what are in you're top 3 favourite games of all time?
from Abraxas@feddit.uk to games@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 16:58
https://feddit.uk/post/34320842

for me mine are 1. Elden Ring, 2. RDR2 3. BOTW, all because they genuinely blew my mind when playing them for the first time and changed how I saw and played video games.

#games

threaded - newest

Dr_Box@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 17:02 next collapse

Dwarf Fortress, Kenshi, and Ocarina of Time

Phelpssan@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 17:04 next collapse

  1. Persona 4
  2. Ar Tonelico 2
  3. Xenoblade Chronicles 2

Honerable mention to Warcraft 3 TFT.

fleebleneeble@reddthat.com on 09 Aug 17:04 next collapse

Ratchet and Clank: Up Your Arsenal, Kingdom Hearts 2, Jak 3

lowspeedchase@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 09 Aug 17:05 next collapse

  • Ultima Online: One of the greatest lore and social experiences of my life
  • Project Zomboid: Been playing for over 10yrs and still come back for a new character every few months
  • FO: NV
  • CIV V
  • L4D2

For what has my attention currently:

  • BG3: Trying my damnest for a durge run but I keep picking middle-evil responses instead of full-evil, too hard for me to be a baddie
Coelacanth@feddit.nu on 09 Aug 17:34 collapse

Good-aligned “resist the Durge” works out better anyway imo and feels like the intended canon playthrough.

TabbsTheBat@pawb.social on 09 Aug 17:07 next collapse

Currently I’d say minecraft, witcher 3, and… warframe probably :3

In no particular order

QuantumStorm@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 17:43 collapse

Yay warframe! :3

TabbsTheBat@pawb.social on 09 Aug 17:45 next collapse

spoiler

I just got to the hex quest :3. haven’t done it yet tho

QuantumStorm@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 17:59 collapse

Very nice! Just as a heads up in case you don’t know, there are two different endings. One at the initial end of the quest, and then once you get them up to rank 3! I hope you enjoy Tenno! :3

474D@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 18:41 collapse

Warframe is not a game, it’s a drug

QuantumStorm@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 19:02 collapse

A wonderful, wonderful, drug. :D

natecox@programming.dev on 09 Aug 17:08 next collapse

  1. Chrono Trigger
  2. Final Fantasy 7
  3. Expedition 33
FenrirIII@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 20:45 collapse

Expedition 33 blew me away with the opening. I haven’t finished it yet as the combat is tricky though, so I’m not enjoying that part as much.

uymai@lemmy.ca on 09 Aug 17:11 next collapse

Oh , probably

  1. Witcher 3
  2. Cyberpunk 2077
  3. Something like persona 4 golden? Feels a little like a log jam
Godort@lemmy.ca on 09 Aug 17:12 next collapse

  • Chrono Trigger

  • Link to the Past

  • Super Mario RPG

Alexstarfire@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 20:25 collapse

Someone like the SNES.

kratoz29@lemmy.zip on 09 Aug 20:35 collapse

Probably he is a Nintendo hater /j (but not entirely, it happens).

toomanypancakes@piefed.world on 09 Aug 17:14 next collapse

  1. Super Metroid
  2. Hollow Knight
  3. Dead Cells
Whostosay@sh.itjust.works on 09 Aug 21:22 collapse

Have you had a go at the Blasphemous games?

toomanypancakes@piefed.world on 09 Aug 21:27 collapse

Not yet, they're on my list to try at some point though

Whostosay@sh.itjust.works on 09 Aug 21:45 collapse

They’re awesome, I think you’ll like it a lot based on your list

0x01@lemmy.ml on 09 Aug 17:14 next collapse

Dragon quest monsters Final fantasy tactics Terraria

All legendary

SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 09 Aug 17:17 next collapse

From my youth:

Mega Man 2
Super Metroid
Fallout

Current, as games have grown as a medium:

Borderlands
NieR Automata
Baldur’s Gate 3

My favorite type of games were really always the story-rich non-linear storytelling of the Baldur’s Gate/Fallout style but in my youth I was far more attracted to Fallout than Baldur’s Gate. However, there are no modern iterations of Fallout in the same style. New Vegas is fun and all, but what I would give for a modern fallout in the style of BG3.

SatansMaggotyCumFart@piefed.world on 09 Aug 17:29 collapse

I’ve never wanted to fuck a robot more then 2B.

SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 09 Aug 17:39 collapse
Metostopholes@midwest.social on 09 Aug 17:21 next collapse

Riven, Shadow of the Colossus, and Guilty Gear Strive.

(in no particular order)

Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 10 Aug 02:23 collapse

Riven: The Sequel to Myst is INSANE

Taco2112@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 17:23 next collapse

For me it’s always about how much fun I had playing them, so right now and in no order:

  • Halo 2
  • Starcraft
  • Red Dead Redemption

Honorable Mentions:

  • Super Mario World
  • Super Metroid
  • Ocarina of Time
  • Fallout: NV
  • Assassins Creed: Black Flag
  • Deep Rock Galactic
  • Hades
  • Hollow Knight
PodPerson@lemmy.zip on 09 Aug 17:23 next collapse

BOTW

Fallout: New Vegas

Skyrim

Console_Modder@sh.itjust.works on 09 Aug 17:53 collapse

Hell yeah, new vegas was mentioned

<img alt="" src="https://sh.itjust.works/pictrs/image/d629dbee-ee1a-41a5-a57a-e3cda8490449.jpeg">

I_Am_Jacks_____@sh.itjust.works on 09 Aug 17:25 next collapse

The Last of Us, Mass Effect 2, Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order

Corngood@lemmy.ml on 09 Aug 17:32 next collapse

  • UFO/X-COM
  • Ultima VII
  • Starsiege: Tribes
MintyAnt@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 21:33 collapse

Geoscape song is such a vibe

fxomt@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 09 Aug 17:32 next collapse

My top 3 choices are (in no particular order)

  • Disco Elysium
  • Outer Wilds
  • Fallout New Vegas

I know these are very bland choices, but these games had a huge impact on me. I’ve only played disco Elysium recently, but it truly is a masterpiece. FNV gives me warm memories of [the good parts, at least.] of my childhood, and outer wilds… I don’t even really know how to describe it.

This isn’t an exhaustive list by any means, and there are some other games that affected me on the same level, but I could only pick 3 :)

BurgerBaron@piefed.social on 09 Aug 21:31 collapse

I adored Disco Elysium while playing it, but the ending felt kinda rushed/soured for me so it didn't quite hit top 3. However, the book Sacred And Terrible Air by Robert Kurvitz that was fan translated to English semi recently helped a great deal with unanswered questions about the world the game takes place in that I had which really helped brighten my overall opinion of the game in retrospect.

The book isn't very approachable I think with almost zero exposition, so it actually helps to have played the game first.

sexy_peach@feddit.org on 09 Aug 17:36 next collapse

  1. Factorio

  2. League of Legends

  3. Call of Duty 2

Deno@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 17:37 next collapse

Fallout New Vegas Batman: Arkham City Path Of Exile

Gainsburnie@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 17:39 next collapse

Dune 2, WoW, Stardew Valley

tanisnikana@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 17:42 next collapse

I’ve probably got some weird takes, but let’s go:

  1. Chrono Trigger is at the way top. The greatest game of all time hasn’t been bested in 30 years. Telling the best narrative I’ve heard in my life, and packing it into 20 short hours, with timeless art and amazing music, and into FOUR GODDAMN MEGABYTES, this is one many try to beat, and none have succeeded. Not even Clair Obscur: Expedition 33.

  2. CrossCode comes right behind it. This game is much longer, but that’s okay. It’s essentially a single-player MMO with all the trappings of life within. A wonderfully smooth action combat system, more amazing music, and some of the most memorable facial expressions I’ve seen. It’s also written in freakin’ HTML5.

  3. Zachtronics Solitaire Collection. Going purely by hours played and wins scored, this is on my favorites whether I like it or not. Every solitaire game from every Zachtronics title, right there. Special shout-out to Fortune’s Foundation.

Honorable mentions: Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 for the worldbuilding and music, Final Fantasy XIII for exactly the same reasons, The Talos Principle 2 for simply giving its NPCs the agency to say “nah, I don’t wanna go back, I’m staying home,” and Chaos Rings 2 for creating one of the most high-stakes yet viscerally unpleasant stories I’ve witnessed, wherein to proceed through the game, the protagonist ritually sacrifices his ever-shrinking party of people.

IceSoup@sopuli.xyz on 09 Aug 18:09 next collapse

I wish I liked Crosscode more. I really enjoyed the writing and loved the puzzles, but the combat just didn’t feel that good to me. Ended up dropping it in the second dungeon and never picked it up again.

dual_sport_dork@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 18:13 next collapse

+1 for a Chrono Trigger ranking. For as popular as it still is in retrospect, I think people still don’t quite give it the full recognition it’s due for smashing pretty much every dreary console RPG convention that the genre had been persistently saddled with up until that point, while still remaining a console RPG. Believe it or not the developers had plans to make it even more ambitious at the beginning but they weren’t able to pull it off in the time allotted.

There are a lot of subsequent RPG titles (like even Final Fantasy goddamned Seven, not to mention Pokémon) that should have learned a bevvy of lessons from Chrono Trigger, but still didn’t. It was well ahead of its time.

Dagnet@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 19:10 next collapse

CrossCode feels so much like chrono trigger to me (which is also my fav) I can’t even explain how, it’s a game on its own right with completely different gameplay but the chrono trigger essence is right there

tanisnikana@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 20:04 collapse

Lea!

Dagnet@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 04:12 collapse

There is one “No” she says in the story that is just … I swear they did such a good job of getting so much emotion through expressions and simple words alone, really impressive

tanisnikana@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 05:38 collapse

When she cries, and Emilie cries, I cry. This game is near-perfect.

That expression she has with her head in her hands is horrifying and perfect and never seen twice.

Dagnet@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 15:22 collapse

I cried too, such a touching moment

neukenindekeuken@sh.itjust.works on 09 Aug 19:13 next collapse

Updoting for Chronotrigger. Always at the top of my list. Every list.

Except worst lists.

Omegamanthethird@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 19:56 next collapse

I didn’t expect FFXIII to get a mention in here. Respect.

tanisnikana@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 20:04 collapse

Final Fantasy XIII and Detroit Become Human hit me so hard they both permanently altered my wardrobe and aesthetic.

Omegamanthethird@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 20:34 collapse

XIII isn’t in my top 5 FF games. But the interpersonal dynamic is the absolute best in the series. The scene where Sahz discovers why his son was branded is one of the most impactful moments in gaming. Two of the most cheerful characters in the franchise, suddenly broken.

