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submitted 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) by AnarchistArtificer@slrpnk.net to c/games@lemmy.world

I was just reflecting on games I've played in the last year, and wondering when Steam's year-in-review thing would be happening (probably within the next week).

However, I thought it might be interesting to ask this question before that drops, because I'd expect that people will respond differently before they've seen the data, and I think that subjective aspect of the reflection is interesting. So tell me what games you've played in the past year that have most stuck out to you. I think it's more fun if you try to go by memory, but if you want to go check stuff like whether you first played a game in December 2024 or January 2025, that's fine too; just try to not get too deep into the data, I'm interested in the vibes here.

For me, a recent highlight was Clair Obscur: Expedition 33. I didn't expect to be able to play it for a long while because of its cost, but a friend got it for me in November, for my birthday. I like that I'll always associate it with them for that reason. The game is also very me, what with its artsy fartsy themes and the like.

Before that, I played a heckton of Hades 2, which I thoroughly enjoyed, even if it didn't quite scratch the same itch that the first game did. I've not 100%ed it yet, but I plan to. My favourite part of the game is the music — the boss fight that incorporates music in a cool way is so awesome

And before that was Hollow Knight, partly motivated by hearing all the hype in the runup to Silksong's release. I'd been weirdly resistant to playing Hollow Knight for years. I think it's because when something is so universally lauded, it makes me feel oddly anxious. Like, if I don't enjoy it, does that mean I have bad taste? What if it is objectively amazing, but it just doesn't click with me, and I feel sad that I'm missing out on whatever magic everyone else is experiencing? Or what if everyone else is wrong, and the game is way overhyped? They're silly thoughts, but this is fairly common for me (this is why I resisted watching Breaking Bad for years). Fortunately I loved it, and I expect that Silksong will be one of my highlights of 2026. Beautiful soundtrack that I've listened to so much that it was in my Spotify wrapped.

The most interesting part of my year is that I branched out more and played smaller games, outside of the typical stuff I'd play, and for a delightfully silly reason: this Venn diagram(Source).

I stumbled across that when I was voraciously consuming as much Disco Elysium analysis as I could back in 2024, when I played it. I had already played Pathologic 2 (largely due to hbomberguy's video essay on the first one), as well as Planescape:Torment (because so many had cited that as a clear influence on Disco Elysium). This gave me enough points of reference on that venn diagram that I became determined to play all the games included (i.e. Disco Elysium, Pentiment, Felvidek, The Life and Suffering of Sir Brante, Planescape: Torment, Pathologic 2. The middle section is not a game, but a book (which I haven't read): Umberto Eco's The Name of the Rose)

I was utterly enchanted by this Venn diagram to an absurd degree. According to it:

  • Pentiment = Disco Elysium - Pathologic 2;
  • Felvidek = Disco Elysium - Planescape: Torment; and
  • The Life and Suffering of Sir Brante = Felvidek + Pentiment Based off the first two statements, I felt like I could approximate the vibe of Pentiment and Felvidek, but I was intrigued to test that, and I played two games I don't think I would have otherwise.

Pentiment was delightful. I played a bunch of it when a medievalist friend was visiting me, and they verified that every weird and wonderful animal drawings were actually drawn from real medieval manuscripts. They worked with multiple historians to ensure the history depicted was accurate, and it made for an incredibly immersive experience. I loved how the text in the speech bubbles were written in a different script depending on how the protagonist perceived them — more educated people speak with a fancied script than peasants, for example. It really grounds the game in the protagonist's subjective perspective, which synergised so well with the historical setting. I learned so much from this game and from analysis content of it. Apparently Josh Sawyer studied history as an undergraduate, and he'd been wanting to make a game like this for years; I'm so glad he got the chance to make it.

Felvidek is a much smaller game than Pentiment — small enough that I would have felt grumpy at its price if not for the fact that it was clearly a labour of love by a small team. It's a JROG based in a psuedo-historical version of Slovakia, which I found cool, because I knew next to nothing about Slovakian culture. I still don't, because it's not really that kind of game, but I felt like I came away understanding more. It's the kind of game where I felt close to the developer, given that it was such a small project. If you were going to try any of the games I mentioned here, I'd recommend this one, because I'd wager you've not heard of it. If it looks like the kind of game you'd play, I'd advise you go in blind to maximise the impact of the generally absurd vibes. The soundtrack was a highlight for me — it really drove home the absurdity.

