I wanna start pushing back on this whole 2023 shaping up to be one of the greatest years in gaming history that I'm hearing.
What this year is about is there is a LOT of games. We are simply seeing the explosion of stuff that was delayed from Covid. So, yes, of course, there's a lot of good games. There's also a lot of bad games (Redfalls, Gollum, etc). A lot of meh games (Wo Long, Atomic Heart, Atlas Fallen) and a lot of in between and as-yet-to-be-determined consensus (FF16? Diablo 4?).
A lot. A lot of games. So that means depending on how you want to look at it, it's one of the greatest years, or one of the worst years, or one of the meh years. It's an everything year! Personally a great year is the one with bold new game-changing (heh) games.
For example 1998 comes up a lot because of Ocarina of Time and Dance Dance Revolution and Metal Gear Solid and Half-Life, each of which you can write a thesis on its impact.
And the ones that are heralded as great this year so far? Sequels, remakes. All of them, pretty much all of the beloved games this year are unoriginal. Tears of the Kingdom, Street Fighter 6, RE4, Dead Space, etc etc.
I wanna separate the ideas of technical sequels and actual sequels. What I mean is- a technical sequence is a game that is technically a sequel but is so different from its predecessors that it's not really a sequel. Like Breath of the Wild. An actual sequel is one that is technologically and in design a direct follow-up, like Tears of the Kingdom.
So like Baldur's Gate 3 and Armored Core 6 are just technical sequels, I count these as new games.
Then you get the smaller games like Hi-Fi Rush and Dredge and Dave the Diver and Pizza Tower and while I am not disrespecting these games, these kinds of smaller games generally do not define these "great years" discussions.
So far then the only big original game that is generally good and a big deal is Baldur's Gate 3. One- that is one game. Starfield has the potential to start a massive franchise but there is a lot of skepticism and the dang thing ain't out yet. Nothing else coming up this year is on this level.
You can make a case that SF6 is pushing fighting games back into mainstream but that remains to be seen, it will take a while to determine its impact.
So... yeah, if after 2023 there is an explosion of D&D games overtaking other genres as top sellers or fighting games become go-to common experiences or Starfield becomes this generation's Mass Effect, then sure, I'll call 2023 one of The Greatest Years of All Time. But let's wait, shall we? We are in the middle of a post-Covid storm and any analysis and rankings of entire years should wait if it's to make any sense.