I don’t love how restricted the game is at the beginning. But each of their personal stories are magnificent, usualy leading to their Eidolon awakening.

kratoz29@lemmy.zip on 09 Aug 20:42 next collapse

  1. Chrono Trigger is at the way top. The greatest game of all time hasn’t been bested in 30 years. Telling the best narrative I’ve heard in my life, and packing it into 20 short hours, with timeless art and amazing music, and into FOUR GODDAMN MEGABYTES, this is one many try to beat, and none have succeeded. Not even Clair Obscur: Expedition 33.

I would lose the count of how many times I have read praises (well deserved) for Chrono Trigger, and it only makes me feel bad with myself because I left it unfinished (I am close to the 1st ending… I think) because I was lost all the damn time and needed a guide to move forward, something that I really don’t enjoy, and I didn’t have too many gaps while playing it to be fair.

I enjoy RPGs and jRPGs, even when they are not my favorite genres, but I don’t like to feel lost all the time.

Now, it should be obvious that I didn’t play this game back in its day, my last game session was about a year ago in my DSi XL (arguably the best way to experience it) so I have 0 nostalgia googles about it, although I am a Toriyama fan and I loved the art style, graphics and music, it is only the pace and the narrative that didn’t caught me completely…

I know I shouldn’t force myself to finish it as gaming is a hobby after all, but damn, I really want to complete it, at least one playthrough lol (I don’t like to leave stuff unfinished).

If anyone has tips to not feel lost all the damn time (aside of not stop playing for a brief time) I am all ears.

Ashtear@lemmy.zip on 09 Aug 23:05 next collapse

Unfortunately it’s a thing when going back to older games after being living in the map marker era for so long. This is a big part of why games back then came with annotated maps so you’d at least have a reference for all the locations.

I’d say at the minimum, don’t be afraid to pull up maps and take notes.

kratoz29@lemmy.zip on 10 Aug 06:28 next collapse

after being living in the map marker era for so long.

Jeez, this is totally it!

Thanks for putting it in simpler words for me 😅

Definitely gonna check in taking notes.

missingno@fedia.io on 10 Aug 20:08 collapse

When playing classics, http://gamefaqs.com/ is your best friend. Guides were how we played games back then.

saimen@feddit.org on 10 Aug 18:51 collapse

For me it is not even having a quest log. Some sidequests are just someone hinting something could or should be done.

chunes@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 00:11 collapse

You’re not the only one. I’ve beaten The 7th Saga more times than Chrono Trigger lol.

kratoz29@lemmy.zip on 10 Aug 06:34 next collapse

I didn’t know about this game, but honestly it is so good that others experience the same as I, of course I don’t think that I am the only one in the world that Chrono Trigger is not for him (not even sure about this myself), but definitely is so scarce to read comments of people struggling with the title compared with praises for it gets!

dvlsg@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 14:44 collapse

I love Chrono Trigger, but as far as SNES goes, Final Fantasy 6 and Secret of Mana 2 (or Trials of Mana or whatever we’re calling it now) both beat it for me.

Flamekebab@piefed.social on 09 Aug 23:12 collapse

I gave Chrono Trigger a fair whack and just got bored. I suspect JRPGs just aren't for me.

tanisnikana@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 23:27 next collapse

It’s why we got so many games!

missingno@fedia.io on 10 Aug 02:09 collapse

Out of all retro JRPGs from that era, I'd say Chrono Trigger is the one that has aged the best, but it definitely is still a product of that era and that can be a bit of an acquired taste. If you haven't played any other modern JRPGs, I'd suggest checking out how the genre has evolved today, you might have an easier time getting into newer titles.

saimen@feddit.org on 10 Aug 18:44 collapse

I actually started playing chrono trigger because of threads like this, but stopped playing close to the end because I wanted to do all the side quest but didn’t have the time to try things out and also played with a lot of breaks so I forgot a lot of things and therefore I started to look things up online but then it became tedious and also felt like cheating and now I can’t even motivate myself to finish it even though I am probably missing out on the best part of it.

you_are_dust@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 17:42 next collapse

  1. Super Mario RPG. I played through this game so many times as a kid.
  2. Dust: An Elysian Tail
  3. Middle Earth: Shadow of Mordor
edgemaster72@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 21:20 next collapse

A fellow Dust enjoyer, nice

Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 10 Aug 02:18 collapse

Based and uwu-pilled

chunes@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 00:16 collapse

Shadow of Mordor is just so much fun to screw around in. Does a really good job making you feel badass

RandomStickman@fedia.io on 09 Aug 17:44 next collapse

  • STALKER Shadow of Chernobyl
  • EuroTruck Simulator 2
  • Battlefield 2

Honorable mentions: EvE Online, Mount and Blade Warband, XCOM Enemy Unknown, Helldivers 2, Disco Elysium, Mini Metro, Tactical Breach Wizards

QuantumStorm@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 17:44 next collapse

Of all time is a hard one. I guess I’ll go by most play hours. So in no particular order, WoW, Stellaris, and Warframe.

kindenough@kbin.earth on 09 Aug 17:45 next collapse

Gameboy Tetris, Galaga on the Amiga, ZX Spectrum Atic Atac.

EgoNo4@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 17:45 next collapse

Bg3

Fo NV

Cultic

missingno@fedia.io on 09 Aug 17:52 next collapse

  1. Puyo Puyo 20th Anniversary - Puyo Puyo is the greatest competitive puzzle game ever made, and 20th is a massive package of incredible extras to go with it. I made a video just showing off how many cool things are in this game, and got so carried away that it ended up being an hour long. To this day, I continue to have a chip on my shoulder about how everything else Sega has done since doesn't come anywhere close to this game, and so the west has never gotten to see the best of what the series has to offer.

  2. Skullgirls - Best damn fighting game of all time. Fast, explosive, with tons of options for flexible teambuilding. It wears its old-school influences on its sleeve, in an era where too many modern fighting games feel watered down. At the same time though, Skullgirls was also so far ahead of its time for having functional online, a training mode more robust than any other game at the time, and tons of excellent QoL features.

  3. Slay the Spire - Spire has ruined all other roguelikes for me. What I love about Spire is that it does not let you get away with just looking for one powerful synergy that will carry you, many enemies are designed to hard counter one-trick decks. You're forced to adapt and actively consider what threats are coming up and what you need to deal with those threats, recognizing the difference between the cards you want and the cards you truly need.

JoMiran@lemmy.ml on 09 Aug 17:52 next collapse

  • Portal 2
  • Persona 4 Golden
  • Galaga

Honorable mentions:

  • Titanfall 2
  • Destiny/Destiny2 (sometimes)
  • Baldies Gate 3
mechoman444@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 17:53 next collapse

Really hard to have any real favorite. But the games I’ve played the most in my life:

Super Mario Bros (NES)

Diablo Franchise

Destiny 2

finitebanjo@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 17:55 next collapse

Dark Cloud

Dark Cloud 2

I don’t like it actually but I have over 5k hours in Dota 2.

Endmaker@ani.social on 09 Aug 18:17 next collapse

I don’t like it actually but I have over 5k hours in Dota 2.

Average dota 2 experience.

Cethin@lemmy.zip on 10 Aug 04:59 collapse

I really think someone needs to make a modern evolution of Dark Cloud. Maybe the technological limitation was actually a benefit though, because a modern game would probably try to do open world, full 3d construction, and things like that. The technology at the time required that they keep it fairly simple but also really well designed.

finitebanjo@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 07:00 collapse

There was a petition for a Dark Cloud 3 a while back, apparently the creators were hip to the idea.

bw42@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 17:57 next collapse

Of all time?

Galaxian - I have an antique table top arcade version my aunt gave me about 20ish years ago that I enjoy.

Civilization - Hot seat multiplayer was awesome. Pikeman as active borders for your country.

Doom - Soundtrack alone is worth the experience

eRac@lemmings.world on 09 Aug 17:57 next collapse

  1. Mirror’s Edge
  2. Lingo (2?)
  3. And Yet It Moves

ME has stuck with me as my favorite game for fifteen years now. I love it visually, the soundtrack is incredible, and the gameplay is fantastic.

Lingo and its sequel are a bizzare, unmatched puzzle experience. I don’t know what else to say there.

And Yet It Moves is… something else. An indy platformer from the heyday of Indy platformers. It is an interesting example of how story can influence art style.

anguo@piefed.ca on 09 Aug 18:27 next collapse

Do you maybe mean Limbo?

eRac@lemmings.world on 09 Aug 20:55 collapse

No, Lingo. Two games, both in the past few years. It’s confusing word puzzles in an equally-confusing world.

Quicky@piefed.social on 09 Aug 19:07 collapse

Mirror's Edge is such an incredible game. The aesthetics and pace are utterly absorbing

Endmaker@ani.social on 09 Aug 18:04 next collapse

  1. Singaporean Bridge - It’s basically a crossover of Bridge and Werewolf / Polar Bear / Among Us. That small change of not knowing who your partner is from the start makes for games that are way more fun.
  2. Pokemon Soulsilver - I love the following mechanic. The other features of the game are really great too.
  3. Raze 2 - I have seen others describe it as the “Halo of flash games”. Personally, I had a blast playing it. Also, Waterflame’s soundtracks are the GOAT.
IceSoup@sopuli.xyz on 09 Aug 18:06 next collapse

  1. Celeste
  2. Outer Wilds
  3. Slay The Spire

Much hidden gem.

greatwhitepapertiger@lemmy.zip on 09 Aug 18:07 next collapse

-Minecraff -Generation Zero -Farcry Franchise

electric@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 18:19 collapse

Can you elaborate on why Generation Zero? I remember seeing a trailer for it randomly before it released and thought it looked great. Haven’t heard a peep about it from anyone though, so assumed it ended up being boring.

greatwhitepapertiger@lemmy.zip on 09 Aug 18:31 collapse

The game is not actively being developed anymore, sadly. I’m not going to say it was the greatest game ever but it’s one of those games where the environment is just great to spend time in. It’s not overly story heavy. The gun play is spot on. The physics are good where it counts and goofy where it doesn’t. The sound design is stellar atmospherically. It’s awesome with friends and good enough solo. This is coming from someone who bought all the DLCs and has never done that for any game before. I’d recommend the story DLCs at least for anybody. This game is just begging for mods. The environment is that good. If you haven’t tried it but can catch it on a sale it’s totally worth it.

electric@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 18:44 collapse

I’m a sucker for a good, immersive environment. I know it’s primarily meant for playing multiplayer, do people still play it?

RightHandOfIkaros@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 19:34 collapse

I wouldn’t say it was designed for multiplayer, just that you can play with other players cooperatively. The game is still solo playable. Yeah, plenty of people still play online AFAIK. I have never played online with anyone other than my friends so I can’t speak for whether matchmaking works or not, but I see posts from online communities looking for players to play with, so its multiplayer scene is still active.

