Stella Brando
Arcane
- Joined
- Oct 5, 2005
- Messages
- 9,500
100. Planescape: Torment
Developer: Black Isle Studios
Publisher: Interplay Entertainment
Release: 1999
Where can I buy it: Steam, GOG
With its amnesiac hero waking up in a morgue with no clue who they are or what they're about, Planescape: Torment begins like a lot of video games do: filling in the gaps by teaching you and your hero about its world simultaneously. But it's the where Torment goes from there that matters. In this isometric RPG, finding the answers involves a little legwork through multiple dimensions. Turns out you're an immortal being called The Nameless One who's been resurrected with a new body and personality each time you die. But you aren't even the best part of Torment. It's a game revered for its characters, and the rest of its cast still hold sway even today, from Morte the floating skull to the bat-winged brothel matron Fall-From-Grace. It is getting on a bit, but the Enhanced Edition still makes this a brilliant outing even today.
99. Celeste
Developer: Extremely OK Games
Publisher: Extremely OK Games
Release: 2018
Where can I buy it: Steam, Humble
The phrase 'peak platforming' has never been more apt than with Celeste. You are a climber leaping and jumping up a mountain that's full of treacherous dashing and wall-jumping, offering players a steep challenge that always feels firm yet incredibly fair. It's one of those games that also feels intensely good under the thumbs, but isn't afraid to open itself up to those who less nimble fingers. Back in 2018, it set the standard for accessibility, offering up invincibility and infinite stamina options, and even went as far as letting you skip entire levels. None of these are unique to Celeste, of course, but developers Extremely OK Games have applied all this wisdom to create a platform game that's both tough as toffee in cold weather, and as forgiving as the grandad who gave you said toffee.
98. Microsoft Flight Simulator
Publisher: Xbox Games Studios
Release: 2020
Where can I buy it? Steam, Game Pass
As Microsoft's series of traditional aeroplane 'em ups approaches its 40th anniversary, the monumental achievement that is 2020's Microsoft Flight Simulator comes into ever greater focus. Not only are Asobo Studio constantly adding and improving this most seminal of flight sims, but it continues to be both a deep and slow-burning affair for off-duty pilots, as well as a gleeful cloud-skimming challenge for hobbyists. You can fly planes as small as a Cessna 152 or as large as an Airbus over a planet teeming with photorealistic cities, seas and mountains. It's a spectacular sight, made possible by capturing and rebuilding seemingly the entire world using (of all things) Bing maps. A true marvel if ever there was one.
97. S.T.A.L.K.E.R.: Call of Pripyat
Developer: GSC Game World
Publisher: GSC Game World, Deep Silver
Release: 2010
Where can I buy it? Steam, GOG, Humble
S.T.A.L.K.E.R is the first-person post-apocalypse survival shooter that has everything you could possibly want from its respective genres. There's the open world full of mutants, bandits and other friendly fellow Stalkers, and its palette of browns and dark greens creates a world you can practically smell through your screen. Your mission is to find artifacts scattered throughout the "Zone" - an irradiated hellscape inspired by the Chernobyl exclusion zone (along with the Russian film that has an identical name). There are a larger objectives at play here as well, involving some downed helicopters, but like everything in this blasted radioactive heath, your actions are dictated by necessity.
96. With Those We Love Alive
Publisher: Porpentine
Release: 2014
Where can I buy it? It's free on the creator's website
It's amazing what white text on a crimson background can do. You are a member of an empress' court in this Twine text adventure, serving a creature described as both monarch and monster. Her city is a labyrinth of "dream distilleries" and "sporeflesh" gardens. And as the days pass, you'll draw symbols on your forearm in real life (no, really), totems of the time spent in this other world. You come away from this feeling scarred and changed. Razorlike pen marks or thick permanent marker strokes across your limb, completely different patterns and symbology to anyone else who plays. With Those We Love Alive is like falling asleep to a Grimm's fairytale at the tattooist and waking up with a dream printed on your skin.
