Ogre Battle 64 is mine. The n64 wasn't exactly known for rpgs but this had so many characters, a ton of depth and an intense story that I wish it was brought up more. This was my intro to a tactical rpgs and I felt like I went right into the deep end.
Just a heads up there is a GBA and 3DS game in the Slime series, but the 2nd game on DS is the only one that made it to America. No idea if there are fan translations, but might be worth looking into.
Hogs of War for PS1.
It's probably the first 'Worms 3D' style game.
Sayonara Wild hearts. It's such an underrated original and stylish game. It oozes charm, and surprised me again and again. The music alone is something I listen to still.
I know I posted here already, but I had to add one more, and I feel it deserves its own post: Eastward!
Eastward is Zelda-like adventure game set in a post apocalyptic world, and the setting itself is heavily inspired by China, Japan, Korea, and other areas in East Asia, and takes a lot of cues from Mother 3: Earthbound's lost sequel. It's a game with a lot of heart. It has a great sense of humor, but also is incredibly dark in some places, it had me in tears by the end. Sure it's not the easiest story in the world to follow, but I became so invested in the characters, and I kept playing because I just wanted to see if they got through everything alright. And even after playing through it once, I spent most of the year thinking back to moments in the game. Very few games have ever hit me like that. Eastward was definitely something special for me, and I wish it had the same hype behind it as many indie darlings like Undertale have.
And the game is probably one of the most beautiful 2D games I have ever played. There is a lot of detail put into the set pieces, and it makes the worlds feel like they were lived in at one point, which fits the post apocalyptic setting quite well. The dungeons, the towns, even the buildings off to the side tickle the urban explorer inside me.
- PS1 : Little Big Adventure (action adventure with the first voice acting I heard in a game)
- DS : ghost trick (it's getting a remake!)
- 3DS : 1001 spikes (tough 2d platformer)
- Modern era : Slay the Spire (best card drafting and rogue lite game).
Invisible, Inc. Klei has created other great games so probably Invisible is not that unknown, but it seems that this game is forgotten both by gamers and developers. The subreddit was dead (when reddit was relevant), nobody streams it, and Klei continued to add content or sequels to other games like Don’t Starve but nothing to Invisible.
A few that are favs for me that no one ever talks about:
Forgotten worlds on Genesis Wild arms on playstation Tokyo extreme racer zero on playstation 2
People bring up Journey a lot but another game by that same company called Flower. It's a short, simple game that I will never forget, a beautiful masterpiece.
Solar Jetman for the NES. A really unique game that was well ahead of it's time, featuring exploration, problem solving, cut-scenes, great music, and multiple planets to explore with different gravities. Your mission is to repair your spacecraft by finding missing parts, and you can use a small craft or leave the vehicle and boost around with a jetpack with your spacesuit.
I don't think I've ever heard anyone else talk about Rocket Slime. I've never even played any mainline Dragon Quest game, and Rocket Slime is absolutely one of my favorite DS games of all time. I love everything about that game, from the team building to the way you steal items and enemies on the carts, to the hilarious slimes you gotta save. And boy, fighting other people in your tank was so much fun, although the cannon play was always kinda lackluster. Still, having an NPC man the cannons while you hop in your (incredibly overpowered) golem suit and walk over to the enemy tank, break in, destroy everything. Your NPC is wailing away on the cannons while you're distracting their gunmen, whittling away the tank's health, only for you to break into the heart and smash it to pieces.
I could go on, what a s(ub)lime game. Thanks for uncovering an old memory I had long forgotten, OP.
Snowboard Kids 2 for the N64. One of my top 3 favorite Mario Karts.
Armagetron Advanced, which is a 3d multiplayer Tron clone, though you can also face off against bots. Fun as hell with friends and the customization options keeps things interesting.
Beetle Adventure Racing for the n64.
Specifically the battle modes. The chaos of a bunch of Volkswagen beetles launching rockets at each other is a core memory for sure.