Having completed these two pillars of the Venn diagram, I was finally able to complete my quest with The Life and Suffering of Sir Brante. However, I find myself running out of steam and unable to write much more, but it was a fun little experience. Not quite as out there as Felvidek, but definitely something I wouldn't have played ordinarily.

Experimenting with new games also encouraged me to push myself out of my comfort zone further, with games like Fear & Hunger, and Signalis. I'm not great with horror, but that's part of why this was fun.

Anyway, what games have been highlights for you guys? Don't feel pressured to write anywhere near as much as I have — I mostly just wrote this much because I appear to be procrastinating making dinner.

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[-] DrSleepless@lemmy.world 7 points 3 months ago

There were many but the one I wanna mention is Dredge - a horror fishing game that is creepy fun. Wasn’t on my radar but popped up on gamepass and I love it.

[-] Yankee_Self_Loader@lemmy.world 1 points 3 months ago

For those of you who may be on the fence, go fucking play Dredge

[-] Goodlucksil@lemmy.dbzer0.com 6 points 3 months ago

I've finally bitten the bullet and tried emulation. I can just say the sheer amount of possible playable games is enough so supply multiple lifetimes.

[-] Katana314@lemmy.world 0 points 3 months ago

Emulation seems neat to me, but I know behind every comment on it there’s a whispered implication: Piracy. Very few people are imaging their own game discs. That unfortunately makes it less appealing to me, especially as trustworthiness shifts at many of those sites.

[-] rtxn@lemmy.world 3 points 3 months ago

Most of those games are no longer being sold outside secondary markets (used games, collectibles, that sort). Neither the publisher nor the developers will ever profit from a "legitimate" sale.

For other games that are still being sold on first-party marketplaces, which is more or less limited to Switch 1 games, you tell me why Nintendo deserves to be treated charitably.

[-] mohab@piefed.social 2 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

I mean, if you can find and afford the games, yeah, buy them. Problem is most of the games people need to emulate are unavailable or astronomically expensive, and that's even if you live in the west/Japan… if you live in the rest of the world, forget it.

[-] Rinn@awful.systems 1 points 3 months ago

Yup, Nintendo in particular has a bad habit of just sitting on a bunch of old games, keeping them unavailable on modern system despite the fact that there's clearly a market for it. And occasionally they'll reach into their great big bag of classics, pull something out and say "we've done the bare minimum so you can run this on our current gen system (Switch), that will be 50 dollars for a 20 year old game".

[-] NOT_RICK@lemmy.world 5 points 3 months ago

Metroid Dread left such an impression on me after playing earlier this year that I bought and modded an OG GBA with a better screen. It was fun and frustrating all at once! My first time soldering since I was a teen. I proceeded to beat Metroid Fusion for the first time despite having the cartridge for probably as long as it had been since my last time soldering. I’m now playing Prime 4, although I’m not yet sure if that qualifies as a highlight.

Besides that, I also got sucked into Hades 2. I didn’t get the true ending to the first game but I did roll credits on this one! What a game. Pokémon Unbound romhack was also on the list of time sinks, but I gotta get back to beating that.

[-] CodeBlooded@programming.dev 3 points 3 months ago

Discovering the open source remix of 1997’s Total Annihilation was a gaming highlight of 2025 for me.

The game I’m speaking of is Beyond All Reason.

https://beyondallreason.info/

[-] AWizard_ATrueStar@lemmy.world 3 points 3 months ago

Played several games this year I liked.

Hollow Knight with the release of Silksong I figured I should probably finally play this. Great game and deserves the praise it gets. Didn’t get anywhere near 100% completion on it but I am OK with that

Strangers of Paradise played on PS5. Once I figured out the battle mechanic I fell into a rythem with this game and really liked it. Ended up getting the platinum for it because I wanted to keep playing.

