Beyond Good and Evil.
Strongly recommended! It's one of those rare games where you don't want a "sequel" because there's no way it would be in the spirit of the first game. Especially today.
Wouldn't say no to a HD remaster though. That'd be nice.
(And I don't think Beyond Good and Evil 2 is ever releasing)
Dungeon Keeper, Red Alert 2, Unreal Tournament.
I'm about to finish the main campaign on Dungeon Keeper, and I've tried the New Game+ Campaign with KeeperFX. What a blast I had when I was a child.
I don't think it's fair to call it a cult classic just yet since the game is rather recent, but eventually i think Kenshi. It's a really fun game although very grindy and i'm not even sure which genre it belongs to. Also it's very moddable to fit even more to your preferences. It's been quite a while since i played it, but i'll share a little story: I started the game for the first time and i wanted to make a "waifu squad" consisting of only women so i did. Worked my ass of mining copper and selling it in order to hire more ladies. Eventually my two ladies started to build a base near where i was mining copper and then one day, the "prayer day" (or whatever it was called) came and an army of crusaders came to spread the word of god. The bishop asked my main lady if there was any men in this settlement and of course i answered no there is none. To them it was blasphemy to not have any men in a settlement and the army slaughter my two ladies like it was nothing. Too bad i lost this save since i've gotten a new PC because i would've wanted to go on with my vengeance story, but maybe i'll fire it up again.
It’s a really fun game although very grindy and i’m not even sure which genre it belongs to.
Absurdist sandbox?
It's a game I've never managed to get into, but it can be rather wild to watch others' antics.
Prince of Persia: Sands of Time.
Jade Empire.
Sphinx and the Cursed Mummy.
Sid Meier’s Pirates.
Came here to say jade empire. I had completely forgotten about it until someone mentioned it in a post on another lemmy. I promptly found it on a rom site and loaded it on to my steam deck.
So much time spent playing Sid Meier's Pirates! I think there was a remake that was faithful to the original with updated graphics, and it was great times. Capture ships, attack forts, trade goods.l... just a great game.
Capture ships, attack forts, trade goods.l… just a great game.
I love games in that genre, they're so endlessly playable. The Mount & Blade series is kind of like a more recent take on that same idea. And X4 Foundations is like that but in space.
Sands of Time was so cool. That series was flawed (Warrior Within was the emo-most game in an era full of emo sequels as the original audience reached adolescence), but I'm sad that it essentially got canceled by warping into AC.
EarthBound for the SNES is one of my favorite RPGs. Very original for its time in terms of setting and battle mechanics. Also, Ness from Smash Bros. is in it!
Such a weird game! The artstyle and just the "weirdness" of it is out of this world.
I'm not a fan of turn-based battles, but this is one of the few games (including Chrono Trigger) where it's legitimately fun. To this day I still think about it.
I don't know if Gothic 1 and 2 qualify as true cult classics or not, but clunky controls and interface aside, these are two of the best games I have played in my life. Gothic 2 especially. The games offer an atmosphere like nothing I've ever played. The soundtrack, themes, and overall color pallete provide this rich and stirring ambience that always manages to make me feel as though I'm exploring an ancient pine forest on a dark, rainy day. See for yourself.
You can feel the spirit of the entire franchise contained within the first two minutes of that audio track, perfectly encapsulated. It was an entire world apart and years ahead of its time. If it resonates with you, then these games are absolutely worth the initial difficulty of figuring out those ridiculous keyboard controls. But if you're really struggling with them, just read up on the Gothic 1 storyline and then skip straight to Gothic 2. It picks up right where the first leaves off. You won't miss a tremendous amount, and the controls and gameplay are infinitely improved. However, sticking G1 out long enough to figure out what you're doing will make G2 far more rewarding when you reunite with various characters and revisit previously explored areas.
A studio is remaking Gothic 1, but everything I've seen of it so far is about as faithful to Gothic 1 as The Dark Tower movie was to the books. They've massacred it. So stick with the originals.