Mmh.. I'd say King of Dragon Pass but the truth is that every half a year I see someone talking about. In niche circles but still. Let me check my Playnite list (only the ones I rated 5/5)...
Ok. At first I thought these ones would qualify: The Lion's Song, one night hot springs, Tacoma, missed messages. But I'm pretty sure I just haven't read in the right places, they are pretty big game in narrative indie circles I think.
Oh, I got it. These are my highly rated games that I don't think I have ever heard (much less read) someone talk about:
- No-One Has To Die: A short scifi puzzle/visual novel.
- The Last Door: An Edgar Allan Poe inspired point-and-click adventure.
- Don't Escape - 4 Days to Survive: A survival & mystery point-and-click adventure.
- Rebuild 2: A management survival game set in a zombie apocalypse. The creator who is called Sarah Northway I think went on to make I Was a Teenage Exocolonist which I haven't played yet.
Now that I think of it, small RPG Maker games would also qualify. I really liked Dhux's Scar back in the day.
By the way, if you want to discover lots of small games that no one knows daily there's YT channels like Wanderbots and Splattercatgaming that dedicate themselves to try certain genres of indies. It really makes cognizant of how many games come out every week.
I've got two.
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- It's an escape room visual novel from late in the DS's life cycle. I can't talk about it much without spoiling it, but it absolutely blew me away when I played it. I can't recommend it enough if you're a fan of mystery and psychological thrillers. There was a remake released on Steam, and the community is divided on which version is better; I personally strongly recommend it on DS emulator/original hardware, with a spoiler-free guide to the good ending after your first blind playthrough.
- OneShot. It's very much in the vein of Undertale, but the initial release was slightly earlier. It isn't quite as tight with its writing as Undertale, but the story evoked some genuine emotions in a way that games rarely manage. As much hype as the latter got, it surprised me that the former is so obscure.
The Legacy of Kain series. Very much slept on. And to make things worse, instead of making a finale game to wrap the story up, they worked on two different projects in the same IP that did not drive the story forward and ended up being scrapped anyway.
I like the series so much that once upon a time I decided I would start playing through it again if I ever became terminally ill.
Phantasy Star Online (PSO). I have thousands of hours in that game across Dreamcast, GameCube and PC over the decades and I'm still not tired of it. It absolutely nailed the loot system and you're always looking to get another rare box drop. BlueBurst on PC still has multiple active and populated servers, but I feel like it doesn't get much discussion in gaming communities in general despite being one of the pioneers of online gaming on consoles.
I really liked Rumble Roses back on PS2
Women's Wrestling with good graphics and interesting features.
Alter Ego, a 1986 DOS game that's still one of the best life-sim type games ever made. You start out as a baby and work your way through life by making choices. They can lead to a wide variety of outcomes, including dying tragically as a child, etc... You can play it free online or they've made updated versions.
My favourite games are NoX, Morrowind and Populous the beginning. Only Morrowind is still really talked about, sadly.
Has anyone heard of "A Flame in the Flood?" It's not the deepest game, but I think it deserves a bit more recognition
I've never played DQ: Slime. I think I'll make an effort to. For me it's possibly Fallout, the original. To me it seems for a lot of people Fallout starts with 3 and ends with 4 or 76. The original Fallout was a wonderful turn-based tactical RPG.
Iji, a free indie platformer shooter, almost like a 2D immersive sim about a girl who trying to fight off an alien invasion using alien tech that got implanted on her. It's very cool! And it's free free, not freemium microtransaction nonsense.
Haha, SimTower for classic MacOS. I've always wanted to put together a clone of it.
I really loved a game called Guns of Icarus (the original one). Fun little airship defense game, where you had to manage fighting air pirates, repairing your ship, and saving your cargo. Extremely simple, basically a tech demo, but the aesthetic, music, and general feel were perfect. Very melancholy world that I still revisit sometimes.
Starsector. It's been in development for so many years, and they are not on Steam. But man, I love that game.
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