Iron Meat finally got a chance to play this. Really fun if short contra style shooter game. Ticks all the right boxes.

Lately I have been playing some classic games and getting retro achievements for them. Fun way to experience my old favorites again with new challenges. I recently played Zelda LTTP and got all the RAs for it. Some fun challenges for the game

Honorable mentions: Cyber Shadow, Firewatch, Mario & Luigi: Brothership

[-] Dalacos@lemmy.world 3 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)
  • Clair Obscur: Expedition 33
  • Dave the Diver
  • Another Crab's Treasure
  • Cataclismo
  • Black Myth: Wukong

(*note some of these were Let's Play's I watched instead of played as combat mechanics like Clair/Wukong don't interest me.)


I also spent a lot of time with an old friend, Heroes of Might and Magic V, Tribes of the East.


Edit/PS: Have to include Tactical Breach Wizards. Hilarious and very different take on the "Xcom-esque" genre. Great characterization and story. Requires a very different style of thinking to master it.

[-] DrSleepless@lemmy.world 2 points 3 months ago

Thanks for reminding me to grab Dave the Diver

[-] Rhynoplaz@lemmy.world 3 points 3 months ago

Balatro inspired me to download other simple rogue likes on my phone.

I also branched out on console and played both South Park RPGs and Farcry 3.

And somewhere in the middle of all that Oblivion remastered made me play that game all the way through for a fourth time.

[-] DesolateMood@lemmy.zip 2 points 3 months ago

Haven't played Silksong yet, but its release did get me to play Hollow Knight which had been sitting in my library forever.

I've gotten partway through Expedition 33, but decided to take a break after spending ~20 hours on act 1 alone (speaking of, I think it's about time to get back on that soon).

As much as I like single player games, I imagine the most significant amount of my time by far has probably been spent on multiplayer games like cod

[-] ampersandrew@lemmy.world 2 points 3 months ago

There are too many games I want to play and not enough time to play them, and with a programming background, I decided to basically use Agile methodology to schedule which games I can reasonably finish in a given month. I've been tracking my completion times and comparing against How Long To Beat to get good ballpark estimates. This year, I've beaten 30 games, 15 of which came out in 2025, and I think I can beat 3 more before the year is done. When a new game comes out, I don't like to play it unless I've played the earlier / mainline / canon entries in the series, so not only did I play Borderlands 4, I played through 1-3, the Tales games, and the Pre-Sequel. I played through the first three Mafia games and intend to play The Old Country once the Steam sale starts. I played not only Kingdom Come: Deliverance II but also its predecessor.

Speaking of KC:D2, that's the best game I played this year, by quite a margin. Obsidian put out two great games this year in Avowed and The Outer Worlds 2, but despite obviously sharing a lot of the same bones, they deliver quite different experiences. Dispatch was a treat. Split Fiction was what I wanted as an iteration on It Takes Two. Borderlands 4 continues what Borderlands 3 set up in making its systems fun for math nerds. Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 was fun and novel in so many ways, and I love the story behind its development; I do wish that I loved the execution of its story more, and I wish the combat wasn't so feast or famine, but those things didn't seem to bother most people. The Alters might be the most slept on game in 2025 relative to its quality; seriously, it's a great story, and it's nice to see that level of presentation in a game of its scope and genre. (A lot of Unreal 5 games in that list...)

[-] Rhynoplaz@lemmy.world 1 points 3 months ago

I'm curious what your take on Borderlands was after paying them all back to back. I've been a fan of that world since the beginning, and I'm curious how they stand up without the nostalgia. And of course, which was your favorite?

[-] HerrVorragend@lemmy.world 2 points 3 months ago

Uboat

Even though I did not like it at first because of the (optional) management and (also optional) zoomed out cut-out camera view. I loved Silent Hunter and was hoping for a modern take but the above mentioned features of the game kind of clashed with my expectations. Luckily, there is a captain 1st person only mode and walking through your super detailed boat as the captain while listening to 40s radio stations (through mods) and blasting British freighters with well calculated torpedo shots is a lot of fun.

