writing, characters, and settings.

    • projectazar@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      When I played Obra Din, I got vibes of Tacoma and I wish someone would take another shot at that style of game in space with the depth/mystery element of Obra Din.

  • StrahdVonZarovich@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Although the entire game has kinda become a meme in recent years, I love The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion. Its a really charming game, and although people like to rag on it for being “generic lotr fantasy” I dont think thats a bad thing. Sometimes you just wanna play a run of the mill fantasy game and explore some dungeons. Plus it still had enough weird and bizarre things to keep it interesting, like the Shivering Isle dlc. I have fond memories of playing the game all the time back in school. One time I beat the entire Knights of the Nine dlc in a single sitting. It can be really clunky, weird, and downright broken but I still love it. Morrowind is still better tho

    • marksson@sopuli.xyz
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      1 year ago

      Nothing before or after Morrowind had this level of familiar-but-alien vibe. Telvanni towers of huge mushrooms, giant crab shell being a redoran town, dwarven ruin, where some npcs standing around in the dark are being held as cattle by vampires… wonderful.

      • StrahdVonZarovich@beehaw.org
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        1 year ago

        I think its the fact that the game starts out weird, alien, and hostile to you (including the people of Morrowind) and the more you play the more you understand. By the time you finish the main quest, you completely understand this world and its secrets. You’ve mastered the setting.

        • Pigeon@beehaw.orgOP
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          1 year ago

          I think oldschool games that were pre-minimap wonderful that way. The maps were often better designed to be distinct and navigable without a map, and by the end of the game you really learn the map in a way you don’t in a lot of modern RPG’s.

          Gothic 2 and Risen are some I really remember fondly for this.

    • HER0@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      I’d go back to Oblivion if it weren’t for the scaling enemies. That really takes a lot of the fun away for me, ever since I realized the game does this.

  • Elbullazul@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    I appreciate overwatch, because the sequel cured my videogame addiction (it’s so much worse)

  • Feydaikin@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Master Of Orion. Both the original, it’s sequel and the modern remake. It’s nice to play something with different pacing from other games. And the random outcomes from AI throughout the game’s progression keeps things spicy from playthrough to playthrough.

  • RadDevon@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    I loved Stuntman on the PS2. In it, you play a stunt driver across a series of movie sets. You drive the car while a director barks orders into your ear. If you complete all the set pieces in a scene, you move on to the next (more difficult) one and then onto other movies.

    I love the process of refining the run over and over until you get it just right. The worst thing about the game is the load times. I don’t remember how long they were, but I remember they were very long. This is tough in a game that’s asking you to do something over and over until you get it right. Super Meat Boy handled this aspect much better years later, but I enjoy the premise of Stuntman more.

  • Strawberry@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I really enjoy enter the matrix, it’s a little janky but it’s got some pretty cool for the time set pieces and I think the entire idea of the hacking mode is interesting, if very weird. For a licenced early 2000s video game I thought it was a step above most of the stuff in that field.

    The driving sections are… Not very fun though.

  • bathcat@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Planetside 2. Loved huge coordinated battles with hundreds of players even though it often was a buggy, laggy mess.

    • Slartibartfast@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      My friends and I played it many years ago and felt like it was an endless grind, but that wasn’t really a bad thing. We still had a great time.

  • thoro@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Dear Esther is a beautiful piece of art that communicates its story and themes through visual, environmental and interactive symbolism, both random and scripted prose, and movingly composed music. At worst, I think anyone can at least appreciate the beauty in this world they created, the use of symbolism in the environment, and/or the music.

    I think of it as the video game equivalent of a Terrance Malick film where you are basically driving the camera and triggering the narration. I totally get if you don’t have preferences for that type of thing, but I think it’s extremely healthy for the medium to have works like it. Few games scratch the kind of itch this one does.

    Additionally, the act of moving and investigating a 3D, digitally-realized island constitutes interactivity and, thus, marks it as something inherently different from a movie or book. Modern “games” do not have to have deep or challenging mechanics to utilize interactivity artistically.

    I’ve played and beaten plenty of difficult, mechanical or systems focused video games, including most the modern From Software games, Hollow Knight, and old NES games so my appreciation for it isn’t some kind of aversion to challenge or mechanical depth.

    • honeyontoast@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      I remember playing Dear Esther many years ago and I did enjoy it. Gone Home would likely be up your alley if you haven’t already played it.

      • Pigeon@beehaw.orgOP
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        1 year ago

        In a similar vein, I still really want to try Everybody’s Gone to the Rapture, but that game NEVER goes on sale even though it’s ancient at this point, and I just refuse to cooperate with that.

    • phazer32@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      I haven’t heard of that. I’ll have to check it out. Eastshade is really great for a calm, artistic environment.

  • scribblemacher@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Not necessarily unpopular in general, but unpopular within its own series are the DS Zelda games, Phantom Hourglass and Spirit Tracks. These games have some great dungeon design and I really liked most aspects of the touch screen controls (except blowing into the DS). These games used the DS to its fullest and will sadly be locked there as a result. I might have been one of the only people disappointed with Link Between Worlds for adandoning the touch screen for traditional controls.