It’s a pretty fun game, I am disappointed that development stopped but we all kinda saw it coming. The game is made in a game engine designed for hunting games, so while the vegetation graphics are very good and the robots behaviour is interesting, it is obviously hard to work with when making a game the engine wasn’t designed for. Plus, it was receiving live active development and free updates and minor paid DLCs for like, 5 years? So it was pretty well taken care of, all things considered.

0li0li@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 02:07 collapse

Gonna get it when I return home, thanks for the insights :)

LambdaRX@sh.itjust.works on 09 Aug 18:08 next collapse

  • NieR: Automata (Replicant is also as good)
  • Metal Gear Solid 2
  • Yakuza 0
electric@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 18:16 next collapse

Only 3 choices makes it a tough one since there are many exceptional games…

If I had to erase every experience of all games, the ones I’d keep are (in no particular order): Cyberpunk 2077 Fallout: New Vegas Sunset Overdrive

Coelacanth@feddit.nu on 09 Aug 18:16 next collapse

Disco Elysium sits completely unchallenged at the top spot as the most meaningful experience I’ve had playing a video game. I resonated deeply with its themes and its main character as someone who has struggled with depression, addiction, obsession and trouble moving on. It’s an astonishing achievement in both writing and in the use of a game as a storytelling medium, an one of the best ever examples of “video games as art”.

The rest of the list is almost impossible to order, because there are so many different ways to rank them. Games I’ve played that I think are the objectively best? Games I would like to just sit down and play right now the most? Games that made the biggest impression on me as a person, especially growing up?

Regardless, it’s probably any two out of:

  • Dark Souls 1
  • Baldur’s Gate 2
  • Civilization 5
  • Final Fantasy VI
  • Need For Speed: Most Wanted (2005)
  • Bioshock 1
  • STALKER SoC/CoP/Anomaly
  • Alan Wake 2
  • Fallout: New Vegas
  • Vampire the Masquerade: Bloodlines
  • EVE Online (up until 2015-16 or so)

Will probably add Expedition 33 to it in the future, but need the dust to settle on it first. EDIT: Hell, Blue Prince has a good shot at making the list too.

EDIT 2: Somehow forgot Dishonored 1&2 and Splinter Cell: Chaos Theory. It really is impossible to list just three!

NaibofTabr@infosec.pub on 09 Aug 18:17 next collapse

<img alt="" src="https://infosec.pub/api/v3/image_proxy?url=https%3A%2F%2Fstatic0.gamerantimages.com%2Fwordpress%2Fwp-content%2Fuploads%2F2024%2F12%2Fmixcollage-07-dec-2024-07-29-am-8643.jpg">

Twenty-two years later and still nothing really compares. I’ve played it through 5… 6?.. times and the characters still feel compelling.

<img alt="" src="https://infosec.pub/api/v3/image_proxy?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.hardcoregaming101.net%2Fwp-content%2Fuploads%2F2018%2F11%2F335436-command-conquer-red-alert-2-windows-manual.jpg">

I miss Westwood… everyone that came after only imitated their work, and while some have made improvements to the gameplay, none have really accomplished the same level of storytelling in the RTS genre.

<img alt="" src="https://infosec.pub/api/v3/image_proxy?url=https%3A%2F%2Fsandboxgamesdb.com%2Fwp-content%2Fuploads%2F2014%2F10%2FFTL-Faster-Than-Light-Game-Logo.jpg">

Kind of a perfect game, one that keeps you coming back again and again.

ampersandrew@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 22:07 next collapse

I’d definitely have a higher opinion of FTL if it didn’t feel like the entire game ended up just being about the final boss. Knights of the Old Republic is also one that I felt that, if you knew the twist ahead of time, lost a lot of its impact.

dukemirage@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 10:39 collapse

I recently played Kotor for the first time since its release and unfortunately, it really felt kinda cheesy and bland. But right before that I played Disco Elysium so that was maybe the wrong order.

Ketram@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 10 Aug 12:14 collapse

Yeah Kotor 1 is a very classic Star wars hero story, which is fun in its own way. Kotor 2 With TSLRCM patch will likely hit a lot better for you after disco Elysium.

AmazingAwesomator@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 18:20 next collapse

Master of Orion 2
Lords of the Realm 2
Caesar 3

BigBananaDealer@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 18:24 next collapse

  1. rock band 3, spent multiple summers playing this all day long

  2. skyrim, still play it every year for like 3 months straight. its insane

  3. borderlands the pre sequel. i honestly prefer this one over any other borderlands game

darthelmet@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 18:28 next collapse

It’s really hard for me to separate my nostalgia for older games with what I’d think about them now. There are some games I’ve played a LOT but haven’t touched in years for one reason or another.

Some pre-Steam games would be things like Halo 3, World of Warcraft, Runescape, and few Pokemon games.

On Steam my most played game BY FAR is DoTA 2 at ~2100 hours. I loved that game and I still think it’s really well designed… I just haven’t played it in years because it makes me too mad to play with randos and it’s impossible to get 5 friends who play DoTA online at the same time anymore.

If I was going to pick a top 3 outside of those nostalgic outliers, maybe:

  • Slay The Spire
  • Dark Souls
  • Deep Rock Galactic
plant@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 09 Aug 19:14 next collapse

Have you tried deadlock yet?

darthelmet@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 21:06 collapse

I tried it out when the testing started. It’s… fine. I’m not much of a shooter/action game player, so the higher skill elements of it are a bit of a barrier on top of re-learning a lot of DoTA-type stuff. I can imagine getting into it more if it came out years ago. But now it’s hard to find the time and motivation I’d need to dedicate to even get back to the level of incompetence I had with DoTA.

SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 09 Aug 22:45 collapse

Rock and stone, brother.

[deleted] on 09 Aug 18:29 next collapse

.

nul9o9@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 09 Aug 18:30 next collapse

  • Kenshi
  • Morrowind
  • Titanfall 2
Omegamanthethird@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 20:05 next collapse

Morrowind is top tier. Every time I play a bit differently or go somewhere new, it feels new again. I’ve never had that from another game. Compare to Skyrim (which I also liked), I kinda felt like I experienced everything my first go-round.

BuboScandiacus@mander.xyz on 09 Aug 20:10 collapse

Do you know of any game that has the Kenshi, Morrowind aesthetic ? I crave more. You know, this:

<img alt="" src="https://mander.xyz/pictrs/image/e97c68a6-070b-4eff-85e6-516196c22467.webp">

<img alt="" src="https://mander.xyz/pictrs/image/a45bedc4-aad1-4c38-89a7-fc767a9869fa.jpeg">

<img alt="" src="https://mander.xyz/pictrs/image/893871cf-dd13-4773-bd68-aa3e7be855c9.jpeg">

<img alt="" src="https://mander.xyz/pictrs/image/75d16a41-457e-457b-bb92-64b72719fb0d.jpeg">

Any recommendation welcome !

nul9o9@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 09 Aug 20:45 next collapse

Man I wish more comes to mind. I was eager for the Morrowind themed Kenshi mod, but that looks like it stalled out. 🫤

chunes@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 23:51 next collapse

Star Wars Galaxies was kinda like that. No idea if it’s still playable though.

tab@sh.itjust.works on 10 Aug 07:50 next collapse

Likely weird take, but Scorn?

More Gigerian and claustrophobic, but vaguely similar. I did not much like its gameplay though, the 3d made me nauseous.

Zoomboingding@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 14:56 collapse

Check out Outward. It has a Morrowind/Everquest kind of feel. It’s an offline RPG, but you can play co-op. You have to basically discover all the mechanics/secrets through trial and error or talking to NPCs, which makes it feel very old school.

SalamenceFury@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 18:31 next collapse

In no particular order:

  • Megaman X
  • UNDERTALE
  • Call of Duty 4 (campaign, never played MP)

I just really like those three games. They’re all fun in their own ways and in the case of Undertale it shaped a huge part of my 20’s because it was through playing it that I learned to love humanity even with its bumps and scrapes. It kept me from turning into a full on misanthrope.

Honorable mentions go to GTA Online (I have almost 6000 hours in that game total, it’s my favorite pastime), Call of Duty Black Ops 2 (multiplayer), and Titanfall 2.

ReCursing@feddit.uk on 09 Aug 18:32 next collapse

Off the top of my head, in no particular order:

  • Portal (or maybe Portal 2)
  • Doom (the 1993 one) (or maybe Doom 2)
  • Stellaris

All great games

ImplyingImplications@lemmy.ca on 09 Aug 18:33 next collapse

Metal Gear Solid 3, Subnautica, Papers Please.

I love the Metal Gear series but the Cold War setting of 3 works so well with the theme of the game. It also features crab battles and the ladder boss.

Subnautica really captures the feeling of being lost in some alien world and slowly making it your new home. The electronic voice assistant manages to send chills up your spine with lines like “oxygen.”

Papers, Please explores complex moral decisions in such a simple way. I wish to live my life more like Jorji.

chemical_cutthroat@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 18:35 next collapse

  1. Chrono Trigger
  2. Xenogears
  3. Vagrant Story

Nier:Automata gets an honorable mention.

kinther@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 03:41 collapse

Xenogears is an amazing story. I never got into the other games in the series. Do you know if they are worth it?

chemical_cutthroat@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 04:11 collapse

XenoSaga is worth it, though it suffers the same fate as Xenogears being rushed at the end. Xenoblade is definitely worth it. None of them cross over but they have the same themes and motifs, plus a little fan service for series old heads.

C4551E@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 09 Aug 18:38 next collapse

3 is really tough, but I’ll say:

  1. Hollow Knight
  2. Noita
  3. Super Metroid

Other GOATs of mine are already mentioned by others. Y’all have impeccable taste

edgemaster72@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 18:52 next collapse

Final Fantasy XI
Shovel Knight
Hades

purplerabbit@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 09 Aug 18:56 next collapse

It’s hard to tell because I have played a lot of games but that comes to mind immediately right now. I would say:

  1. Red Dead Redemption 2.
  2. Garry’s Mod.
  3. Titanfall 2.

Red Dead Redemption 2 is a game that I absolutely fell in love with and it’s one that I regularly go back to just lose myself in and still find new things in it. Arthur Morgan might just be my favorite protagonist of anything ever. It’s still one of the best looking games ever made. The game looks like a painting. And you know they did something truly special when they managed to make my ADHD ass enjoy just walking in a game without running.

Gary’s Mod is an odd pick for me because I almost thought about leaving it out because I cannot like don’t see it as a game. I have thousands of hours on it and most of my time has been spent exploring empty maps. It’s more of a tool of relaxation for me than anything else but it’s deeply meaningful to me. If I had to summarize it, I would say that the Source engine is my home.

Titanfall 2 is simply the best FPS I’ve ever played. Both multiplayer and solo. It’s amazing. I have spent weekends just playing the main campaign on max difficulty on loop without ever getting bored and the multiplayer was fucking fantastic.