Skyrim VR ( MadGodsMod)

It is always fun to play Skyrim from time to time, but this version has to be my favourite, and after finally having a PC that is beefy enough for VR makes this ancient game one of my highlights this year.

[-] Mofy@piefed.social 2 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

Abiotic Factor, has been a pearl. Survival in a 90's science center complex in the middle of Australia. Good mechanics once you get past the water hump. The story has the right amounts of dread and humor, and the stakes /difficulty / rewards ramp up just right for me.

Oh and still playing noita... Finally cleared it this year

[-] Minnels@lemmy.zip 2 points 3 months ago

I play a lot of games every year and nowhere complete anything so whatever I do complete they go into great games I recommend to friends.

Clair obscure expedition 33 was my highlight of the year. Long time since a game made me cry and laugh like this one. Completed chapter 2 but then I had enough but I want to return and look more at this and the next chapter.

No rest for the wicked is in EA but it totally captivated me for a couple of weeks. Had a lot of fun and looking forward to multiplayer and playing with my friends. I love that the devs are following their own vision and doing stuff a little bit different.

Reality Break. This one is a bit odd. I managed to buy the wrong game somehow but this was totally a hidden gem for me. No regrets and they had some big updates after I was done so I plan to return one day.

Metaphor Re Fantazio. My first game like this one and while I never completed it it made a mark.

Heart of the machine will get a small spotlight also. Very different game and something that I really have to visit again when it releases in 1.0.

I guess my 2026 will be a lot of revisits and (hopefully!!) less buying games. Another good overhaul mod of Factorio would save me a lot of money and Guild wars 2 occupies quite a bit of my gaming time.

[-] IEatDaFeesh@lemmy.world 1 points 3 months ago

Sonic Racing Crossworlds, Hellish Quart, and Warframe's newest frame Uriel.

[-] missingno@fedia.io 1 points 3 months ago

Attending Combo Breaker is the highlight of my year every year. In 2025 I was able to fit Frosty Faustings into my travel budget too. Managed to place 17th in Mystery Bracket both times, and they were very wild bracket runs. I saw Gyakuten Puzzle Bancho and turned to my opponent to utter a sentence no one wants to hear in Mystery: "I'm sorry, I know how to play this game." Also at CB I was able to make it out of pools in Under Night In-Birth II, and it was a hella stacked bracket so I'm pretty happy with that one.

Been focusing more on my mahjong career, attended Riichi Nomi Open and Philadelphia Riichi Open as my first two tournaments. Didn't do so hot though. But of course, when I win it's because I'm skilled, when I lose it was just bad luck.

New arcade opened up near me with modded Maimai, Wacca, and Chunithm cabinets. I told myself I'm never going back to Round 1 again, though R1 does have the new official international Maimai now so I guess that's something. I also got back into Dance Dance Revolution a little, but I'm still not very good.

As for actual new releases, Deltarune is obvious. Kirby Air Riders is a sequel I waited 22 years for, and it was worth the wait. The original is one of my favorite games of all time and I'm blown away by how much higher they raised the bar. Online City Trial is everything childhood me ever dreamed of. And I have to shout out Rhythm Doctor finally exiting Early Access, the final chapter is a wonderful conclusion that gave me a lot of emotions.

[-] HarkMahlberg@kbin.earth 1 points 3 months ago
  • Finishing my first Baldurs Gate 3 campaign after 250 hours.
  • Winning my first gold stake run of Balatro.
  • Still alive to witness the Ace Combat 8 trailer.
[-] ICCrawler@lemmy.world 1 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

I got Monster Hunter: Wilds finally, but surprisingly, I have not dropped a lot of time into it despite playing the franchise since the first, with usually 100-250 hours spent on any given title I purchased in the series. TBF, my PS5 controller is in a terrible state right now, forcing me to use K&M, which is genuinely surprising to me that they added support for it in the PS5 to begin with. As far as I know, that is very rare. And while I'm no stranger to K&M, I've never used it for Monster Hunter and I just don't dig it much.