95. Divinity: Original Sin 2 - Definitive Edition
Developer: Larian Studios
Publisher: Larian Studios
Release: 2017
Where can I buy it? Steam, GOG
As Larian continue to toil away on Baldur's Gate 3, their most recent work, Divinity: Original Sin 2, remains a high point for RPG design. It's the kind of game where you can roleplay a stuck-up dragon prince and not get an intense amount of side-eye from real-life Dungeons & Dragoners, for starters, and its isometric, turn-based combat really encourages you to mess with the environment. Set oil slicks ablaze, electrocute soaking enemies, turn that corpse into a bloated bag of flesh and force it to fight for you. There is a central tale about the gods and the fickle games they play with this gang of potential chosen ones. But there are also enough off-beat sidequests and hidden storylines to inspire 82 episodes of a "good cop, bad cop" style Let's Play series. It's a huge, chunky RPG that will keep you enraptured for weeks, possibly months, and that's before you get into the open-ended co-op or the custom adventure creator that lets you design your own stories to take friends through as a benevolent (malevolent?) gamesmaster.
94. Devil Daggers
Publisher: Sorath
Release: 2016
Where can I buy it? Steam, GOG, Humble
Never stop shooting. Never stop moving. The first-person principles of warfare are taken to their logical conclusion in a hellish time trial of reflex and spatial awareness. Horned beasts, floating skulls, boney leviathans, dark squid. The flow of polygonal terrors is as constant as the daggers spewing from your fingertips. You can fire them as a stream, or in a single shotgun-like blast. Either way, you'll need your wits as well as a whip-like wrist to survive for 30 seconds. What more is there to do in Devil Daggers? Well, you try to survive for 31.
93. Final Fantasy XIV
Publisher: Square Enix
Release: 2013
Where can I buy it? Steam, Humble
What once began life in 2010 as an unremarkable online spin-off to Final Fantasy has since become one of the best MMORPGs of all time. Final Fantasy XIV has gone from strength to strength with every expansion it's received since 2010, and it's now been revamped and expanded to the point where many players dive into the land of Eorzea simply for the story quests. Make no mistake, this is still an MMO with plenty of rat-whacking. But it might be the best example of a genre that too often forgets to spin you a yarn as you level up. Here, colour is provided as much by players as by the developers. There are fashion contests, theatre troupes, even a full-blown housing crisis. And, of course, enough lore to fill a small library.
92. Chicory: A Colorful Tale
Publisher: Finji
Release: 2021
Where can I buy it? Steam, Humble
Chicory is a truly special game. Despite its big, chunky picture book veneer, this top-down adventure strikes hard at what it actually means to be a creative, celebrating its joyous and fulfilling highs while also tackling its (sometimes literally) monstrous lows. When all the colour in the world suddenly disappears one day, your character comes into possession of the Wielder's Brush, a magical tool you can drag and splodge across the screen to cover it in paint. As well as using it to bring some life back to this monochrome world, you'll also be solving puzzles with it, and finding out exactly what's causing mysterious black roots to appear around the map and why they're giving off such bad vibes. An ode to self-expression, Chicory's the kind of game that stays with you long after the end credits start to roll.
91. Wildermyth
Developer: Worldwalker Games
Publisher: Worldwalker Games, WhisperGames
Release: 2021
Where can I buy it? Steam
Play Wildermyth, you cowards. No joke, this game is a genuine marvel. On the surface, it's a tactical turn-based RPG about shepherding a bunch of wannabe adventurers around a fantastical world full of monsters. Its battles scratch all those lovely strategic itches you know and love - the flanking bonuses, the cover tiles, the adjacency-depending support skills - but it's also one of the best story generators of the last decade. Thanks to the dozens upon dozens of scripted micro-stories that play out over the course of its story - all based on your characters' personality traits, skills, background, relationships and your own decisions, I might add - Wildermyth's narrative ambitions put other RPGs to shame. You never play the same game twice in Wildermyth, and once you've experienced it, you'll never want to go back to the humdrum tomes of other Tolkien-esque fantasies ever again.
90. Eliza
Publisher: Zachtronics
Release: 2019
Where can I buy it? Steam, GOG, Humble
Eliza is one of those rare games that isn't afraid to ask big tech questions. A challenging yet uplifting visual novel, it puts you in the shoes of Evelyn, a former tech-ite who now works as a human proxy for the eponymous AI counselling programme that helps the world at large deal with its woes and worries. It's an AI that generates things for Evelyn to say to her 'clients', because it's the algorithm that knows best in these cases, not the human sitting across the desk from them. At first you must pick from the list of Eliza-written responses, but later Evelyn has the option to go off-script, with all the potential effects that implies. Eliza is not only beautiful to look at, but it's also compelling to play. Is something better than nothing? Is it worse? What, after all, do we owe to each other?