*i'm gonna cheat and give some honorable mentions. :3*

- Thief: The Dark Project - Terraria - A Short Hike - Portal 2

0li0li@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 02:09 collapse

If Titanfall 2 had full bot support, I would not play any other shooter…

purplerabbit@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 10 Aug 12:21 collapse

My dream, right there.

spankmonkey@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 19:04 next collapse

Street Fighter II for getting me into fighting games. While I don’t play that version anymore it is a favorite because of how much I did play it and later fighting games.

Valheim - hundreds of hours of enjoyment from the first moment I was dropped into the world by a giant crow. So much fun time with friends, building stuff, and just exploring. Such a well done game with fantastic lighting, sound, and things to do. Only long tine gripe is fighting on slopes!

Helldivers 2 - yeah, another more recent game but it is also just the exact thing I am looking for in a mutiplayer game with friends. Nearly everything is viable in most difficulties, the game has mechanics for accidental team kills, the setting evolves, but in a way that encourages participation in scheduled events without forcing it, and the devs have listened when the player base pushes back on changes that don’t mesh with the tone of the game.

Enjoyed a lot of other games too, but those are ones that hit specific things that I love and enjoyable to replay over and over and over and over…

Sonotsugipaa@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 09 Aug 19:15 next collapse

  • Halo 2
  • TLoZ:OoT
  • Half Life

I can’t deny that nostalgia has to do with the first two fossils in the list, though I still maintain that I like them more than their latest counterparts in their franchises.
Not Half Life though: it was ~15 years old when I first played it, no nostalgia there.

Still, between the many games I would gladly build a monument to, those are games that I can play beginning to end without getting bored, annoyed or burnt out (as long as you allow me to use the Ship Of Harkinian randomizer for Z:OoT, otherwise replace that game with Perfect Dark ig).

red_bull_of_juarez@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 09 Aug 19:23 next collapse

  1. Cyberpunk 2077, just by hours played and number of replays.

  2. The Horizon games. I just adore the world and Aloy.

  3. Great Gianna Sisters for hours played and the music.

I also loved the Portal games, they might be a contender for third place.

tgirlschierke@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 10 Aug 14:34 collapse

Haven’t played Gianna Sisters, but I’ve heard the soundtrack for the newest one was made by the incredible Machinae Supremacy.

Hubi@feddit.org on 09 Aug 19:30 next collapse

  1. Mafia 1 from 2002, that game really shaped my taste in games when I was a kid
  2. Kingdom Come Deliverance 2. Essentially a perfect video game from start to finish IMO.
  3. Alan Wake 1 or 2, genuinely hard to pick one.
al_Kaholic@lemmynsfw.com on 09 Aug 19:35 next collapse

Beat Off The Wiener was a game I enjoyed as a youth as well.

AliasVortex@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 19:49 next collapse

  1. RimWorld - I don’t think I’ve ever seen a game care so much about making the player feel like part of the story; just all around amazing. Damn near everything is configurable and for anything that isn’t the modding community probably has a fix for (and then some).
  2. Terraria - Certainly has its quirks and annoyances, but I like that it has sandbox elements to be creative and do whatever, but also always feels like the game has an objective to work towards. I’ve probably played though at least half a dozen times between solo runs and multiplayer games with friends/ family and I just keep coming back to it.
  3. Stardew valley - it’s just cozy with a slight hit of nostalgia. I have childhood memories of staying up entirely too late monopolizing the TV/ GameCube playing Harvest Moon and this scratches the same itch. Beyond that you can feel the love and attention to detail that the dev has poured into the game. Plus the skill ceiling is pretty low, so even my non-gamer friends/ family can play and have a good time.

Honorable mentions:

  • Factorio
  • Slay the Spire
  • FTL
msage@programming.dev on 10 Aug 13:03 collapse

I hope you played Terraria with mods, like Calamity.

Alexstarfire@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 19:55 next collapse

Mostly based off hours played: EU4, Borderlands 2, Bioshock.

I excluded League of Legends even though I probably have the second most hours in that. Toxic as shit and I’m glad I gave it up.

Read everyone else’s picks and Tales of Phantasia is one RPG I’ve gone back to countless times. Might be the only one where I can come back to it months later and pick right back up where I left off. I know it that well.

_ed@sopuli.xyz on 09 Aug 19:55 next collapse

I tend to run an unranked top 10 so three of those would be.

  • Elite (1984). Very cool graphics engine, combat and gameplay.
  • The Chaos Engine (1993) IMO The best bitmap brothers games when they were kings of the 16 bit era.
  • Metroid Prime (2002) Great environments, design and soundtrack.
dinckelman@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 20:02 next collapse

  • Gothic 2, and by extension, Chronicles of Myrtana
  • The Binding of Isaac: Rebirth
  • Both are equally as monumental, so it’s shared between Obra Dinn, and Outer Wilds

That being said, i’ve excluded any mmos out of this list, purely because sometimes i struggle to call them my favorite games, despite having playing several thousand hours of each. Some of them have been unbelievably impactful at certain times in my life, but i’m afraid the embers are getting cold now

Omegamanthethird@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 20:02 next collapse

Morrowind
Final Fantasy X
The Last of Us

The first two are interchangeable first and second.

Next two are Final Fantasy VIII and inFamous 2, again interchangeable.

makyo@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 21:12 collapse

Morrowind was such a game changer for me. I’m still bummed that Bethesda dropped the best things about it for their later games.

kratoz29@lemmy.zip on 09 Aug 20:50 next collapse

  1. Jump Ultimate Stars, this is the dream game for any Otaku, the fact that we can still play it in 2025 thanks to custom servers is a blessing.

  2. God Of War 2018, I was having a bad streak gaming related due to personal and work life, but when this game was released I got it immediately, something that I rarely do (patient gamer gang), anyway, this game kept me awake late nights, I know this is not something that one should brag about, but I was enjoying it completely thus the nights felt that happened too quickly.

  3. Toy Story 2, this game will never age for me, I honestly don’t know if it should deserve this spot, but if there is a game that I have replayed the most in my life, this would be it, the platform mechanics and graphics are top notch for me (and hey, PS1 graphics are making a comeback, so no shame at all with that style).

Maybe another game deserves that last spot, but those 3 games were the 1st ones that came to my mind.

Honorable mentions:

Mario Kart DS

Phoenix Wright Ace Attorney Trilogy

Hotel Dusk & The Last Window (can you guess my favorite console by this point?)

Pokémon Soul Silver

TWEWY

Time Hollow

All the other God of War games (even Ascension)

Batman Arkham saga (even Origins)

The Witcher 3

Xenoblade

And a bunch others that would make this list absurdly big, which is not the main point of this post.

Brkdncr@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 20:52 next collapse

Smb3.

HL2.

Team Fortress Classic.

Falcon 4.0 gets my respect for forcing me into advanced computer tinkering and sending me into my career eventually.

Stety@sh.itjust.works on 09 Aug 20:55 next collapse

Factorio Outer wilds Horizon zero dawn

panda_abyss@lemmy.ca on 09 Aug 20:56 next collapse

Factorio, Anno 1602, Civ 3

Easy choices for me, but I don’t know how to order them.

Anno 1800 gets an honourable mention for feeling like a great spiritual successor to 1602, but I have a ton of nostalgia for the first game.

BurgerBaron@piefed.social on 09 Aug 21:16 next collapse

Not gonna rank them because I can't.

Age of Empires II I've played since release and still do occasionally.

Everhood 1 everything about it I love. During covid things got very dark for me personally and this game just hit perfectly on some stuff plaguing my mind at the exact right time I most needed it. The devs were one hit wonders unfortunately. Coming from that, the sequel was atrocious.

Thief 2: The Metal Age. It's like crack to this brain of mine. Yes I play The Dark Mod too.

Runners up:

LISA: The Painful

Diddy Kong Racing

chunes@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 22:40 next collapse

Thief 2 is just incredible. Many games try, but none can dethrone the stealth game king.

And I totally forgot about Diddy Kong Racing, but yeah. It’s legitimately a better game than Mario Kart 64.

BurgerBaron@piefed.social on 09 Aug 23:18 collapse

Aye and it helps the fans are so passionate making new maps to play for both Thief games and TDM.

DKR holds up so much better. It's just more* realised too. Way more stuff to do. MK64 is skeletal more like an arcade game really. Wish it'd get some reverse engineering love as much as I enjoy the fan made map packs for MK64.

With DKR once you get used to the car drifting camera movements, bunny hopping the hovercraft, letting go of the gas before hitting boosts, and learning the plane can also trigger ground boosts you'll feel like a god.

I see a lot of people shit on the hovercraft while I'm over here bunny hopping sharp corners jumping up to smash into walls on purpose like a psycho so I don't slow down ping ponging all over. It's such a joy.

SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 09 Aug 22:49 collapse

I’ve been curious about LISA: The Painful for a long time.

otp@sh.itjust.works on 09 Aug 21:17 next collapse

Your title says “What are in you are top 3 favourite games of all time”.

You were thinking of “your”, which is possessive. “You’re” is a contraction of “you” and “are”; the apostrophe is a hint there.

Flamekebab@piefed.social on 10 Aug 00:23 collapse

Given that this is Lemmy and we have advanced technology - I hope OP edits the title to fix it.

neatchee@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 21:20 next collapse

  • Wing Commander 4 - At the time, I was very young, and this game changed how I looked at videogames. For my little brain, the FMV cutscenes and genuinely decent acting (ffs, it has Mark Hammil) somehow made it click that games could have compelling narrative
  • Kingdom Hearts - this game changed my life in many ways. I can genuinely say I wouldn’t be doing what I do today if it weren’t for this game and my involvement in the fan community around it. This game is very special to me because of its themes and major plot beats, and how those interacted with my life at the time. This game taught me that you could go beyond “compelling narrative” and break my heart with a video game lol
  • Natural Selection 2 - I wish this game were more popular in its prime. This is the epitome of what I think good competition looks like, and a great manifestation of what I personally love in esports
exu@feditown.com on 09 Aug 21:21 next collapse

Favourites

Witcher 3

Witcher 3 was one of the first “big games” I got to experience. I still think of the characters occasionally and it has some very memorable quests. It’s been on my “to replay” list for a while to see if it still holds up against my memories of it.

Nier: Automata

This is another early “big game” I played, though I didn’t finish it then. I won’t spoil it, but at some point I was up against a boss, way under levelled and didn’t feel like grinding. However I started a new playthrough this year, got further along and it’s still very good. The story telling and world building are simply excellent, combat is fun (except a certain section I won’t spoil) and I really want to see what else happens in my current play through. My only gripe is that keyboard & mouse sucks without an overhaul mode, which unfortunately doesn’t work on Linux.

Other games

I couldn’t think of a third game, so here’s a list of other good games that don’t quite make it.