I'd actually have to give my personal GOTY to a game that's not at all new. I've eyed Pathfinder: Wrath of the Righteous for some time, even though I don't think I've played a traditional CRPG since Planescape: Torment (granted not in 1999, I bought it thru GOG, so it had to be sometime after 2008.) And despite it being a CRPG and me knowing that, I played it via Playstation+ on PS5... with my controller, which still had stick drift at the time but not as bad. I sunk between 200-250 hours into it and I still have not beat the damn thing. I kept remaking my party as I grew more familiar with the game's system. My last and favorite being subclassing all my regulars to have dinosaur pets. Game went on sale for like 6 or 7 bucks a little while ago so I just went ahead and bought it permanently. I'm sure I'll revisit it again just like I do Elder Scrolls and Borderlands franchises.

[-] mohab@piefed.social 1 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

Not much new for me this year.

I had a lot of fun with Soulstice, Assault Spy, Hi-Fi Rush, and Hellsinker.

NieR:Automata, The Surge, Death Stranding, and Scarlet Nexus were disappointing.

Every time I stepped ever so slightly outside my comfort zone I ended up regretting it. I will still flirt with action RPGs, but no more open world or soulslikes. If relatively linear action is not the core, I'm out.

Next year, I intend to invest more in indie action games. Currently eyeing Genokids, Spirit X Strike, and No Straight Roads 2. Also indie shmups: currently, Devil Blade Reboot, Birdcage, and Gunvein are on my wishlist.

For fighting games, I intend to get into Granblue next year. Possibly also Melty Blood and Blazblue.

Looking forward to fleshing out my library with more of my favorite genres.

[-] Nelots@piefed.zip 1 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

I didn't pick up any new games this year that I can think of despite how good of a year it's apparently been for new releases. I almost exclusively play multiplayer games with lots of replay value, so I don't mind going a few years without a new game. I've mostly played a lot of Helldivers 2, Phasmophobia, Remnant: From the Ashes, Risk of Rain 2, Terraria, and Tabletop Simulator.

Risk of Rain 2 in particular has been a lot of fun recently. It got a new DLC about a month ago, so I guess I did technically get something new. It's easily the best DLC for the game yet, and the new boss fights are a massive step up in quality compared to any others in the game.

The only singleplayer game I've been playing a bit of is Minecraft. I picked up GregTech: New Horizons, a minecraft modpack, a bit earlier this year just to see how far in it I could get before getting bored. GT:NH apparently has a ridiculous average completion time of 2,500 hours of active gameplay for experienced solo players, and I have quite literally never touched a tech mod in my life, so I have no delusions about ever actually finishing it. But it's been fun so far.

[-] paultimate14@lemmy.world 1 points 3 months ago

I played a decent number of games this year, and a lot of games that have huge fan bases. God of War 2018, Bloodborne (my first ever soulslike), Baldur's Gate 3, Disco Elysium, and more. But the one that keeps gnawing at me is Subnautica

I remember when it was in early access I watched Markiplier play it, and it piqued my interest enough that it was the first time I ever bought anything in early access. Which is very unusual for me (I think the only other time I've done that was Hades, which was also great). I played through as much of the game as there was at the time, or at least as I could find. Which was still mostly in the safe shallows, no deep areas. Still out in a dozen hours or so and was satisfied given the price so I moved on.

In 2024 i recommended it to my wife, who loves marine biology and base building games. She, in turn loved the game and I watched her play through it. I got to see all of the deep areas. After watching her play it and the DLC I got the itch to go back to it, so I started a new file in late 2024.

By mid-January 2025 I was about halfway through that file. My wife visiting her friend in another city, so I had the house to myself, I think I took some PTO too. Single-digit temperatures Farenheit outside. My wife had taken our only car, so I was loaded up with plenty of weed, drinks, food, and snacks. So I had a few days to focus and finish that first file. I had such a great time I did something else I almost never do: I immediately started a new file to play it again. While I had so much fun, I also learned so much and had so many ideas of what I could have done better. Better places to build based, exploring in a different order, knowing all the great spots to farm resources and get blueprints and everything.

So I played through again. The soundtrack is phenomenal synthwave that perfectly suits the game, but by the time I had built my cyclops and was ready to plunge down into the depths I was also ready for a new soundtrack. I put on one of my favorite albums, which is also one of the most appropriate: Oceanic, by Isis.

