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Offline p3ter_st0ry

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Re: Games We've Loved...
« Reply #120 on: December 09, 2007, 06:41:00 pm »
Indeed, cave story is amazing. One of my favorite games would have to be an arcade game: Galaga. You can get it for mame. It's crazy fun.
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Offline Quemaqua

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Re: Games We've Loved...
« Reply #121 on: December 12, 2007, 03:57:17 am »
Nice to see other Soul Reaver fans.  I've been a huge fan of the series but totally crapped out and never played Defiance, even though I have a copy laying around somewhere.  I'd totally forgotten about it.

Also, for those interested, it seems that Cave Story has a PSP source port!  I've got a homebrew capable PSP and have played it extensively, and it's really good  stuff and only had a couple tiny bugs that didn't get in the way at all  (plus it may have been updated... was a few months ago I downloaded it).  I think I heard something about a DS port as well, which interests me now that I finally have a DS and an R4 flashcart.

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Offline PsyPhi

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Re: Games We've Loved...
« Reply #122 on: December 13, 2007, 07:54:26 am »
Tried not to read anything in the thread first, so as not to have other's choices floating through my head.

-- Dig Dug -- Pump it little man pump it!  This game was great and I really don't know why, but I can remember it clearly.  I'd stay inside for hours just pumping the monsters full of air and making them pop.  Somtimes I'd torture them and pump em up, but not all the way, this way they'd be stuck there trying to blow the air out as I carried out my devious plans to bring the dirt down on them all.

-- Phantasy Star IV -- this is a tough system to choose one great game from but seriously, this is the best jay ar pee gee I have ever played to date.  It's more expanisve than anything I've played before or after, and the tale told still holds up well today (I just finished playing it again, though I may be a bit biased in that assesment).

-- Super Metroid -- without question, the best action/adventure/platformer in the world.

-- Symphony of the Night -- the 2nd best action/adventure/platformer but with rpg elements so I guess it's the best action/adventure/platformer/rpg in the world :p

-- Ridge Racer Type 4 -- this game had an insane amount of cars, cool designs that you'd never see on the road and concept car creators probably picked for the game.  Great GREAT sound track.  My favorite car racing game ever

-- Wipeout XL -- my favorite future craft racing game ever, another great soundtrack, but cleverly designed tracks and a nice challenging AI make it worthwhile unlike the rest of hte Wipeout series.

-- Ico / Shadow of the Colossus -- The visual style of these two games is so surprisingly good it could be called art, especially so for Ico with it's often times amazing camera angles and arenas.  The games are equally as artistic in their design, very little spoken about the world and characters, everything I learned I had learned through intuition.  Carefully guided intuition of course, crafted masterfully by the designers.  Both are a one of a kind experience independent of oen another, and together they show just how much talent Team Ico has.

-- F-Zero GX -- Sega and Nintendo making a racing game together was bound to be amazing.  The speed on this one still blows me away, and everything is so smooth, it may not be the fastest ever hovercraft racing game (I can think of a couple more that are insanely fast) but none can match the liquid smooth animation of this in motion.

Now for some PC games...
-- Stonekeep -- a real dungeon romp, but in real-time.  Not many games are dungeon delvers and real-time.  The story was fantastic too for taking place in one extensive underground labyrinth with mostly repeating tiles.  It moved kind of like turnbased games do, up back, turn left or right, but attacking was realtime and enemies could move whether you were or not.  A wonderful wonderful RPG with a very intuitive leveling system that was probably before it's time.

-- Terra Nova -- a great science fiction game, similar to Mech Warrior, but more along the lines of the power armor defined in Starship Troopers.  Loved it.   Great weapons and thrilling battles.  One of the many reasons I am sad that Looking Glass no longer is around.

-- Fallout / Fallout 2--  Love em both equally, probably my first 'mature' videogames.  Such a wonderful combat system, equally a wonderful dialog system, this game actually had choices that impacted the world...few RPG's today can say the same.  I'm scared that Bethesda won't be able to pull off the magic that made these two so great with Fallout 3.