  • Cyberpunk 2077: I like it, but it hasn’t really had as much of an impact as my two favourites.
  • Baldur’s Gate 3: Very good contender for my 3rd favourite spot, but I need to play through it a bunch more times.
  • Dishonored: I haven’t thought of this game in a while. It’s still very good, just not a contender for favourite.
  • Skyrim: One of my higher playtime games, but I see it more as a modded sandbox à la Minecraft that’s fun for 2 weeks.
  • Receiver 2: Very neat gun mechanics with an important central message
  • 1000xResist: Interesting story and message, though you won’t play this for the gameplay. Some awe inspiring visuals occasionally
tty5@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 21:21 next collapse

Civilization (the OG dos version)

Planetside 2

Warframe

0li0li@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 01:59 collapse

PS2 does rule <3

caut_R@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 21:33 next collapse

One has to be Crusader Kings III considering the amount of time that died in that game. I did Lingua Franca (world domination) when mods and savescumming voided achievements, my whole empire fell apart literally 20 seconds after I achieved world domination lol, could barely hold it together to achieve the feat.

The other one is probably Rocket League. Low skill floor, skyhigh skill ceiling, wonderfully designed esports game. If you could still freely go in and out of casual games, I‘d probably still play it. But I peaked and don‘t feel the need to play ranked anymore and casuals started to feel like ranked.

After these two I can probably name ten more but I can‘t say which takes a top 3. League of Legends, Counterstrike 1.6, Battlefield 3, HITMAN, Dark Souls II (yep lol, I could probably draw a map of this game from memory), NIOH 1/2, Monster Hunter World, Sleeping Dogs, Muse Dash, all these games killed countless hours with fun, but it‘s hard to put one above the other. Apart from League of Legends, that one takes the rear.

dependencyinjection@discuss.tchncs.de on 09 Aug 21:34 next collapse

Halo 2, Minecraft, and Factorio.

sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works on 09 Aug 21:42 next collapse

  1. Europa Universalis IV
  2. The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past
  3. Lords of the Realm II

EUIV will probably be replaced by EUV when it comes out.

kionay@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 21:57 next collapse

  1. Satisfactory
  2. Stardew Valley
  3. Baldur’s Gate 3

Not that they’re the best games, but they’re definitely my favorites. Though if I’m being honest there’s a large gap between number one and number two, and anything other than Satisfactory feels like it could move in the top 10 depending on my mood.

So I guess if I’m being honest with myself it’s more like
1: Satisfactory

~massive gap~

2-∞: any other traditionally well-liked game, depending on my mood on a given day

ampersandrew@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 22:05 next collapse

  1. Skullgirls - Simply the best fighting game ever made. There’s so much depth in a comparatively small roster that I could basically never get bored or see every viable strategy in it.
  2. Baldur’s Gate 3 - Tried and true RPG mechanics combined with the best version yet of Larian’s engine that encourages free form problem solving. And on top of that, they managed best in class presentation in NPC dialogue and had some of the best writing in the genre. This will be a tough act to follow, especially since I don’t think their last two Original Sin RPG systems were anywhere near as good as D&D 5e.
  3. Elden Ring - It’s been a great couple of years for two of my favorite games of all time to come out within a year and a half of each other, but this is another one of those games where there’s just so much to see and so many ways to solve the problem in front of you. Pattern recognition for where to find your next reward is up to you; your next goal is up to you; how you conquer the bad guy in front of you is up to you.

All three of these games just respect your intelligence and are composed of systems deep enough to give you countless ways to solve their challenges.

anakin78z@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 22:24 next collapse

Morrowind - the first game that let me leave the path. It completely changed RPGs for me, and I loved it.

Solasta - this game captured the D&D feeling like no other game has. My wife and I have spent hundreds of hours playing this together.

Dragon Age: The Veilguard - this game touched me emotionally, more than any game before it. The whole 3rd act is an emotional rollercoaster. Plus it has one of my favorite action sequences ever, in The Siege of Weisshaupt.

muhyb@programming.dev on 09 Aug 22:33 next collapse

  • Starcraft II
  • Mount & Blade: Warband
  • Heroes of Might & Magic III

Honorable mentions

  • Anno 1404
  • Far Cry 2
  • Witcher 3
  • Tropico 4
  • Factorio
chunes@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 22:35 next collapse

  • Doom/Doom II. They somehow lucked the hell out on mechanics, speed of movement, ease of modding etc. John Carmack did us all a massive solid and got the game released under GPL license only four years after it came out. As a result of the incremental improvements enabled by that, the game keeps my interest to this day.
  • TIE Fighter. I used to be a massive Star Wars fan, and this game was just the best thing ever for a detail-oriented kid. I memorized the stats of every single ship and for the rest of time was pissed whenever someone got it wrong. The missions truly require you to use your brain and every advantage at your disposal (in-flight map; reinforcements; wingmates; ship characteristics; good tactics). 've’never come across a better flight sim to this day (although the Freespace series comes close).
  • Diablo II. I was 15 when this game came out. I rollerbladed all the way across town to buy this game without my parents knowing. The clerk almost didn’t sell it to me because he thought I looked too young but in the end he did me a solid. The game was worth it and then some. It consumed the rest of my teenage years. Digital crack.

Games that deserve to be in the top three but don’t fit:

  • PlanetSide. I still remember being in shock watching a hundred people shoot at each other without massive rubberbanding etc. It totally redefined what was possible in a game. I was obsessed with making loadouts for every situation. TR forever!

  • Dark Souls. They totally nailed the feeling of being in some sort of dark fantasy fever dream. So beautiful, and I love how the lore is relevant to how you feel trying to overcome the adversity of the game. First half of the game has some of the best world design I’ve ever seen.

  • World of Warcraft. I flunked out of college because of this game. I think it was worth it.

Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 10 Aug 02:21 collapse

My parents wouldn’t buy me Diablo II for Christmas because it was too evil for the season.

…they did buy me Dimmu Borgir’s “Enthrone Darkness Triumphant”, though!

a_wild_mimic_appears@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 09 Aug 22:36 next collapse

  1. Prey 2016 - I love the designs, the art, the story, the lonely feeling in space, the soundtrack (Mick Gordon!).
  2. Nier Automata - The only game that ever made me cry - multiple times. Great Soundtrack too!
  3. Grim Dawn - for me personally the best ARPG ever made, and they are working on a new expansion, after all this time!

Edit: Honorable Mentions: x) Fallout NV, but i can’t be arsed to mod it AGAIN, and vanilla is too buggy, so currently no NV for me x) Dragon Age - Origins: played this through on the Xbox 360 3 times! x) Dead Cells: i wish i were young enough for the reflexes needed to get to 5 boss cells. Doesn’t stop me from trying, tho!

0li0li@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 01:58 collapse

I like you!

a_wild_mimic_appears@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 10 Aug 09:33 collapse

umm thanks i guess 🥹

Mistic@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 22:39 next collapse

  1. Skyrim
  2. Minecraft
  3. Destiny 2
konalt@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 22:41 next collapse

  1. Portal 2
  2. Hollow Knight
  3. Minecraft
GrayBackgroundMusic@lemmy.zip on 09 Aug 22:42 next collapse

Those are all relatively new games. How old are you? Just decade, not specifics. I’m in my 40s. I’d say my top 3 are World of Warcraft, Factorio, and Final Fantasy 6.

Zetta@mander.xyz on 09 Aug 22:47 next collapse

  1. TF2

Its just so good, played it a fair bit when I was a young teen and picked it up again a couple years ago and haven’t stopped playing 8 - 20 hours a week. Best game ever imo, never gets old.

  1. Garry’s Mod

Easily my favorite game when I was in middle school and high school, and it still holds a very dear spot in my heart and memories from that era of my life. Excited for s&b

  1. Cyberpunk 2077

I remember seeing the teaser trailer when I was a preteen and was so hyped, took like 10 years but when it did come out I had covid (which was lucky for me because I didn’t feel that sick and I got paid leave for 14 days to play the game). Played on PC from day 1 and beat the game In a week or so, it wasn’t that buggy imo. I loved the story and I encountered minimal issues during my play through, and only one that caused me to need to reload a save.

Other favs probably rimworld, gta 4, stanleys parable

emb@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 22:51 next collapse

  • The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past
  • Super Smash Bros. Melee
  • Phantasy Star Online: Episodes I & II
moakley@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 02:57 collapse

Phantasy Star Online: Episodes I & II

What the hell was it about that game? There was just something addictive. I barely even played it online, but I could just sink hours into it.

emb@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 03:08 next collapse

Right? I never tried it online for years either, though my friends and I did a lot of local co-op. Even though online is in the name, I actually think the offline is what really makes the game.

Anyway, there was just something beautiful to me about that drop chart. You could hunt specific things with specific characters, and the rates made most of it feel rare but findable.

I don’t know how they struck that sweetspot so perfectly. Had all the hook of an mmo while still being grounded and approachable.

Zoomboingding@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 14:52 collapse

I bet there’s private PSO servers you could hop back into. I’m currently playing PSU on Clemantine and it’s an amazing nostalgia experience.

Zoomboingding@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 14:51 collapse

My friend and I played split screen for years in high school on a tiny 12" CRT. I’ll never forget finally beating the Ruins on extreme difficulty. He had to revive me 10 times during the boss fight because one attack would always 1-shot me. It was a 15-minute white-knuckle struggle, and it was incredible.

Plagiatus@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 22:56 next collapse

Minecraft and Factorio are definitely my top 2, after that it gets difficult. Probably Mario Kart (not necessarily a specific one, but if you’d ask me to nail it down it’d be Double Dash (for the nostalgia) and 8 Deluxe (currently best imo) at the top).

These are the only games I have consistently played for over a decade and that I keep coming back to in one way or another because I enjoy them so much. And that to me is the most important aspect of a game: my actual enjoyment of it

Edit: Honorable Mentions:

  • Chants of Senaar
  • Opus Magnum
  • Sea of Thieves
  • Supreme Commander
  • The Settlers Series (preferably 3-4)
fodor@lemmy.zip on 09 Aug 23:20 next collapse

Betrayal at Krondor. A huge world for exploring, at a time when that didn’t exist.

Chrono Trigger. The replay value is so high.

Wolf 3D or Doom or Doom 2 or Quake 3, for similar reasons.

StarCraft, at a time when BattleNet was small and the ladder rankings and fights were all global.

chunes@lemmy.world on 09 Aug 23:29 collapse

My best friend and I used to spend summer afternoons trying to figure out the answers to all the riddles on the chests (in Betrayal at Krondor). We sucked at it (lol) but when we finally managed to crack one, the feeling was euphoric.

The music was awesome. I used to listen to the CD while I slept.