I strongly recommend this to anyone who likes Isis or Subnautica. Just absolutely sublime. It's like peanut butter and chocolate.

[-] KawaiiBitch@lemmy.world 1 points 3 months ago
[-] KawaiiBitch@lemmy.world 1 points 3 months ago

He fwoofy♡

[-] Skyline969@lemmy.ca 1 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

This year was a good year for games.

Hades II is a fantastic roguelike that sucked me in for weeks.

I got convinced to play Project Zomboid by a couple friends. I get the hype now.

Project Diablo 2 is an excellent revival of LoD with rebalancing, new features, and controller support. So much fun on the deck.

Pirate Yakuza in Hawaii was yet another great addition to the off the rails nonsense that is the Yakuza series.

Yakuza 0 Directors Cut was also a good remaster and English dub. People shit on Yong Yea as Kiryu but I like his performance. Could be because I never played the game in Japanese.

Also spent a lot of time playing Subnautica. An oldie but a goodie, especially with a multiplayer mod.

Yup, this was a good year for gaming.

EDIT: Oh! Can’t forget Ninja Gaiden: Ragebound. Pretty fun, challenging but sometimes a bit cheap in the challenges. One optional challenge relied on firing a knife through a narrow gap, but there was no reliable way to line yourself up. And since it was timed and at the very end of the challenge, if you mess up you have to do the whole thing all over again. Other than that, really fun.

[-] ameancow@lemmy.world 1 points 3 months ago

I am using a 7-year-old video card on a 5-year-old machine and have been notified my health care premiums are going up 1000%.

I've been playing small, cheap, low-res social games with friends and family like Misery or RV There Yet and those are nice. But I feel like gaming broadly is starting to recede in my rear-view mirror. Too many real-world problems and stresses and not enough pay.

I am not sure what all these huge companies are going to do when nobody can afford anything anymore.

[-] rtxn@lemmy.world 1 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

This year I unsubscribed from FFXIV. Speaking only for myself, Dawntrail was a massive drop in nearly all aspects after Endwalker. The music and environment were great, I was positively giddy when I reached Solution Nine... but the characters are unlikable, the antagonist is boring and one-dimensional, there is hardly any payoff for setups, one of the most significant conflicts gets resolved with a fucking pep talk, most of the first half of the main story only exists to extol about how much of a chad the current monarch is. Somehow the second half gets even worse with multiple contrived plot points relying on characters being idiots and the player being a passive observer, including the reintroduction of a high profile issue that had been present for the entire DECADE of the game's existence and resolved in a high profile way in Shadowbringers. Wuk Lamat was fine. Overused and dumb as a pair of boots, but fine.

I got to the final region, got the "I will now genocide the multiverse because my obviously unsustainable economy is running out of resources" monologue, and just stopped playing. Unless 8.0 sees some massive improvements, I have no plans to finish Dawntrail.

On the completely different end of the spectrum, Warframe is in the best place it's ever been. The last four major updates (1999, Isleweaver, Vallis Undermind, and The Old Peace) have been fucking phenomenal, both in terms of story and gameplay. The Old Peace (released literally a few days ago) also contains the most valid crashout in history. Rap tap tap, little piggy. The new gamemodes are fun, fast-paced, and so far haven't outstayed their welcome, although like always, I'm worried about their longevity since they're essentially content islands.

Warframe's music is exceptional. I'll always appreciate the works of Keith Power (he gave us We All Lift Together and This Is What You Are), but the current composer Matt Chalmers has elevated the game's music both in quality and variety. Starting with 1999, there are no songs that I ever want to skip, and that includes the virtual boy band. Even if you have no interest in the game, you shouldn't skip the music: TennoConcert 2025 (Matt is the eternally chilled out dude who sings From The Stars), Tethra Jahrak, Lullaby of the Manifold, and (potential spoilers) Roses from the Abyss.

In terms of smaller games, I fell off the wagon and had several all-night benders in Factorio. If you're anywhere near the spectrum, that game is like crack cocaine. I had a lot of fun in Project Wingman and the biggest furball in history, I replayed Star Wars: Republic Commando, and rediscovered my appreciation for games where the player is not the Chosen One. Against all wisdom, I finally played The Mystery Of The Droods. Even knowing what awaited me, I was unprepared for the absolute jank.