To latch on to this: the first Elex, a game by the same studio as the Gothic series, is, despite the average reception by critics, THE definition of a flawed masterpiece! So many things to criticize (too difficult early in the game, bad cut scenes, flawed combat) but the main focus of the game, the open world filled with tons of monster and people to interact with, is just great! I loved how exploration is encouraged and rewarded, how there are meaningful desicions and characters that can be killed off. The world is huge and all though the general atmosphere is post apocalyptic, the developer somehow managed to fit a middle age type fraction and a science fiction type (Clerics) fraction in to the game. Also smaller groups you can't join.
Elex has a very special place in my gamer heart and all though I can't flat out recommend it to everyone I would say if you have a soft spot for open world games that do not play like the average Ubi game and don't hold your hand the whole time, I say: check it out, it's pretty cheap in most places!
Black and White.
The Age of Empires series, especially AOE2. There's a nice digitally remastered version on Steam and I think it really holds up.
Wololo!
Vampire: the Masquerade - Bloodlines. Dated, needs mods to run, but the fact that there's still a community patch being made for it after all this time says a lot. Haven't really heard much about it since the sequel crashed and burned, which is sad because no game has really given me the same atmospheric vibes. It was (is?) really special
Im not sure how forgotten it is but Riven: the sequal to Myst. I always thought Riven was way better yhen Myst. I rememb3r being sucked into the world when i was a kid. It was world building and such a beautiful and unique design. I played it again a couple years ago and still holds up.
Stronghold, the castle simulator with a lot of charm but a dev team that lost their touch after a few sequel attempts.
I recently got a ps2 and all of the SOCOM games. I’m still working through the first game, but I think 2 was my favorite back in the day. It’s the only game I was aware of at the time that enabled voice commands to the AI, and the first one came out in 2002 I think. i wish they would reboot the series.
The original Leisure Suit Larry series, Monkey Island, Day of the Tentacle, Myst, Half-life, Doom, Quake, Lemmings, ... For more fire up your retropie or recalbox on a raspberry pi.
Ogre Battle on the SNES is the original auto-battler. I would really recommend Ogre Battle 64 though, not only is it one of the very few RPGs on the system but it's got really unique gameplay. It's got its flaws but I'm such a sucker for the character designs and job/class system that it's still my favorite game to this day.
Love the OG Ogre Battle. I played that game like crazy. I always appreciated how you could revisit locations for loot and battles.
Vanquish, best "cover" shooter that I've ever played, really wish it'd get a Switch port and that Platinum would revisit it.
Sliding around on jets, going into slo mo to hit weak points, vaulting cover and initiating slomo, it's all so fucking fun and visceral.
Imagine if Bayonetta and Gears of War had a baby, and then that baby devoted an entire button solely to smoking a cigarette during a gunfight.
If you like Katamari Damacy you should try ps1 game called “Incredible Crisis”.
It is an extreme wacky minigame… game, one of those games that is simultaneously addictive and punishingly difficult. You play as four members of a japanese family trying to get home for grandma’s birthday, and insanity ensues. (Aliens, bank robbers, etc).
It got an english release back in 1999 but I dont think it made a huge mark. In any case, its very fun and ridiculous. Especially good to play with friends. It also has an amazing ska soundtrack by Tokyo Ska Paradise Orchestra if you enjoy ska, haha
Aquaria is one probably not too many people played to make it a cult classic, but it has a dedicated following of people that love it. Was pretty popular as a 2d indie adventure. I never thought I would like it, but was glad I gave it a try. 😊
It's a phenomenal metroidvania too. The visuals might be off-putting at first, but the game has so much soul. Excellent music too.
- Shenmue: Rereleased with a wonderful port on PC/Xbox One/Playstation 4 in 2018, it's an investigative adventure game that takes place in a small town in Japan in 1986. The thing that sticks out to me about it is how unlike any other game in its class before or since, it feels like an authentic depiction of a regular-ass suburb from that period, from people who lived in similar places growing up.
- Freespace 2: Space dogfighting game that gets right to the point, feels intense, and while you're there you find yourself in the middle of an excellent sci-fi radio drama. Holds up great today when you pair your purchased GOG copy with the fan-maintained Freespace Open Source Project engine. Joystick + Keyboard control recommended, but Mouse + Keyboard is fine!
Loom
A very unique game for the time, fun adventure with a great story and game play mechanics.