Ashtear@lemmy.zip on 09 Aug 23:23 next collapse

Impossible to rank, so I’ll pull from at random from a top 25 I did not long ago:

  • Trails to Azure - This one had a massive impact on me, from musings on depression and self-worth to love for a city, a community, and the hard choices that come from that love. Incredible story and character writing. All boosted by a well-developed world with a lot of moving parts and a crazy good soundtrack.
  • WarioWare, Inc.: Mega Microgames - Endlessly replayable. Holds up even to this day. Every time I think about it, I’m amazed at how they got lightning in a bottle with this new idea.
  • The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt - Just one of those games where every single facet clicked for me. Visuals, writing, setting, soundtrack, gameplay, meta-gameplay, decision points. All of it.
Flamekebab@piefed.social on 09 Aug 23:28 next collapse

Probably:

  • Fallout 2
  • Command & Conquer: Red Alert 2
  • Broken Sword: The Shadow of the Templars

Fallout 2 isn't as refined and tight as Fallout but I personally enjoy it more. It's arguably far too big but as I've played it so many times (unusual for me - I'm usually a one-and-done person when it comes to time sink RPGs) that isn't a bad thing. I enjoy the writing, mechanics, and atmosphere. Also I voice a robot dog in a mod for it.

Red Alert 2 is the best C&C game ever. I do not care for any of the 3D ones and Red Alert 1 is rather too difficult for me. However RA2 I have finished on hardest difficulty several times. I've never really bothered with the multiplayer for it outside of co-op because I don't play to be competitive. I tend to take my time and like it that way.

Broken Sword: The Shadow of the Templars is maybe my favourite point and click RPG. I go back to it every few years and it always sucks me in. I know most of the puzzles off by heart but I'm more there for the sense of escapism and gentle humour. There's other amazing point and click games but for whatever reason this one really speaks to me. It's not even a nostalgia thing - I've only ever played the 2009 director's cut! I'm old enough to have played the '90s version but never did.

Honourable mentions:

*Startopia
*The Binding of Isaac: Rebirth
*Theme Hospital
*What Remains of Edith Finch

Startopia's music, humour, and gameplay are all top notch. Runs on a potato, makes me laugh, and features my old pal, Arona.

BoI:R is great. I've put a ridiculous number of hours into it. The latest DLC has made it a bit too big for my tastes but in general I enjoy it a great deal.

Theme Hospital is like Two Point Hospital but tighter, funnier, and prettier. Lots of fun.

What Remains of Edith Finch is art. It's funny, moving, tragic, and beautiful. I encourage everyone to play through it. It won't take that long - a few hours. Such a fantastic experience. Gone Home is pretty damn good too.

saimen@feddit.org on 10 Aug 18:37 collapse

The soundtrack of red alert 2 is the only one I ever deliberately listened to outside of a game.

I second What Remains of Edith Finch, but funny? I couldn’t see that. One of the few games that made me cry and it gave a lasting impression. I played it shortly after the birth of my first son though. The bathtub scene and the ending hit really hard.

Flamekebab@piefed.social on 10 Aug 21:51 collapse

Funny in that it has moments of levity. It's not wall-to-wall misery even if it's filled with tragedy.

AmosBurton_ThatGuy@lemmy.ca on 10 Aug 00:59 next collapse

  1. Super Metroid
  2. Fallout: New Vegas
  3. Factorio
SaneMartigan@aussie.zone on 10 Aug 01:22 next collapse

Descent for the movement.

Unreal tournament for getting ten PC’s on a token ring for PvP lan.

Warcraft 2 because it’s rad and a pirated copy got me a job at the trading card shop.

0li0li@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 01:55 next collapse

  • Shadow Warrior 2 (playing with Quake 3 arsenal)
  • Prey (playing in VR)
  • Burnout Paradise (playing with wheel and VR).

Oh, cheeky 4th one: Magicraft (best bite-sized PoE/arpg ever)

Planetside 2 used to be my no.1 game, but I haven’t played in a couple years and do not believe I’ll ever return.

Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 10 Aug 02:20 next collapse

Ragnarok Online in the early 00s is the only reason I’m alive to post this comment

Diablo II for sure, what an amazing technical achievement in the year 1999

Theeeen probably Earthbound.

dubyakay@lemmy.ca on 10 Aug 03:23 collapse

Hey fellow RO player.

I quit when my hometown Morroc got obliterated on iRO. I’ve tried coming back once right after the server mergers, but I don’t know what kind of methodology they’ve used when determining name conflicts, I’ve lost quite a few character names to what I assume were randoms from other servers banking on taking over the names. Pissed me off way too much. Tried coming back a second time about a year ago, but I was unable to figure out my character account passwords with the warp portal changes and what not.

notptr@lemmy.sdf.org on 10 Aug 03:11 next collapse

Doom Crosscode Cave Story

Ashen44@lemmy.ca on 10 Aug 04:06 collapse

crosscode mentioned, hell yeah!

kinther@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 03:45 next collapse

  1. Earthbound. I replay it every few years for nostalgia and just a feel good game.
  2. Xenogears. Hands down one of the best stories for an RPG.
  3. SOMA. The dark, post apocalyptic world is so gritty, I just love it. The ending really left me speechless.
burrito@sh.itjust.works on 10 Aug 16:47 collapse

Really glad to see someone say Earthbound. I love that game and have really enjoyed sharing it with my kids. I started them young on it while teaching them to read. I’ll sit with them and narrate the game and it really helps them a lot with learning to read. Just got to Happy Happy Village with one of them the other day.

kinther@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 17:22 collapse

That and Moonside are my favorite locations!

TechAnon@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 03:59 next collapse

  • Link to the Past
  • Super Mario Bros 3
  • GTA 4

I took into account the impact at the time of release as well as the timelessness of the games.

BadlyDrawnRhino@aussie.zone on 10 Aug 04:01 next collapse

Top 3 is hard. I’ll start with the first three that came to mind, in no particular order:

  • Witcher 3

  • Star Control 2

  • Monkey Island 2

But there are so many that I could have listed instead.

The Commander Keen games are amongst the first I remember playing, I loved those and played through them so many times.

Baldurs Gate 3 was such a masterpiece, it probably could bump W3 off that list.

Although, Ultima 7 was the first RPG I played where I became properly immersed in the story. The world, the characters, the way the mystery of the main story unfolds. And it is actually a really good jump-in point for the series as it’s set a couple centuries after number 6.

Fallout 1 also could easily make the list. I loved the way such a small and intimate quest for your vault unfolds into something bigger.

ripcord@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 04:21 collapse

This is good taste right here.

giacomo@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 10 Aug 04:16 next collapse

cyberpunk 2077 eve online counter strike source

Krudler@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 04:19 next collapse

Squarez Deluxe

Tormentor❌Punisher

Ultima 6

[deleted] on 10 Aug 04:20 next collapse

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Ashen44@lemmy.ca on 10 Aug 04:26 next collapse

Going by favourite as “Left the most lasting impression on me” it would have to be:

  1. Monster Hunter World

  2. Crosscode

  3. Outer Wilds

agelord@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 05:50 next collapse

Assassin’s Creed: Black Flag and Rogue. Skyrim. Dishonored. Bioshock. NFS MW (2012). The Pentiment. These are in no particular order.

monocles@lemmy.zip on 10 Aug 06:18 next collapse

Couch coop: Ssx tricky Original Halo

Solo: Roller coaster tycoon Skyrim Rdr (zombies)

Competitive: Sc2

Mmo: Wow

But I’m older. So that’s a factor. Haven’t gamed in years.

Mezmer1zed@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 06:28 next collapse

MGS3

Rocket League

Resident Evil 4

ExLisper@lemmy.curiana.net on 10 Aug 07:14 next collapse

  1. Jagged Alliance 2
  2. Unreal Tournament
  3. Fistful of Frags
dandelion@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 11 Aug 01:35 collapse

fistful of frags is strangely addictive, what’s your load out / weapon choices?

ExLisper@lemmy.curiana.net on 11 Aug 05:59 collapse

I haven’t played in a couple of years so I don’t even remember all the different weapons. I just loved the challenge. I found the game by accident on steam, tried playing and got totally crashed. It took me couple of months to be able to stand my ground and finish the round in the top half. Really hard but as you say, really addictive. I don’t have that much time for games now but if I do one day I might get back to FoF.

Shape4985@lemmy.ml on 10 Aug 07:24 next collapse

Skate 3 Gta 4 Re4

biotin7@sopuli.xyz on 10 Aug 07:37 next collapse

Duskers, Homeworld & Earth-2150

tab@sh.itjust.works on 10 Aug 07:42 next collapse

  • Left 4 Dead 2 - for the awesome vs teamplay
  • The Last of Us (remake) 1+2 - stunningly gorgeous, emotional heavy hitter
  • Disco Elysium - art, literature, as a game

edit: I forgot Guitar Hero / Clone Hero was a game not a ‘standard hobby’, I play e-drums on that daily still…

leftzero@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 10 Aug 08:29 next collapse

Favourite of all time?

Wing Commander (2 if I have to pick one, otherwise 1, 2, and secret missions).

Monkey Island (3 if I have to pick one, 1 to 3 otherwise).

Third is difficult, but… Disco Elysium, I guess…?

(What games I’ve spent the most time playing, though…? Definitely Crusader Kings 2 and 3, followed by Stellaris.)

vga@sopuli.xyz on 10 Aug 08:40 next collapse

I’ll cheat because picking just 3 is impossible.

  1. Nethack / Alundra (PS1) / Sim City 2000 / Transport Tycoon Deluxe / Prey / Doom 2016 / Elite / Dwarf Fortress / Rimworld / International Karate / Paradroid

  2. System Shock / Ultima 3-8 / Alpha Centauri / GTA5 / Titanfall 2 / Control / Eye of the Beholder / Sensible Soccer / Star Control 2 / Total Annihilation / Impossible Mission

  3. Undertale / Bioshock Infinite / S.O.M.A. / Nemesis the Warlock (entirely because of the title song) / Pirates! / Stardew Valley / Revenge of the Mutant Camels

GreenMartian@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 10 Aug 10:03 collapse

Alpha Centauri

I still have no idea why they just let the IP drift into oblivion, and chose to keep milking Civ instead…

vga@sopuli.xyz on 10 Aug 18:04 collapse

It’s possible that its legendary status relies on that. A bit like Firefly.

polle@feddit.org on 10 Aug 08:51 next collapse

Factorio of course.

Macaroni_ninja@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 08:59 next collapse

Fallout 2/New Vegas

Terraria

Pillars of Eternity 1-2

But please ask me in a hour and probably will give you 3 new favs.

TheV2@programming.dev on 10 Aug 09:05 next collapse

  1. OMORI
  2. Children of Morta
  3. One Dreamer

This might change everyday, especially for #3 I don’t have a definite pick. But I chose the lesser-known game.

Zerfallen@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 09:22 next collapse

Only three is a cruel restriction; I grant myself at least a top four.