-- Planescape: Torment -- one of the most diverse and creative PC RPG's I've had the joy of playing.  Such a brilliantly crafted story, and characters were equally as interesting as they were varied.  Really would like to play an updated version or a sequel, but will probably never happen

-- Descent / Freespace series -- both have little in common besides some famiiar faces in the developers/publishers booth, but both are undisputited.  There hasn't been a great space sim shooter since this game came out, and even before it, the best were X-Wing/TIE fighter.  Freespace smoked em, and Descent brought true 3D movement like no other game before and after it.  I still remember the LAN gaming sessions in my high-schools AutoCAD lab.  yeah I was and still am a geek, shoulda been out chasing girls, but instead playing games with the rest of the geeks :( :p.

If I go into handhelds I'll take even more space so I'll leave this at that.  Of course there are many other games I loved throughout the years, but I tried to limit myself to just one or two per generation in the consoles and only a handful of my most respected titles for PC games.  I can't really say anything too recent as I haven't had enough time to really digest their experience and know if I really will be playing them years and years later.  (yeah I still play each and every one of these games; if they're not installed right now the disc is right next to my computer/entertainment system to do so at any time).

Offline Crizzle

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Re: Games We've Loved...
« Reply #123 on: December 13, 2007, 10:25:10 pm »
The original Grand Theft Auto definitely has a special place in my heart haha. Star Wars: Dark Forces is also a classic for me. I couldn't list all the games I've loved, gaming is my life. :)

Offline PHeMoX

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Re: Games We've Loved...
« Reply #124 on: December 13, 2007, 11:06:08 pm »
Nice to see other Soul Reaver fans.  I've been a huge fan of the series but totally crapped out and never played Defiance, even though I have a copy laying around somewhere.  I'd totally forgotten about it.

Yeah, it's an excellent series! Defiance is worth playing through! It has some of the best level design I've ever encountered in games up to now. Together with Prince of Persia Sands of Time (and more or less the two sequels too) definitely worth playing.

I liked Blood Omen 2: Legacy of Kain too, by the way, although it's not as good as Defiance or Soul Reaver II for sure.


I forgot to add Interstate '82 to my list of all-time favorite games... dang, how could I forget about that one.
« Last Edit: December 13, 2007, 11:30:01 pm by PHeMoX »
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Offline Alrik Fassbauer

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Re: Games We've Loved...
« Reply #125 on: December 13, 2007, 11:55:25 pm »
The games I loved most were

- Zanzarah
- Commander Keen
- Indy Jones and the fate of Atlantis
- Monkey Island I

for different reasons.

Zanzarah had the most immersive effect to me; it 's one of the few unique games that I totally loved - that made be feel - be - in this world.

You can still find information on it on www.zanzarah.de , although it might have become difficult to get this game at all. Nowadays.


Offline Mandrake42

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Re: Games We've Loved...
« Reply #126 on: December 14, 2007, 12:35:47 am »
I still have Zanzarah but I cant get it to run on modern OS :(

Hi Alrik, long time no see ;)

Irony, I used cat as my avatar on the Larian forums, I use a Fish here.
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Offline Mandrake42

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Re: Games We've Loved...
« Reply #127 on: December 14, 2007, 02:13:38 am »
I'm a big fan of RPG's and strategy games as they give me the most bang for my buck:

Baldurs Gate 2
Planescape Torment
Fallout 2
Ultima 7 parts 1 and 2
Ultima Underworld 2
Arx Fatalis
The Quest For Glory series
The Monkey Island series
Day of the Tentacle
The Dig
Robin Hood: Conquests of the Longbow
Indigo Prophecy (aka Farenheit)
The Longest Journey
Dreamfall
System Shock 1 and 2
Deus Ex 1 and 2
Master of Magic
Age of Wonders: Shadow Magic
Galactic Civilization II
Civilization IV
Elder Scrolls Oblivion
Elder Scrolls adventures: Redguard
Nethack
Space Rangers 2
Star Control 2
Final Fantasy 6,7,9 and 12
(12 ditching the endless random battles is the best thing to happen to FF since the move to 3D in 7)
Chrono Trigger
Chrono Cross
Terranigma
Dark Cloud 2
Silent Storm
Jagged Alliance 2
Might and Magic (Xeen, can't remember what number that was)

Ummm, that's all for now ;)
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Offline Ixis

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Re: Games We've Loved...
« Reply #128 on: December 14, 2007, 02:54:55 am »
Hmm, a lotta games mentioned here I myself have loved to death, but I can't shake the feeling that I grew up in an alternate universe than most people here, lol. ^_^;;

I've played and loved Castlevania: SotN, but didn't play it until this summer. I dig Metroid, but the first ones I ever played were Fusion and Prime. Anyway, here's some games that haven't been mentioned that made my list.