      • Pigeon@beehaw.orgOP
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        1 year ago

        I am bumping both of these games up my personal list to try on 3DS now. This sounds cool. And I’ve been playing totk so zelda is on the brain lately. :)

    • WhoRoger@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      I think we might as well declare Alpha Protocol the best game of all time. Ok joking, but that dialog system, damn how good was that

    • Raineacha@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      I completely forgot about Brink. Game felt like one of the first “parkour” shooters. So much fun, sad it died quickly.

  • SveetPickle@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    any arena shooter in the style of Quake, Halo, or Unreal Tournament. It’s a shame they aren’t more popular

    • TheRtRevKaiser@beehaw.orgM
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      1 year ago

      Huh, I was under the impression there was a bit of a “boomer shooter” renaissance going on the last few years. I know I’ve seen a bunch of games that were trying to emulate the feel and sometimes even the look of that style of FPS.

      • setsneedtofeed@beehaw.org
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        1 year ago

        The definitions of arena shooters and boomer shooters are both pretty fuzzy and have a lot of overlap.

        For example, I consider Duke Nukem 3D’s multiplayer to be a great arena shooter, however when many people talk about arena shooters what they mean are early 2000s style shooters that are fully 3D rather than sprite based. Halo CE was “the” arena shooter when it came out.

        It is a genre that really hasn’t made a comeback. Some people say things like Overwatch are arena shooters, but for the kinds of people wanting old fashioned shooters a big element is that all players start with the same weapons and abilities by default. It’s the imperfection of language trying to articulate a feeling.

          • SveetPickle@beehaw.org
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            1 year ago

            Oh, OK! I should have been more specific that I was talking about multiplayer games like what I mentioned, my bad! I knew about some of those games. The Doom Reboot and that Warhammer Boltgun are both sick, I’ve enjoyed both of them. I’ll be looking into the others thanks!

            • Helix 🧬@feddit.de
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              1 year ago

              for multiplayer I liked Splitgate a lot, but the devs seem to have mostly abandoned it right when it came out of beta.

            • Pigeon@beehaw.orgOP
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              1 year ago

              How does the Halo Infinite arena multiplayer differ from the original Halo? I never got to play the multiplayer modes in these older shooters.

              Is it that the older shooters had faster movement or simpler controls (easy to pick up, hard to master)? More like a Painkiller style of shooting? Or is that impression I have of older shooters totally off base?

              • WhoRoger@lemmy.ml
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                1 year ago

                Painkiller was definitely designed after the first Quake. As in, people who were playing Q1 for close to a decade because nothing else came close, loved Painkiller. If you were someone who just wanted to try out multi… Lol good luck, you lvl1 villager against lvl998 bosses.

              • s900mhz@beehaw.org
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                1 year ago

                Unreal was from what I remember is similar to painkiller. Imagine halo but jumping in slightly low gravity and you are always spirting.

              • SveetPickle@beehaw.org
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                1 year ago

                I didn’t play much of the original three Halo games, I picked the series up when Reach came out, but yea movement and controls were simpler, there was no sprint or the special abilities they added in reach and afterwards like the jet pack and place down shield barriers. It was just you and your weapon against the other dude and their weapon.

                If memory serves the original halos actually felt slower in terms of movement and time to kill than the modern ones.

  • Ving-Thor@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    Giants: Citizen Kabuto

    It was a kinda janky 3D Action Adventure from around 2000. Back then it had really beautiful and colorful graphics. I remember playing it on my first “real” PC and being amazed by how it looked.

    It also stands out to me for being actually funny and comitting to being a comedy game.

    • Opteryx@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      I loved this game! The humour was my favourite part - very dry and very British. A fun shooter with a lot of variety. Amazing soundtrack by Jeremy Soule. I found the game very difficult, though - I doubt I ever got close to finishing it. How about you?

      • Pigeon@beehaw.orgOP
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        1 year ago

        You two + the screenshots on the steam page I just looked up have sold me on this. It looks, at the very least, interesting and different, which is sometimes all I want really. I’ll give it a shot.

      • Ving-Thor@feddit.de
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        1 year ago

        When I first played it I didn’t get very far into it. But I came back to it a few years later and finished it. The Multiplayer was also suprisingly fun on LAN-parties.

    • WhoRoger@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      Nobody can hate that game. Damn that was gold. I believe it’s well beloved, tho not widely remembered

  • _NetNomad @ DXC@forum.dxcomplex.com
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    1 year ago

    I liked Balan Wonderworld. i didn’t love it, but i certainly don’t understand the hate- I haven’t ran into any bugs, some of the powers were neat, the music was phenomenal, and the simple controls were a selling point for me. it was like playing a new Dreamcast game in 2023 for better or for worse, another Billy Hatcher or something.