  • Morrowind
  • The Neverhood
  • Diablo 2
  • Hyper Light Drifter
piyuv@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 10:44 collapse

I’ve tried getting into hyper light drifter but quickly got lost. Do you have any tips?

Zerfallen@lemmy.world on 11 Aug 08:48 collapse

I used this interactive map to help me in some areas: hyper-light-drifter-map.de

killeronthecorner@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 09:37 next collapse

  • Diablo II
  • Chrono Trigger
  • Halo 3

I don’t get to play games much nowadays but I was a rank 50 lone wolf back in the day. Good times.

Kolanaki@pawb.social on 10 Aug 09:41 next collapse

Elden Ring, Dwarf Fortress, and Disco Elysium.

Blackmist@feddit.uk on 10 Aug 10:01 next collapse

Outer Wilds

Mario Galaxy 2

UFO Enemy Unknown

CheeseNoodle@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 10:16 next collapse

Today:

  • Super mario world
  • Shadowrun Dragonfall
  • Mechwarrior 4 mercenaries
jordanlund@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 10:40 next collapse

Ultima IV
Phantasy Star Online
Destiny (not Destiny 2)

Zoomboingding@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 14:31 collapse

Hell yeah PSO! My friends just got back into Phantasy Star Universe on the private Clemantine server. It’s glorious :D My top 3:

  • Mother 3
  • Outer Wilds
  • Stardew Valley
dukemirage@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 10:42 next collapse

Half-Life 2, Max Payne 2 and Mass Effect because I‘ve been an impressionable teenager and a nitpicking adult.

MrSusan@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 10:43 next collapse

  1. GTA San Andrays
  2. Halo 3
  3. AOE 2

These games are rooted in my childhood and connected to memories of simpler times and good friends. I Still play video games but I don’t think I could ever experience the same level of joy and excitement that I got from gaming as I did when I was younger. These days I’d rather just go for a nice walk with my dog like the boring old man that I am.

dandelion@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 11 Aug 01:35 collapse

took too much scrolling to find AOE 2

LordWiggle@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 10:48 next collapse

Did you play RDR1? I thought that one was much better than 2, story wise. Not that 2 was bad. Rockstar games are always good imo.

Baldur’s gate 3 is also in my top 3, story wise and how well it was made and time spent playing it. I finished the campaign 6 times now, 4 of which with friends playing couch coop.

Also Age of Empires 2 because when I was young I played that game for over at least 3000 hours (if not double) and I still play it sometimes. Just well balanced and lots of good memories from back then, having LAN parties with my friends and playing it for days.

reactionality@lemmy.sdf.org on 10 Aug 11:14 next collapse

Grammar. You’re -> Your*

[deleted] on 10 Aug 11:58 collapse

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OhStopYellingAtMe@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 12:05 next collapse

They’re not wrong but they are an asshole. (You’re is short for “you are,” your is the possessive pronoun)

[deleted] on 10 Aug 12:22 collapse

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[deleted] on 10 Aug 12:19 collapse

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[deleted] on 10 Aug 12:21 next collapse

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[deleted] on 10 Aug 12:31 collapse

.

[deleted] on 10 Aug 12:21 next collapse

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reactionality@lemmy.sdf.org on 10 Aug 12:30 collapse

Awww, did youw wittle bwain spaz out at being cowwected?

[deleted] on 10 Aug 12:25 next collapse

.

[deleted] on 10 Aug 12:25 collapse

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reactionality@lemmy.sdf.org on 10 Aug 12:28 collapse

I’ll kiss you soon then 😘

lIlIllIlIIIllIlIlII@lemmy.zip on 10 Aug 11:34 next collapse

With all the times I asked posts like this I am sure that it is possible to correlate my person between different sites even if I used different usernames. How many people can share the same 3 games?

rfr_Foglia@feddit.it on 10 Aug 11:49 next collapse

The Last Of Us part 1 and 2 and the Witcher 3

OhStopYellingAtMe@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 12:02 next collapse

  • Uncharted (series)
  • RDR2
  • Minecraft

Honorable mention: No Man’s Sky

JGCG@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 12:11 collapse

No Mans Sky is a serious contender. They never gave up on it and it shows.

FollyDolly@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 13:24 collapse

I just got back into No Mans Sky having not playing since release and I was blown away. Base biulding!? I can have PETS!? It’s like a whole new game.

JGCG@lemmy.world on 12 Aug 13:23 collapse

It’s amazing. I feel like a lot of people are missing out on the experience

Ketram@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 10 Aug 12:11 next collapse

Disco Elysium

Hi-Fi Rush

…third is hard. Maybe Mass Effect Trilogy. Maybe Rogue Trader/Pathfinder WOTR.

FRYD@sh.itjust.works on 10 Aug 12:12 next collapse

  • Nier: Automata
  • Kingdom Hearts
  • Super Smash Bros: Melee
VOwOxel@discuss.tchncs.de on 10 Aug 13:11 next collapse

Copy Kitty

Anno 1800

Satisfactory

dkppunk@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 13:48 next collapse

Star Wars Pod Racer Halo Reach Word of Warcraft

Pod racer was the first game I was better than my younger sibling and when I bought my very first CD (Green Day). I spent hours playing that game with my CD on repeat.

Halo Reach was the first Halo game I was really into and first console modern game played. I spent so many hours playing online and IRL with friends.

World of Warcraft is the game I’ve played the longest. I’ve been playing since a few months after launch. Even though I initially thought it was “too cartoony”, it has kept me entertained for decades. Some of my favorite books are from Warcraft lore. I’ve played countless hours with friends, but now I play solo more than anything. I chase achievements, transmogs, and pets.

NotASharkInAManSuit@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 13:50 next collapse

PHANTOM CRASH!

RDR2

Project Zomboid

Sp00kyB00k@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 13:58 next collapse

Breath of the Wild. Kingdom Hearts. Gris.

For just being great in immersion and story.

KingGimpicus@sh.itjust.works on 10 Aug 14:17 next collapse

Gonna show my age a bit here.

  1. Chromehounds. Nothing since has filled that 20 story tall mecha hole in my heart. The way you could build your hound into the role you wanted to play really hasn’t been done well in any game since

  2. MAG (massive action game). Ps3/ps4 128vs128 matches online? It was such a clusterfuck and I loved it.

  3. Binding of Isaac and all its expansions. Game has been a solid and consistent time sink in my life for more than 10 years. Quirky and infinitely replayable.

Taleya@aussie.zone on 10 Aug 14:33 next collapse

Dungeon Keeper.
BOTW.
Emperor: Rise of the middle kingdom

tgirlschierke@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 10 Aug 14:33 next collapse

  • Quake
  • Minecraft
  • Fallout
Agosagror@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 10 Aug 14:43 next collapse

  • Mindustry, it’s open source as well, must have sunk close on a thousand hours into it. Incredible Game, has a good modding scene as well.
  • Trove, the opposite of Mindustry, in that the game sucks, I do not recommend. However the game had so much potential and it sort of half realized it before becoming a cash grab. Does a good job of releasing LOADS of dopamine for very simple game play. That said I am now looking into Veloren - which appears to try and be a better version of trove, although taking voxel MMORPG in a new direction. It’s also open source so, yeah.
  • Minecraft - with mods. Nothing quite beats tech mod mania. I hope some day luanti gets to be a real competitor on some level, but till then.
Daedskin@lemmy.zip on 10 Aug 15:19 next collapse

In no particular order, and without adjusting for recency bias:

Single player

  • Hollow Knight
  • Undertale
  • Outer Wilds

Multiplayer

  • The Finals
  • Awesomenauts*
  • YOMI Hustle

* Right now the game is in a weird state where the original company who owned it went backrupt, and the game is in the process of being revived by a different company. In the meantime, the already low player count got lower. On top of that, there’s two versions of the game: an old version that used Steam matchmaking (as the matchmaking server went down when the game original closed); and what had been the current patch, being accessible on a beta branch, which currently has issues making it hard to actaully play a match.

lb_o@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 15:58 next collapse

  1. Portal
  2. Disco Elysium
  3. Drone Perspective
thezeesystem@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 10 Aug 16:46 next collapse

Factorio Minecraft And 3rd is split between rimworld and baldur’s gate 3

GerardsGuitar@retrolemmy.com on 10 Aug 16:56 next collapse

  1. Minecraft - Was my absolute childhood and I met so many good friends and learnt a lot throughout my time playing the game.

  2. Skate 2 - The controls are perfect, the vibe is amazing, it’s just one of my overall favourites.

  3. GTA V - The first R rated game I played. Both this game and Fallout 3 were massive inspirations for me focusing on 3D environments as a Game Dev student.

Honourable mention to Little Big Planet and Rollercoaster Tycoon Deluxe; both of which absolutely shaped my childhood

Drigo@sopuli.xyz on 10 Aug 17:21 next collapse

  • Oldschool RuneScape
  • Factorio
  • Baldur’s gate 3
xistera@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 11 Aug 06:19 collapse

Oldschool RuneScape

kinda makes me sad that this seems to be the only mention of osrs in this thread.

Drigo@sopuli.xyz on 11 Aug 10:36 collapse

That was literally why I wrote a comment! I saw zero mentions of osrs

I guess most people play single player games, even though osrs is getting new all-time player peaks every other week these days.

xistera@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 14 Aug 01:52 collapse

I wish the osrs community on lemmy was bigger. Maybe we should start a clan or fc in game

Drigo@sopuli.xyz on 14 Aug 04:20 collapse

Yeah, I wish there was more activity aswell. Honestly I just think people should be better make posts, kinda the only way to make it more active haha

BurntWits@sh.itjust.works on 10 Aug 20:22 next collapse

Really hard to narrow it down, but I think this would be it:

  1. Elden Ring. Before the DLC this would’ve been a toss up for where on the list to put it, but SotE made me confidently place it as my favourite game of all time. I’ll avoid any other Souls games in this list for the sake of diversity but Dark Souls 1 & 3 and Sekiro were all in contention for first place before the DLC. They’d make up spots 2-4 on my list, but I’ll omit them for this one. Elden Ring renewed my love of video games, at a time where I was getting a bit burnt out from playing them. When the DLC came out I played it day one, which I never do for anything, and it completely blew me away, even more so than the base game. The world design of SotE is incredible, the views are breathtaking, and the bosses are the best in the whole series. I cannot fully express just how much I love this game when you take into account the DLC. I’m not sure anything will ever take its place on the throne, but then again I would’ve said the same of Skyrim before I played any Souls games, so only time will tell.
  2. Skyrim. Probably a boring or predictable choice, but with over 5k hours it’s kinda hard to not include it. I’d probably add Oblivion immediately after this one, but again, I want to make the list interesting so I’ll avoid it here. Skyrim also helped me through the darkest point in my life, so I’ll always hold the game close to my heart, even if new games come along to displace it on my list. I’ve spent so much time modding this game, and it’s one of the things that first brought me and my wife together when we started dating. It might not be my top spot anymore, but it definitely had the biggest impact on my life.
  3. Hitman: World of Assassination. This spot was hard to fill honestly. When I think of my favourite games, I usually just think of the Souls series and Skyrim/Oblivion. There’s lots more games I love, but the top spots are all well above the rest. It’s kind of like movies. I have four movies I absolutely adore, and they’re on the highest pedestal. There’s lots more movies I love too, but they don’t compare. Ask me for my top four, that’s an easy answer. Top five? Near impossible. Same deal here, so I just went with playtime and Hitman is my highest remaining game at around 1500 ish hours. It feels weird to call it my third favourite game ever (or I guess seventh because of the other games I’m omitting from this list but you get the point), but so does any other game I considered for here, so I’ll include some honourable mentions below. But back to this game, I feel Hitman is the perfect game for what it is. It can be serious for sure, you’re a hitman taking on contracts, but it can also be completely ridiculous too. One minute you’re tinkering with a race car to make it violently explode on the track to kill your target without anyone suspecting foul play, the next minute you’re dressed as a flamingo exiting the mission by literally flapping your wings and flying from a helipad. 47’s permanent seriousness in the most ludicrous scenarios is peak comedy honestly. Going to a high society Parisian fashion show dressed as a children’s clown and punching out the CEO is a totally normal thing you can do in this game, it’s amazing. And if you don’t like that vibe, you can be a total badass and do a full blown shootout, or a stealthy assassin and eliminate your targets from the shadows with none the wiser. It’s the ultimate hitman/assassin sandbox game.

Honourable mentions: Portal 1 & 2, Pokémon SoulSilver, Hollow Knight, Dishonored, Red Dead Redemption 1 & 2, Batman Arkham Asylum and City, Inside, Gunpoint, any Forza game before the most recent one (haven’t played it), all the Bungie Halo games, and many more. I just love video games I think.

Gonzako@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 21:06 collapse

Skyrim is such a weird game. I don’t even like it anymore but I hold it in such good regard for just being there at the right time

callouscomic@lemmy.zip on 10 Aug 21:51 collapse

Kingdoms of Amalur was better and released almost the same time and wasn’t a buggy disaster.

BurntWits@sh.itjust.works on 10 Aug 23:20 collapse

Didn’t that one come out at the same time as Oblivion? I could be misremembering but I feel like KoA was nicknamed “the poor person’s oblivion” or something like that.

callouscomic@lemmy.zip on 10 Aug 23:25 collapse

It came out like 3 months after Skyrim, while I was waiting for their patches to fix its game-breaking bugs.

BurntWits@sh.itjust.works on 10 Aug 23:30 collapse

Yeah you’re right, just looked it up. I guess it was called the poor man’s Skyrim then. Funny how memory works (or doesn’t sometimes).

GrammarPolice@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 21:29 next collapse

  1. MGS3
  2. Metal Gear 4: Peace Walker
  3. MGSV

Honourable mentions: Metal gear, Metal Gear 2, Metal Gear Solid, MGSV: Ground Zeroes and Sons of Liberty

afox@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 21:38 next collapse

Crab… Battle…

GrammarPolice@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 21:47 next collapse

Thank you for enlightening me with this masterpiece. I will forever repeat this every time i replay the game while struggling to kill those crabs for food in that godforsaken cave

YiddishMcSquidish@lemmy.today on 10 Aug 22:03 collapse

Broke muh knife

callouscomic@lemmy.zip on 10 Aug 21:50 next collapse

Metal… Gear… 4?

GrammarPolice@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 21:57 collapse

Lol. I always hallucinate and see an imaginary 4 next to peace walker since it technically should be if they decided to keep the numbering consistent

wavebeam@lemmy.world on 11 Aug 14:44 collapse

But what about the actual MGS 4 that came before Peace Walker?

AstralPath@lemmy.ca on 11 Aug 14:38 collapse

Sons of Liberty is the most cohesive entry in the series IMO. Best story too; prophetic, really.

Allero@lemmy.today on 10 Aug 21:35 next collapse

  1. World of Warcraft
  2. TES V: Skyrim
  3. Minecraft
wraithcoop@programming.dev on 10 Aug 21:46 next collapse

It’s hard as there’s a lot of different games that I like for different reasons, but if I had to narrow it down it’d probably be:

  • Minecraft
  • Mirror’s Edge
  • Dragon’s Dogma
callouscomic@lemmy.zip on 10 Aug 21:50 next collapse

Elden Ring, RDR2, and BOTW feels like such a basic bitch gamer list.

ShortYetLongDogs@lemmy.zip on 11 Aug 00:04 collapse

We all gotta start somewhere

MrScottyTay@sh.itjust.works on 10 Aug 22:28 next collapse

Final Fantasy VII Kingdom Hearts II (or BBS depending on the day of the week) Persona 4 Golden

To be honest these three could be different any day of the week. I play more than just RPGs but because these are heavily story driven they stick in the front of my mind more when it comes to these questions.

Obi@sopuli.xyz on 10 Aug 22:49 next collapse

Going by time played it’s probably something like:

  • WoW
  • Rocket league
  • Tony Hawk
washbasin@sh.itjust.works on 10 Aug 22:55 next collapse

  • StarCraft: Brood War
  • Dark Age of Camelot
  • Diablo 2

Shout out to WarCraft 3!

Scott_of_the_Arctic@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 22:58 next collapse

Control, the horizon games and stardew valley.

Ougie@lemmy.world on 10 Aug 23:54 next collapse

Arma 3, Battlefield 2, minesweeper

mrgoosmoos@lemmy.ca on 11 Aug 00:05 next collapse

I want to know what titles were knocked out of top place for OP

mrgoosmoos@lemmy.ca on 11 Aug 00:07 next collapse

Minecraft Borderlands 2 Bioshock

honourable mention for Zelda on N64

but the top 3 are based on replayability and just how easy it is to spend time playing them

RevolverSly@lemmy.world on 11 Aug 00:17 next collapse

Dota 2

Starcraft: Brood War

Vagrant Story

lemrondu556@lemmy.world on 11 Aug 01:00 next collapse

Forever stuck in mid to late 90s JRPGs, if I had to pick 3

Final Fantasy VI Final Fantasy Tactics Suikoden II

fishsayhelo@lemmy.ml on 11 Aug 01:02 next collapse

In no particular order ( mostly cos i think ranking beyond a certain degree of precision hurts the art involved ):

  • NieR Automata
  • NieR Replicant (ver 1.22… , realistically)
  • The Talos Principle ( one of the most suprisingly brilliant games that too many people haven’t played)

then i suppose one tier below, not consequent of any particular shortcomings, but rather just not being at the same “transendent” level as the above:

  • Crosscode
  • Citizen sleeper
  • What Remains Of Edith Finch
  • Portal & 2

NieR automata literally changed my life, so it kinda deserves it’s own top spot, but placed as is in spirit of the question.

goombakid@lemmy.world on 11 Aug 01:30 next collapse

  1. Horizon: Zero Dawn
  2. Ghost of Tsushima
  3. Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild
Weirdfish@lemmy.world on 11 Aug 01:34 next collapse

Going to have to go with the three that had the biggest impact on me.

1: Doom / Doom 2. In addition to being two of the most influential and important FPS games of all time, they got me into modding, programming, the internet, 3D graphics, shaping my entire future career path.

2: Kerbal space program. No moment in all of gaming had me leap out of my chair and whoop the way landing in the Mun for the first time did. Now that I understand orbital mechanics, I get annoyed at almost all depictions of space flight in movies.

3: Factorio. Got to this one late, on Switch about 6 months ago. I can’t think of any game which has rewired my brain as much. As a programmer, I come away from each play through with entire new methods of solving problems at work. May be the single most in depth and addictive game I’ve ever played.

Uebercomplicated@lemmy.ml on 11 Aug 01:40 next collapse

No one is going to agree with me, but here I go:

  • Counter Strike (all versions): the perfect shooter.
  • Terraria: the progression is amazing, but what never ceases to amaze me is how, despite the game’s huge content, it is never overwhelming or intimidating. Just a lot of fun.
  • Transport Fever 2: by far my favorite world-builder type game, and it still gets updates!
xistera@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 11 Aug 06:21 next collapse

  1. Oldschool Runescape
  2. Halo 2
  3. GoldenEye 007
NikkiDimes@lemmy.world on 11 Aug 07:29 collapse

Hello fellow old!

xistera@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 14 Aug 01:51 collapse

It hurts to read this comment… but so do my knees and back.

NikkiDimes@lemmy.world on 14 Aug 17:33 collapse

Right there with ya. Knees are still good. Back is a fucking mess 😂

AVengefulAxolotl@lemmy.world on 11 Aug 06:53 next collapse

Now this is a tough one to be honest. But if i had to pick:

  1. Cyberpunk 2077
  2. Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice
  3. Hades

Honorable mentions (cant leave these out): Return of the Obra Dinn, Wasteland 2, Darkest Dungeon, and many more…

Lazhward@lemmy.world on 11 Aug 07:14 next collapse

Call me Nostradamus 'cause it’s Silksong.

sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works on 11 Aug 14:03 collapse

So Silksong is going to be a trilogy? Rock on!

Lazhward@lemmy.world on 11 Aug 19:17 collapse

Eventually… all we can do is believe.

M137@lemmy.world on 11 Aug 14:20 next collapse

Portal 2 and Warframe. I’m not sure about a third, several contenders. And can’t really say which spot any are in, feels more like they share 1st.

Questions like this are always hard, it’s never a certain answer and it shifts over time, no matter if something new comes along to take a place or not. It’s as fluid as anything else.

yermaw@sh.itjust.works on 11 Aug 14:23 next collapse

My top 3 are based on “for their time”.

Morrowind

Portal

Halo 2

JackbyDev@programming.dev on 11 Aug 15:09 next collapse

Tears of the Kingdom was amazing. The only thing BotW did better was how it felt riding on horseback through Hyrule field dodging lasers. But that was the high point, the average experience in BotW was less fun that TotK for me.

TotK really might be one of my top 5.

It’s too hard to really rank every game. I spent a ton of time on Minecraft over the years but haven’t recently. Like over a decade ago I liked gmod and still spent so much time on it but haven’t played recently.

Lately colony management games have been scratching the itch. Do id probably say Dwarf Fortress, Rimworld, and Oxygen Not Included.

penguindog@lemmy.zip on 11 Aug 18:02 next collapse

  1. Minecraft
  2. Fallout: New Vegas
  3. Portal 2
nostalgicgamerz@lemmy.world on 12 Aug 15:05 collapse

Nier Automata Deus Ex GOTY (and Human Revolution) Red Dead redemption 2