Okage and Earthbound:






Ok, seriously guys... How many pages and nobody's mentioned Earthbound at least once? (I'm used to no one knowing Okage, but... C'mon!) Earthbound, if you didn't know, is a little off-beat RPG about a mute boy named Ness on a quest to collect random bits of music around the world to stop an ancient evil alien thing (and a really annoying fatass bully named Pokey) from acting like jerks and releasing untold evil horrors and stuff upon the Earth. Okage on the other hand, is about a quiet shy boy named Ari who's shadow is possesed by the great evil king Stan. Stan, possesing Ari's shadow, decides that Ari is to be his slave and embarks on a quest to destroy several evil kings and take over the world.

Both games are off-beat RPGs, but even moreso, they're RPGs that don't take place in sci-fi anime land -or- fantasy anime land -or- Lord of the Rings rip-off fantasy land -or- star wars rip-off land. Now, that isn't to say I don't like RPGs that are set in fantasy or sci-fi worlds; in fact, NWN, KoToR, Fallout 2, the Tales Series, and Chrono Trigger are among my favorites, Chrono Trigger being the first RPG I ever played. But with Earthbound and Okage the creators said, "Y'know what, let's make an RPG that takes place in a contemporary fantasy setting." How many RPGs actually do that? (The Persona series and Shadow Hearts 3 do, but those just aren't as charming and fun in my mind.)

To me, these games are the only RPGs that were truly unique and didn't feel like something I've seen before. It takes guts to do something different in the gaming industry. Specifically when it comes to RPGs, of whom usually do nothing more than come up with hopelessly complex and pointless battle systems with long and boring special attacks.

Kudos also goes to Skies of Arcadia and Jade Empire for deciding not to do another LotR/Final Fantasy/Star Trek style game.

That said, if you value charming characters, witty dialogue, unique art styles, funky but damn catchy music, and just about everything you could ask from an RPG aside from extremely old-school style combat and vanilla dungeons then go out and play Earthbound or Okage. If you like all of that but want an interesting combat system then pick up Mother 3.


Megaman 2




I don't think Megaman 2 has been included on this list either... Bizzare! The first game that really got me into "games." Before then it was nothing but edutainment games on my Dad's Apple IIe. You played a robot dude with a robot laser arm shooting other robot dudes because... Well, because Dr. Light says so and Dr. Wily is a squirrely b**** with a floating castle made of blood... Robot blood... I guess... Somehow it hurts you. Also robot bubbles are strong against him...

Don't ask...


Gameboy Camera




Nobody ever talks about the Gameboy camera anymore, when it was so fun, so innovative, and the first signs that Nintendo probably has their employees snort a line of coke during lunch breaks. If you've never had the opportunity to just play around with one for an afternoon, then you've missed out on one of the most fun and unique gaming experiences ever to be created.



Guitar Hero




I'm a huge fan of rythm games, and I happen to own or have played all of them (yes, that include Bust-a-Groove and that DS guitar game you play with the stylus.) Guitar Hero happens to be the only game in my life I continually return to. And not just the updated games that come out every year, but the old ones (I only own GH1 and 2, and I still play both 8 times a week at least.) It's like DDR, but you don't look like a schizophrenic with parkinson's disease. It has catchy songs that everyone knows, and it has that simple air-guitar feeling of melting faces... That and it can get you chicks.

Seriously, I've impressed at least three women from playing Guitar Hero alone...

... Although, that can be taken as a negative comment about the people I hang out with...

So, I guess if you want to attract really easy women impressed by your skill at wailing on a Fischer-Price style plastic guitar, then play Guitar Hero until your knuckles bleed.



Lunar Silver Star Story




The one and only game to make me cry... That's all.



Psychonauts




If you've played it, let's just stare each other in the eye and nod in a shared, secret occult brotherhood style understanding. If you haven't go buy it already before the rest of us in the Tim Schafer cult steal you away late at night and do terrible things to you in an abandoned church basement!!

While you're at it pick up Grim Fandango too.
« Last Edit: December 14, 2007, 02:57:25 am by Ixis »

Offline Mandrake42

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Re: Games We've Loved...
« Reply #129 on: December 14, 2007, 03:48:59 am »
How could I forget the KotOR games, best thing to happen in Star Wars themed games in years (Well, leggo star wars is pretty cool too)

Psychonauts was brilliant.

