Blown away by.. I guess that means I need to find it far more enjoyable than I expected from reviews.
1. Simearth, more for its technological accomplishment of simulating climate, air and ocean circulation, plate tectonics, biosphere and techno sphere on a SNES. Too bad it just isn't fun as a game.
2. Titan Quest. Works perfectly as a Diablo 2.5 (or even a diablo 3 if you really hated Diablo 3). Plays much closer to Diablo 2, but with the added graphics and polish you would expect from something released more recently.
3. Warhammer 40K. A RTS developers first attempt at the notoriously competitive third person hack-and-slash genre, and they nail it perfectly. No 40K game has ever come as close to the atmosphere, personality and canon-accuracy as this, and the gameplay mechanics fit what it means to be a space marine.
4. Red Faction Guerillia. A relatively silent sequel to an otherwise forgettable game... that went on to become an amazing selling masterpiece. Too bad that Armageddon was so terrible it has seemingly killed the rebooted series for good.
5. Call of Duty: World at War. My favorite first person shooter simply due to the depressing and brutal atmosphere of the Campaign (especially the Russian front). The only truly anti-war Call of Duty game. Admittedly, I am not a big fan of FPS games anyway. Also, Nazi Zombies.
6. Pokemon Mystery Dungeon series. A very in-depth commercial roguelike that, when described, ends up sounding like a clusterfuck of ideas that should fail horribly. Actually works and is an excellent game.
1. Simearth, more for its technological accomplishment of simulating climate, air and ocean circulation, plate tectonics, biosphere and techno sphere on a SNES. Too bad it just isn't fun as a game.
2. Titan Quest. Works perfectly as a Diablo 2.5 (or even a diablo 3 if you really hated Diablo 3). Plays much closer to Diablo 2, but with the added graphics and polish you would expect from something released more recently.
3. Warhammer 40K. A RTS developers first attempt at the notoriously competitive third person hack-and-slash genre, and they nail it perfectly. No 40K game has ever come as close to the atmosphere, personality and canon-accuracy as this, and the gameplay mechanics fit what it means to be a space marine.
4. Red Faction Guerillia. A relatively silent sequel to an otherwise forgettable game... that went on to become an amazing selling masterpiece. Too bad that Armageddon was so terrible it has seemingly killed the rebooted series for good.
5. Call of Duty: World at War. My favorite first person shooter simply due to the depressing and brutal atmosphere of the Campaign (especially the Russian front). The only truly anti-war Call of Duty game. Admittedly, I am not a big fan of FPS games anyway. Also, Nazi Zombies.
6. Pokemon Mystery Dungeon series. A very in-depth commercial roguelike that, when described, ends up sounding like a clusterfuck of ideas that should fail horribly. Actually works and is an excellent game.