Skies of Arcadia. Two words: sky pirates. Coupled together with a beautiful overworld filled with hidden discoveries, charming characters, fun ship combat, and excellent music. You can’t go wrong with either the original Dreamcast version (higher quality music, VMU minigames) or the Legends remastering on the Gamecube (an additional story quest, less frequent random encounters - the original is somewhat relentless with these).
Gothic 1 and 2. Weird control scheme you have to get used to, but very good games world building snd character wise. Can be quite challenging with the combat, but quest allow tons of ways to solve problems.
Nox (the better single player Diablo, with some incredible game mechanics, even looking at it today)
Hexplore
Imperium Galactica
Giants (this game ran like shit on every age appropriate PC, I'm kind of wondering if the engine can even run without stuttering, but it's a fantastic game)
Gothic 1 (alive open worlds are not that new and exciting anymore, but this game has a lot of charm & an amazing sense of exploration)
The Longest Journey
Knights and Merchants (combat strategy game, the later levels are combat only and it's very HARD)
Rage of Mages 2
Chrono Cross (probably the best jrpg of all time, but the combat system scared away many)
These are not really forgotten & qualify for being a cult classic, but merely they are old titles that the new kids have never touched:
Baldur's Gate 1-2
Morrowind (so much better than Skyrim, it's not even close)
Pharaoh & Caesar 3 (the city builders, there is a recently released HD remake for Pharaoh)
Oddworld: Abe's Odessey (Much better art style & direction than in the still great remake called New and Tasty)
Jazz Jackrabbit 1 (Sonic feels soulless compared to this)
Settlers 3
Chrono Trigger (It's not really a cult classic, because eventually all jrpg fans play this, right, RIGHT?)
Ultima Underworld 1 and 2. These are ancient RPG games going right back to the dawn of PC gaming. The first one was the first PC game with a true 3D world where you could look up and down and there were two slopes rather than just steps. The control scheme takes a little getting used to as it was before WSAD+mouse look had become established. Spells are made by combining runes which you find about the place. It also has things like repairable weapons and armour, the need to sleep and eat as well as the normal RPG stats and levels.
I played the first splinter cell a few months ago. It was honestly really really fun and rewarding, but there were aspects that showed its age. Some of it was trying a bit too hard to be immersive and even on lower difficulties the enemies were brutally aware of their surroundings. There are also like two checkpoints a level and each level can take upwards of an hour depending on how slow you go. Otherwise I thought it was a really fun game and the sound design was out of this world for its time
There’s a few classic Star Wars games that don’t get talked about as much that are great. Galactic battlegrounds is an age of empire 2 clone with Star Wars skins and stories. I played the crap out of this one over the years. Fun campaigns and tons of fan made missions out 5err too. But a ton of the old Star Wars games are fun if you are a fan. Freelancer is a PC game that I don’t think you can even buy any more which was a fun space sim from back in the day and holds up somewhat. Star Trek also had a bunch of interesting games in the early aughts worth checking out if you’re so inclined.
One of the later SNES games called Secret of Evermore!
It's kind-of a spiritual successor to Secret of Mana, but with a more sci-fi bent.
Hybrid Heaven on N64. Great game with a super interesting battle mechanic. I've never played anything else quite like it. Maybe The Surge would be the closest system, wherein you can target specific body parts for interesting effects. But you can't suplex an alligator in The Surge.
Heroes of Might and Magic 3 is one that instantly comes to mind. It surprisingly still has a very active competitive playerbase, mostly comprised of slavs that have been playing it since they could read words on a computer screen. Another one that I've personally can't stop playing, is the first Warhammer 40K:Dawn of War game with it's expansions and mods. It's just so good, and I wish a modern version with a modern engine could be made. I don't trust Relic to do that tho.
Other than that, there's a myriad of old console and arcade games that are still excellent. Super Metroid, SEGA Rally, shmups like Dodonpachi and Mushihimesama, Street Fighter 3: 3rd Strike... there are really way too many to count.
Geneforge
Gaming
From video gaming to card games and stuff in between, if it's gaming you can probably discuss it here!
Please Note: Gaming memes are permitted to be posted on Meme Mondays, but will otherwise be removed in an effort to allow other discussions to take place.
See also Gaming's sister community Tabletop Gaming.
This community's icon was made by Aaron Schneider, under the CC-BY-NC-SA 4.0 license.