I've seen Okage around but didn't really know anything about it. I might pick it up.
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Offline Ixis

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Re: Games We've Loved...
« Reply #130 on: December 14, 2007, 04:44:51 am »
How could I forget the KotOR games, best thing to happen in Star Wars themed games in years (Well, leggo star wars is pretty cool too)

Psychonauts was brilliant.

I've seen Okage around but didn't really know anything about it. I might pick it up.

Be warned, the dungeons and combat system are EXTREMELY bland for an RPG. The spells, animations and music in combat is top notch, but for some reason the rest of combat is Final Fantasy 1 era stuff. Also all the dungeons use exactly the same graphics except for the final dungeon.

Offline Zaratus

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Re: Games We've Loved...
« Reply #131 on: December 14, 2007, 06:14:12 am »
Earthbound!  Seriously, one of my favorite games ever.  It's such a classic game, marred by an idiotic marketing campaign.   ('This game stinks!' was the tagline.) I'm still pissed at Nintendo for not bringing over Mother 3 (Note for the uninformed - Earthbound is known as Mother 2 in Japan).  Currently waiting for the fan-translation patch, follow the progress at http://mother3.fobby.net  The translator, besides being a total Earthbound maniac (along with the rest of the fellows at Starmen.net) is also a professional translator - he does it for a living (various anime and such), so you know it is in good hands.  If you've ever played Bahamut Lagoon, he did the translation for that as well.  

Okage - I own and beat the game.  Has a good style and a decent story, very Tim Burton-esque graphics.  Overall, I just found it a bit boring.  I didn't feel there was much incentive to exploring either.  Still, it wasn't bad, and I got it cheap.  It was a fun diversion.  Earthbound is the better of the two in my opinion though.  

Lunar.  Ahh, I love Lunar.  Many people complain, because they felt Working Designs took too many liberties with the translation. (i.e. some of the pop-culture jokes given to random NPCs, who probably said the same thing as another NPC in town)  Some think the voice acting is cheesy, but I like it.  I really like the 'Boat Song' (aka Wind's Nocturne).  Such a shame that Working Designs went out of business.  =/  Have you played Lunar 2 at all?  Even though it is 1000 years after the first game, I thought it was just as good and it still manages to have a couple returning characters (nope, not gonna spoil it.)

Mandrake42 - for Might and Magic - Xeen was the combination of the fourth and fifth games.  The fourth was Clouds of Xeen, I believe, and the fifth was Darkside of Xeen, and combined they made World of Xeen, where you could travel (mostly) freely between the two games, with some extra content available if you had both.  I was sorely disappointed with the Might and Magic games I've played past V.  I just didn't like them nearly as much.  

Hmm, I remembered a few other games that should be in here.  For newer stuff, there's the Ys games.  Out of the recent offerings, for PC, Ys: Oath in Felghana (a remake of Ys III, formerly on SNES if you remember that) is probably the best, although it is currently available only in japanese, there is an english patch in the works.  (and a leaked beta version, but I shall not help with that)  The remake successfully turned the game that was most peoples least favorite in the series and turned it into most peoples favorite.  It's classic gaming at its best.  Definitely a lot like an old-school action RPG, it's a fast paced hack'n'slash with a pretty good story and some great bosses.  Oh, and the music is awesome.  A lot of which are pretty challenging, especially on the higher difficulty settings, where besides getting stronger, they get a few new tricks up their sleeves too.  I'm currently playing through it again on the 'Nightmare' difficulty, and phew, it's rough.  And I thought Hard was tough.  It's great that a semi-big name developer (Nihon Falcom) is still making great games like this, even if they don't see an english release.  Also to look into for the recent offerings - Ys VI: Ark of Napishtim is available on the PS2 and PSP (ports courtesy of Konami (even if they did replace the sprites with polygons on the PS2 version.)  And they added a *little* bit of new content and voice acting.  Ys VI is what really got me back into the Ys games, although it isn't as good as the other two, which are PC only and japanese only.  The most recent game is Ys Origin, which I believe takes place 700 years prior to the rest of the series and has three playable characters.  The language barrier isn't a big deal with the games, it's mostly action and there's very few spots you could get stuck not knowing what to do.  Easily resolved as there are guides for both games.  Oh, also if playing japanese versions, you need to change windows region settings to japanese, or use AppLocale. Here's a trailer video - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9u_A6Ffpg-8  And that'll be all for my rambling about that.

