*Raises hand* Of course, I used to be an obsessive collector of JRPGs before they all got Nomura'd.Kungfu_Teddybear said:This is going from games that I own: Magna Carta. I know no one who has even heard of these games.
*also raises hand* First one kind of sucked, but I heard the second was better.targren said:*Raises hand* Of course, I used to be an obsessive collector of JRPGs before they all got Nomura'd.Kungfu_Teddybear said:This is going from games that I own: Magna Carta. I know no one who has even heard of these games.
Followed up by Return to Krondor a few years later. That counts, right?Vegosiux said:Betrayal at Krondor.
Though, that's not a series.
Ah yes, that was a good one too. Never managed to finish the first one, but did the rest. *grumbles* That damn snake in Whodunit...canadamus_prime said:Hugo's House of Horrors. It's one of those old type in commands for the player to do kinda thing. Sorta like Zork, but with actual graphics.
FirstToStrike said:The Klonoa series, no doubt.
Kungfu_Teddybear said:This is going from games that I own: Magna Carta. I know no one who has even heard of these games.
Nightmare-Child said:Lufia for the SNES. That was fairly obscure.
Lugbzurg said:I really wouldn't know what out of all I've got would be considered the most obscure, but I've got some good ones...
> Army Men
> Bomberman
> Break-Out
> Earthworm Jim
TrevHead said:Langrisser series (TRPG), because most of them never saw localisations outside Japan except the first as Warsong.
That showed up in the Humble Indie Bundle a couple times I don't know if it counts anymore.The said:Anyone ever heard of a little indie game: And Yet It Moves? Pretty cool, but I doubt it's as popular as Braid or Limbo or other indie games.
There's also Timesplitters, which I discovered recently, but never played.