89. Invisible, Inc.
Developer: Klei Entertainment
Publisher: Klei Entertainment
Release: 2015
Where can I buy it? Steam, GOG, Humble
XCOM for stealthy hackers. As squad leader of a group of well-dressed anti-corporate saboteurs, your job is to infiltrate randomly generated buildings and steal everything that isn't nailed down. It's all on a tidy isometric grid that gradually reveals itself the further you go, peeping through doors and around corners to see the CCTV cameras, laser fences, and armoured security goons patrolling the place. Shh, they don't know you're there… yet. This is Invisible Inc's best feature, a little "alarm level" wheel in the corner that ticks up with every turn. Stay in the building too long without stuffing all your team members into the exit elevator, and more cameras and drones and enemies will start to appear. That's pure danger in a game where, once spotted, there is no fighting back. At some point, you've got to bug out. Even if that last room has precious loot calling out to you. It's a strategy game about pushing your luck to breaking point, and coming away from a mission thinking "that was close, I won't be so greedy next time." But next time the "loot" might be one of your friends.
88. Shadow Tactics: Blades Of The Shogun
Publisher: Daedalic Entertainment
Release: 2016
Where can I buy it? Steam, GOG, Humble
Let the bodies hit the floor (and then pick them up and hide them in a bush). This here's your top-down stealth game set in Edo Japan, featuring the usual cast of seasoned killers. You've got your silent ninja, your honourable samurai, your Geisha assassin, your urchin with a bear trap and a whistle, your old man with... a sniper rifle and a trained Tanuki? It imitates the Commandos games of old, presenting the level like a diorama of possible deaths, and asking the player to come up with a perfect sequence of backstabs, shurikens and environmental "accidents" so they can get through town, eavesdrop on soldiers, or assassinate their leaders. It might take some quicksaving and quickloading, but when the plan comes together it feels like a lethal puzzle well-solved.
87. Red Dead Redemption 2
Developer: Rockstar Studios
Publisher: Rockstar Games
Release: 2019
Where can I buy it? Steam, Humble
Wanna get dead drunk? How about Red Dead drunk? Ha ha ha. No, for real, if you get drunk in this game you'll trip on a railway line and get flattened by a steam train. Rockstar, the developers of this cowboy life simulator, did not hold back. It is not precisely a world of "realism". You will kill hundreds of people and swallow enemy bullets like they are delicate pastries. But there is something about the way plain-faced anti-hero Arthur Morgan walks, the way he rides his horse and holds his revolver. Everything is weighty, everything requires a bit of work. From opening up and scoffing down a jar of health-regenerating offal, to getting out your lasso to hogtie some do-gooder witness to your recent crimes. Red Dead Redemption 2 is video games as wild man power fantasy. But it is also your sit in a canoe and chill out fantasy. Go fishing in the wild west fantasy. Get eaten by a bear fantasy. Drink too much whiskey and wake up in a canyon fantasy. It's a big world out there, and a man can only spit so far.
86. Half-Life: Alyx
Developer: Valve
Publisher: Valve
Release: 2020
Where can I buy it? Steam
Still a masterclass in how to make a VR game, Half-Life: Alyx is clear, undeniable proof that Valve are still very much at the top of their game. Set in City 17 five years before the events of Half-Life 2, you play as a younger Alyx Vance on a mission to rescue her father from the shackles of the Combine. Shooting in VR remains as tense, taut and tactile as ever, and the screech of a head crab has never been more terrifying. After all, it's not your monitor screen they're leaping at any more, but your actual, literal face. But it's the little details that really make Alyx sing, from scribbling on window panes with in-game marker pens in real-time, to playing the piano and simply watching bottles of liquid slosh around in your hand thanks to their impeccable physics. And what hands they are, too. Clad in a nifty pair of gravity gloves, they not only let you reach out and grab whatever object the Combine have left lying around, but they also double up as your health and ammo meters, elegantly removing the need for a traditional HUD. Is it worth buying an entire headset for? Maybe not, unless you have very deep pockets, but if you do have one, this is about as essential as it gets.
