Monkey Island or Little Big Adventure
RetroGaming
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Skyrim. After 200 hours, you start becoming really aware of the "seams" and the clunkiness of the Creation Engine. Although, while you're still working your way through the quests, and every stat isn't at 100 yet, it's pure pure pure bliss. To have that original feeling back. Gah!
Portal or Arkham Asylum, something that surprised me in unexpected ways.
Portal because I thought I was getting a neat puzzle game (I was), but GLADoS blew me out of the water.
Arkham Asylum because of how effectively some of the Scarecrow sequences messed with me specifically (making me think my game had glitched, etc.)
The original Luigi's Mansion. First off little kid me was still scared SHITLESS cause this game has ghosts everywhere. And that dumb kid didn't have a clue what "triangles" or animations" were so in his mind those ghosts could do ANYTHING to poor little Luigi just trying to save his brother.
And the story of course isn't anything super amazing of course, it's a non-rpg Mario game. But again little kid me doesn't know shit. In my mind I can remember thinking "what if E.Gadd is lying and is actually evil. What if I can still find Mario somewhere in this mansion and we can gtfo together.
My family used to rent that shit from Blockbuster all the time and I was youngest of three, so I barely got to play much back then and we wouldn't own it for years. But I can still remember major tears of joy when I finally did and Luigi just starts laughing at Mario with that vent stuck around his neck.
Others for my list that I've seen plenty here so won't gush about the same way is: Dark Souls 1, Both Portal, Destiny if I could experience it from release day and have the shitty content droughts D1 went through constantly, Halo 3, and another I haven't seen is JK: Jedi Outcast
its not exact but LTTP rando gives that sense of new game feel each and every time. The races are great.
Then I double teamed it with https://samus.link/ which is SMZ3 crossover. Races are even better again.
Course all the wonderful hacks for both games. Parallel Worlds for LTTP is wickedly hard but a lot of fun.
Getting in to SM arcade mode recently too.
Both Super Metroid and Zelda are phenomenal.
That Zelda is on my list for sure. I'd add super Mario world as well, just like Zelda did, it introduced so many new mechanics and the maps were so HUGE you could spend absolute weeks trying to unlock all of certain areas.
NBA Jam on SNES.
Wolfenstein or Doom first time really seeing a 3d game. Being absolutely terrified of the ambient noises in Doom.
Half-Life for sure. Relatively intelligent soldier opponent tactics, puzzling real puzzles in 3d for the first time not just point and shoot.
Goldeneye 007. Trying to figure out how to aim, so slowly and ineptly. Then one of your friends says let's try multiplayer and 4 years later...
Warcraft 2 on dial-up with your friend across town.
GTA 2. Discovered almost by accident and the top down view was so great. Never cared much for the rest of the series.
Super Bomberman.
Being absolutely terrified of the ambient noises in Doom.
Yeah, when I was a kid and Doom had first come out, I got scared to death when I walked around a corner and ran into my first pinky; it was horrifying!
There are many games that I loved and would enjoy playing for the first time, but I'm going to pick Mario and Luigi Superstar Saga. My reason being that I spent the vast majority of the game waiting for it to morph into a spiritual successor of Super Mario RPG back when I first played it, rather than giving it a chance to stand on its own as a unique and hilarious game. My preconceived idea of what I hoped the game would be really hurt my initial enjoyment of it.
For a runner up, I'll mention Kirby's Dream Land 3. In the days of Blockbuster rentals, I'd rented Kirby Super Star first, so it took me a while to get used to the more traditional Kirby powerup system where copied abilities only do one type of action each.
My nostalgic answer is Super Smash Bros Brawl (Subspace Emissary was wild to me), but my more modern answer is Elden Ring.
That game was like cocaine the first time I played through it.
Portal 2 and Undertale the true pacifist run
The return of the Obra Dinn. Really fun unique game
I feel its been so long since i last played it might feel new to me, but still it wont be the same as first playthrough.
Read dead redemption 1. A masterpiece.
Morrowind but it wouldn't matter because I don't have enough time to get immersed in it anymore.
Silent Hill 2
I've replayed that game so many times but the first playthrough hits different
That'd have to be Metroid: Zero Mission and The Legend of Zelda: Wind Waker. Two of some of the only games I actually 100%.
Half-Life 2 and Shining in the Darkness.
Probably Fallout New Vegas (if that even counts as retro yet). I've played it to death ever since it came out and can't even remember the first time I completed it.
I have seen no mention of Planescape Torment, so there you go.
Bioshock. I am sure you can just replay it. The twist at the end... I wish I could relive the surprise again.
Quake 3 Arena. Or more specifically OpenArena + baseq3 and other mods like ratmod. Most fun I have had playing a game ever.
That one you can ask enjoy even today regardless though. It's not the story that made it, is the gameplay
Space Invaders
Asteroids
Pitfall
Spyro the Dragon as I was back in the day. That game has always been so magical for me.
If I were to experience it as I am today (and judge it versus games with modern graphics etc), I'd pick Ori and the Will of the Wisps. It quickly became one of my all-time favourite games, and I finished it three times in a year when I discovered it. Beautiful in so many ways.
Half-Life is probably the game that has had the biggest impact on me, though, so that would be my pick if I experienced it as I did around 1998.
Wings for Amiga, flying in WW1 and a cool story between missions. Everything I know about ww1 air battles, I know from that game :)
I agree with lots of what's already been said and haven't got much to add to those extant conversations, so let me try to add in some that I've not seen:
RuneScape is a candidate. I started way back with RS Classic (the sprite-based one!).
Oh, and Dwarf Fortress too. That began in 2009.
Achaea and/or Lusternia are way up there but I don't imagine anyone but me can share the experience.
Oh, as well, Mount & Blade: Warband. Quite the adventure(s).
I don't really game anymore. But this thread did dredge up some memories, old and new.
Thank you.
Dwarf Fortress is one of those games that I love to read about, but I don't think I would actually enjoy playing. Like Eve Online.