There's an OLD pc game, I really enjoyed.  An indie game, still being sold today, but I believe the game is uncrippled anyway.  First exposure was one of those old CDs loaded with tons of DOS games.  Much better than those discs sold today with lots of crap on them.  It was called Excelsior (full title, Excelsior - Phase One: Lysandia)  Very old-school style RPG, you create a character, pick stats and alignment, then you can pick a class (options based on what stats you have).  It's definitely not for everyone, as the graphics are rather primative, but it was still fun, IMO.  A few years back, the creator released a windows version of the game, still shareware.  Also fixes a few bugs and adds a map (though IIRC, it's not entirely accurate, I believe two of the towns are swapped).  There's some pretty tricky puzzles in the dungeons, I remember that for sure.  Give it a shot, it's actually pretty decent.  There used to be a fan site up and about for the game, and I used to chat with the owner of the site a lot and was a mod on her forums even (slow as they were.)  It went down though, and as far as I know, it never went back up.  And holy crap, I actually found a video for the game on YouTube.  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x69_TvbyMdk  It doesn't quite do it justice, sound is nonexistant for part of the video, and the rest of it, the sound is a bit messed up I believe.  No music in the game though.  Official site for the game and download here:  http://www.nwlink.com/~dberke/ex1.htm  They even made a sequel, better graphics, but in my opinion, it wasn't as good as the original.  The second one I believe imposes a level-limit which registering disables.  It's still possible to beat though, if you are *really* good and abuse the hell out of invisibility potions.  Oh, there's no manual included with the first game, iirc, but there was with the original DOS game.  If you are interested in the game, I recommend you track the DOS version down for the manual, it explains the races and spells and stuff.  Hmm, it seems to run really badly on this computer - it crashes if I try to go fullscreen, and it animates absurdly fast.  It might be better to play the DOS version with Dosbox.  Just gotta watch for a situation that makes it impossible to complete - namely, do NOT do a certain thing with the rock and balloon until you know what you are doing with it.

Meh, that's all I can think of to say now, so I'm done.  

Offline Battlerager

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Re: Games We've Loved...
« Reply #132 on: December 14, 2007, 07:40:57 am »
One Must Fall 2097.

An amazingly addictive fighting game for the PC and one of the very last and only really good fighting games exclusive to the PC.

Robots beating the crap out of each other are awesome.




Plok.

One of the toughest and quirkiest platformers I've ever played. The music is unbelievable.




Impossible Creatures.

Real Time Strategy is always more fun when you are able to customize your army. Your units are 'creatures' that you create by combining two different animals into a new being, choosing between certain body parts and abilities attached to them.
With Impossible Creatures, that feature is really the core of the game.
A absolutely hilarious setting, a great B-Movie plot about an evil capitalist trying to take over the world and provoking a war, great sense of style, countless possibilities for unit creation, and its just plain fun to experiment with different abilities and perfercting your army (especially against  a human opponent.)

The game also features tongue-in-cheek voice acting, a great sense of humour and  an absolutely appropriate soundtrack comprised of jazz, swing and more.

Offline Quemaqua

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Re: Games We've Loved...
« Reply #133 on: December 14, 2007, 08:37:37 am »
OMF!  Never thought I'd run into another fan of that in a hundred years.  I used to play the living crap out of that back in the day, but I never did try the 3D remake that came out a while ago.  Did you, Battlerager?

Also, Psychonauts is one of my favorite games of all time.  I really have to reinstall that.  It's been a while since I've played it.

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Offline Battlerager

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Re: Games We've Loved...
« Reply #134 on: December 14, 2007, 09:17:59 am »
OMF!  Never thought I'd run into another fan of that in a hundred years.  I used to play the living crap out of that back in the day, but I never did try the 3D remake that came out a while ago.  Did you, Battlerager?

Also, Psychonauts is one of my favorite games of all time.  I really have to reinstall that.  It's been a while since I've played it.
YES! I played that one. Its okay, kinda so-so. Quite unique though as it tries to be a fighting game with a 3rd person camera view...

I even recorded the main theme once. That song is so kickass. The whole soundtrack basically rules.