85. Monster Prom 3: Monster Roadtrip
Developer: Beautiful Glitch
Publisher: Those Awesome Guys
Release: 2022
Where can I buy it? Steam, GOG
Monster Prom 3 is so new the paint's still wet, but I'm already calling it: this is the best Monster Prom game yet. A follow-up to the original 2018 multiplayer dating sim and its 2020 sequel, Monster Roadtrip delivers on the best of what we've come to expect, but refines the formula significantly. Monster Prom games were always charming, but the shift away from relatively-straightforward dating sim to survival strategy with-dating-elements makes playing this latest entry with pals feel more meaningful. You now have a choice of modes on a sliding scale from co-operative to competitive, and the visual novel sections are much punchier — but no less packed with laughs and lore. Basically every character from the first and second games makes a return, and there are some lovely moments as you see relationships you've been following for the past two games deepen. They've even added save states, so you no longer need to complete each run in a single session! Pure monster-romancin' bliss.
84. Resident Evil Village
Developer: Capcom
Publisher: Capcom
Release: 2021
Where can I buy it? Steam
Resident Evil Village is a blend of slow, creeping horror that lurches out from the shadows to scare you when you least expect it, and riveting action that packs your pockets with ammo before unleashing hordes of ravenous werewolves. That might sound like an identity crisis, but it excels at both halves so triumphantly that it’s hard not to come away impressed. From stumbling through a ghoul-filled cellar flooded with deep ruby wine to blasting iron soldats in the face with a grenade launcher, Resident Evil Village forces you to face your fears and then helps you conquer them with an explosive blast. In other words, it’s nice horror. Horror that guides you through the feeling of shitting your pants and back to the sensible werewolf-slaying champ that you are, rather than leaving you huddled in the corner in a panicked sweat. I appreciate that a lot.
83. Subnautica
Developer: Unknown Worlds Entertainment
Publisher: Unknown Worlds Entertainment
Release: 2018
Where can I buy it? Steam, Humble
Survival games often place you in a harsh environment, usually populated by monsters, zombies or other threats. Subnautica puts you in a world that is only harsh because you don't belong there. There are no monsters here, only animals you haven't seen before. There is so much life in this first-person survivathon, and you'll need to dive among the reefs and sci-fi shipwrecks to find the materials you need to stay alive. Quench your thirst with some Bladderfish, eat a salted Peeper, take refuge in the big underwater cylinder of titanium you will call home. Other survival games would be content to leave it at this - a loop of crafting and getting by. But here, the radio crackles. A beacon! Somebody else might still be alive! This is how the subtle storytelling begins. Off you go on one of the many exploratory dives through this massive, handmade seascape. As a survival game, Subnautica is the best, with perhaps one blocky exception. As a journey of discovery, it is incomparable.
82. XCOM 2
Developer: Firaxis Games
Publisher: 2K Games
Release: 2016
Where can I buy it? Steam, GOG, Humble
XCOM: Enemy Unknown was a landmark moment in the world of tactical strategy games, busting open and rejuvenating a genre that had long since lain dormant. But then Firaxis went and did it again with XCOM 2, remoulding and improving on the original in just about every way possible. In the last game, you were tasked with fending off an alien invasion, but things did not go well, judging by the set up for the story here. Instead, you're now playing as the resistance, turning fights into powerful ambushes rather than messy run-ins with enemies you couldn't see. There's no relying on a constant stream of overwatch cones anymore. Instead, XCOM 2 takes everything that its predecessor already did incredibly well, and shakes it until it is somehow better. There is a base-building overworld to think about. Resources to manage. Troopers to keep healthy. Psychic supersoldiers to train. This is one of the most moreish, plenteous, and - dare I say it - replayable games on this list.
81. Into The Breach
Developer: Subset Games
Publisher: Subset Games
Release: 2018
Where can I buy it? Steam, GOG, Humble
Into The Breach is about as close to the perfection of chess as a strategy game about giant robots is likely to get. While not exactly "minimalist", this dollop of turn-based tactics from the makers of FTL still gets a lot done in a tight space. You command a trio of mechs fighting off swarms of giganto-insects on a 8 x 8 board of tiles. The megabugs are out to topple any buildings on the board, and if too many buildings crumble (or all your pilots are killed) it's game over. What results is a cavalcade of punching, hopping, vapourising, smoke-bombing, and mech-sacrificing that turns a straightforward game of abstract repositioning into a brainy battle for supremacy betwixt humanity and beast.