[-] FooBarrington@lemmy.world 1 points 3 months ago

Silksong - I had hyped myself up way too much, yet it still delivered. Absolute masterpiece.

Dispatch - I finally understand why people enjoyed Telltale games so much. The writing is great, the characters are interesting, just all around a great experience.

Lies of P - Overture - I finally finished Lies of P & played Overture a few weeks back, after dropping off the game twice in the last years. Wow, that was great! And honestly more emotional than I'd expected.

[-] it_depends_man@lemmy.world 0 points 3 months ago
  • factorio space age: it's the best for a reason, but there are a few things that irk me. There is a "pick any of 3 paths to go first but you have to do all 3" kind of choice. And unlike RPGs you don't really get all that much from each choice, so there isn't much to optimize in that way, it doesn't result in different builds. Space age 2.0.X still has a few issues, the UI for the actual space part is pretty bad and while that's not a space age feature, the way they do logic programming is easy for simple things but takes up too much space and is too difficult to set up for slightly smarter setups, so there is no reward for doing those.
  • mindustry (purple planet): It does way better spacial puzzles than factorio. In factorio you have "too much" space or it's too free form. You can pretty much build the way you want. Mindustry has more basic resources you have to mine in specific places, enemies are coming from a distinct direction and you have a lot less space to lay out your factory, so you have to make more choices. I liked that.
  • hollow knight: I did see a playthrough years ago and was mad that I spoilered myself. Played it, and had forgotten enough that pretty much everything was new again. Great game, 10/10.
  • hollow knight silksong: also played it, has it's moments, ultimately I didn't like it. Writing, mechanics, when stuff is available to find... there are some weird choices and imo regressions from hollow knight. Great soundtrack and it does deserve the goty award it got.
[-] AnarchistArtificer@slrpnk.net 1 points 3 months ago

I've not played Factorio Space Age yet, but I'm looking forward to it whenever I next get a hankering for Factorio.

[-] it_depends_man@lemmy.world 1 points 3 months ago

Highly recommend it. Although slight warning, you go to 4 new planets with different mechanics, and one is a "hate it or love it" situation. I loved it, but clearly a significant number of people didn't.

[-] WanderWisley@lemmy.world 0 points 3 months ago

Expedition 33, The game came out on my birthday. I never had the time to get around to playing it. I just downloaded it on PlayStation for their black Friday sale. I am currently only six hours into the game, but I fully get behind the hype and the enjoyment of this game. It does have a high level of skill when it comes to combat but slowly, but surely I’m getting it down and I am enjoying it so far.

[-] AnarchistArtificer@slrpnk.net 1 points 3 months ago

Despite the high skill level required, I actually found that it was quite forgiving for people who were learning. I barely did any parrying until I was well into Act 3, for example. I like the way that the feedback for dodges work — I started trying to parry more when I realised that I was consistently getting perfect dodges, which meant that if I had parried, it would have been successful.

I also like the way the difficulty works in the open world. It reminds me of games like Fallout: New Vegas, where the enemies aren't scaled to player level, so you can be dumb/brave and wade into encounters that are way beyond your power level. Sometimes that works out surprisingly well, but often you try fighting a difficult enemy and get pwned so thoroughly that you accept that you'll have to come back later. In Expedition 33 especially, it is super viable to just go and explore elsewhere and come back with more levels, better weapons and better pictos. The beautiful world also means that exploring is fun even without the mechanical perks.

[-] orenj@lemmy.sdf.org 0 points 3 months ago

Void Stranger, all of the ways it fucks with you even up to the end made it very memorable. The catharsis of finally getting it, and turning insurmountable challenges into not even a bump in the road was incredible. Place your faith in the void and jump in blind.

[-] AnarchistArtificer@slrpnk.net 1 points 3 months ago

Your pitch has sold me on it. Yet another game to add to my wishlist

this post was submitted on 15 Dec 2025
41 points (100.0% liked)

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