80. Before Your Eyes
Developer: GoodbyeWorld Games
Publisher: Skybound Games
Release: 2021
Where can I buy it? Steam, Epic Games Store
Before Your Eyes is a first-person story-driven game that takes advantage of your webcam, so when you blink in real life you skip time forwards in-game. Not only is it a beautifully realised world composed of brief vignettes, it's one that's masterfully arranged, steering you through memories of a life's mundane joys and deepest sorrows with an impeccable flow. Above all, the game links you so strongly to the main protagonist through your blinks, it's like you're both physically attached to them and having an out-of-body experience. With a pair of headphones on and a spare 90-minutes, you'll be in your room blinking back tears for a life that's entirely yours until the credits roll. There's nothing quite like it.
79. North
Developer: Gabriel Helfenstein
Publisher: Gabriel Helfenstein
Release: 2016
Where can I buy it? Steam, Itch
I've fought demons and dragons in medieval villages, explored the cities of long-dead aliens, and even driven a car, but no game has made me feel as lost and out of place as first-person explore-o-puzzler North. Applying for asylum in North after fleeing South, you have to integrate into a society you don't understand, following rules which seem arbitrary, feigning beliefs by copying their trappings, and trying to do a job which seems impossibly cruel. What does this society value? What's good and what's bad? How much do I need? How can this be better than the situation we escaped? The answer involves a lot of curiosity, trial and error, and discovering strange and terrible things. How wonderful to feel this lost, confused, unease, threatened, and desperately unhappy.
78. Tomb Raider II
Developer: Core Design
Publisher: Eidos Interactive
Release: 1997
Where can I buy it? Steam, GOG, Humble
Released only 13 months after the original game, Tomb Raider II nevertheless showed off a number of improvements, mainly on the graphical side. Lara Croft now resembled a human being, and could even be taken for the woman on the box if you squinted. The sky overhead was no longer a depthless abyss even in the outdoor sections. Rounded edges were not unheard of. Affectionate ribbing aside: 25 years on, Tomb Raider II still features some of the finest set pieces in the franchise. This one game gave us Venice Violins, one of the most iconic musical compositions in gaming; an underwater level where your sole goal is to outswim a shark; snowmobile navigation sections with a surprising degree of replay value; and, to top it all off, an extended peek at Lara's home Croft Manor in the epilogue. 1998's Tomb Raider III deserves an honourable mention as well, but for the title that really set the standard for action-adventure gaming, it has to be TRII.
77. The Beginner's Guide
Developer: Everything Unlimited Ltd
Publisher: Everything Unlimited Ltd
Release: 2015
Where can I buy it? Steam
The Beginner's Guide is, at its core, an examination of those who create and how other people interpret those creations. It’s a game about games. About relationships. About friendships. Narrated by Davey Wredon, the co-creator of the Stanley Parable, you are guided through a series of unfinished Source Engine games created by Wreden’s online friend. To say any more would be a spoiler, but know this: The Beginner’s Guide is a masterclass in storytelling that results in a vicious gut punch that is completely unforgettable.
76. Garry’s Mod
Developer: Facepunch Studios
Publisher: Valve
Release: 2006
Where can I buy it? Steam
PC gaming "culture", for lack of a better word, can be insular and overly serious. It can also be a wide-open, endlessly creative laugh riot, and few games embody that like Garry’s Mod. Whether it’s acting as the scaffolding for an homemade games-within-a-game or serving as a stop motion animation tool, you can be sure that even today, and probably right now, someone is sat down using Garry’s Mod to make something interesting. Of course, you don’t have to be a modder or aspiring game dev to get your seven quid’s worth. The server browser in Garry’s Mod is unique in its, uh, breadth: besides big-name GMod creations like Prop Hunt and Trouble in Terrorist Town, there are base building games, zombie survival games, obstacle course games, racing games, and uncountable roleplay servers. Or you could just load up a sandbox map and pose an Eli Vance ragdoll giving the Team Fortress 2 Heavy a piggyback. Up to you.