The two games no longer in the zeitgeist that absolutely altered my brain are Chrono Trigger and Lufia 2. I played them one after the other repeatedly for the entire late 90's and burned all the weird story and lore bits into my brain
games
Tabletop, DnD, board games, and minecraft. Also Animal Crossing.
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Chrono Trigger may not be in the zeitgeist, but it's absolutely recognized as a classic and sometimes a masterpiece. I would say this game is still thought of quite often. Lufia 2 is a bit more forgotten, but often makes top lists of old RPGs from the golden era (whereas CT is a contender for top 1 in any list)
That canned Resident Evil DS game that got recycled into a spooky moon fps game. You wouldn't believe it, it's called Moon
I'm not sure anyone ever thought of it unfortunately, but Yoku's Island Express was an indie metroidvania pinball game.
I had never really enjoyed a metroidvania before this game, but something about it got me excited about the genre in ways I hadn't been before. I've since played a ton of metroidvanias and its one of my favorite genres.
I highly recommend it if you've never heard of it. It's a lot of fun and uses the pinball mechanics in an open world really well.
Infantry Online. An old game that i think was owned by Sony in the early 2000's. It was F2p for a long time and I played it during that time with my friends. Had an absolute blast with it. But then it went P2P with a subscription, killing most of the playerbase and finally, the game. Its been revived a bit with the above private server, but its just not the same :(
There's a game I don't remember anything from beyond that it was a very interesting RTS with good graphics for it's time and a load of different factions and heroes that had unique dialogue with each other. One of these heroes is a killer cyborg and in an interaction with another hero it'll say "you've got pretty eyes" and then it gets a positive response so it asks "May I have them, if you're not using them?"
That game haunts my mind.
Also just RTS games in general. I miss them. Dawn of War: Dark Crusade was peak and the fact it became yet another squad/hero thing was so sad.
Informed my imagination for years as a kid
This series has been on my backlog for ages i need to get around to it
I found a YouTube link in your comment. Here are links to the same video on alternative frontends that protect your privacy:
Arena fighters CAN be good, but people have forgotten the history
Didn't recognise this at first but looked up a video and I played the shit out of this game.
I forgot about it for like 2 decades before it resurfaced for no apparent reason. I only rented it for a few evenings, but me an my friend played the shit out of it. Remembering it and Power Stone made me think of how we're in a fighting game renaissance, but the arena fighter has been left behind, or even dismissed as fodder for lisenced game purgatory. The only successful remnant still kicking is the platform fighter, which is really just the arena fighter put on its side
Dr. Muto - 2002 PS2 platformer where you can unlock transformations into 5 different creatures: a hamster, gorilla, piranha, spider, and a flying squirrel. Each mutation has different uses - squirrel can fly so you can reach previously unreachable areas, piranha can swim so you can reach the underwater areas of each level, hamster can travel through small gaps/holes. Pretty standard platformer, nothing really special in terms of level design or mechanics, but damn I loved this game as a kid because HE CAN TRANSFORM!! I first played this in the era of Blockbuster right after its release (so like 2002-2004ish) and remember beating it within a day or two & spending the remaining week just flying around the levels as the squirrel. Goofy ass game but it is burned into my memory (especially that little hip-thrust dance Dr. Muto will do when you get a collectable/unlockable)
Godzilla: Destroy All Monsters - 2002-3 Gamecube kaiju fighting game. This shit is what actually put me onto kaiju like Godzilla, Rodan, and Ghidorah. Had a Destruction mode that I really dug where you had to destroy more city buildings/infrastructure than your opponent. You could fucking call in Mothra airstrikes. The NPC Army would attack all monsters randomly with missiles and shit. But above all else, I loved just playing Destruction/Multiplayer mode with my brother and essentially roleplaying our own Godzilla movies.
War of the Monsters - 2003 PS2 kaiju fighting game. I have to pay respects to Destroy All Monsters because without it, I would have never stumbled across this game in Blockbuster as a child and been like "yes!!" but because I had played Destroy All Monsters, I remember being like "yes" immediately. Funnily enough, while Destroy All Monsters used actual kaiju like Godzilla and Rodan, War of the Monsters had 'original' kaiju that were very clearly meant to be shit like Godzilla and Rodan but tweaked enough to avoid copyright/licensing issues. There were a bunch that were wholly, at least from what I remember and know now having seen a ton of actual kaiju/Godzilla films, original though. Kineticlops, a giant fucking humanoid eyeball whose limbs are electricity and Preytor, a giant fucking preying mantis stay in the recesses of my mind. Me & my brother actually wound up BEGGING our dad to buy this game for us after we rented it 3 weeks in a row just so we could spend hours roleplaying as our favorite monsters in battles. Most notably, War of the Monsters had actual terrain/movement features that Destroy All Monsters lacked. Preytor could glide and climb up buildings fast as fuck like a bug, Kineticlops' attacks would bounce and arc between enemies, the larger monsters like the King Kong knockoff (Kongar was its name iirc) could grab things like transmission antennas off of buildings or cars from the road and use them as weapons. You could launch monsters through buildings with combos.
I mean, just look at these two dudes and tell me child you wouldn't go
Jet Set Radio Future - This one isn't wholly forgotten compared to like Dr. Muto or Destroy All Monsters; especially not with the reboot they announced a few years ago, but goddamn thank you Microsoft for bundling this and Sega GT together with new Xbox purchases because this game consumed me. The soundtrack still slaps today, thank you Hideki Naganuma. (Understand understand the concept of love - free love is too tame for him! )
The Simpsons: Hit and Run - Another one that isn't exactly forgotten by most people who were gaming in 2003 but I have to put this one down because more than the other 4 games I've mentioned, this is the one my brother and I were OBSESSED with because we both loved the Simpsons. I spent so much time trying to master the Rocket Car's handling/controls because I was like "holy shit its so fast!!". The Ghost Ship vehicle...the monorail vehicle....my beloveds...10/10 game, especially the fact that they got the official cast to do the VA for the entire game. Bart's 'Eat asphalt, asphalt eaters' is what I say to this day when I'm winning in like Mario Kart. They dunno how to make games this good anymore that's why the Simpsons is on Season 35 or whatever and we still haven't gotten a remaster or even a rerelease of the original on like Steam...
All of the above were basically my childhood with more popular-ish games sprinkled here and there (most people go "what is that??" when I bring up Mortal Kombat Deception and Armageddon, but they recognize Mortal Kombat...can't say the same for Dr. Muto or even Jet Set Radio...Kingdom Hearts 4 will come out in the next decade...I don't even try to bring up Viewtiful Joe to most people because I'm not gonna get tricked into explaining what its about...)
Thanks for actually making me think about all these - I haven't reminisced on them in quite awhile and man, I forgot how much time me & my brother spent sitting in our dining room with the PS2/Gamecube/Dad's Xbox playing all of the above together and essentially just roleplaying. We, of course, did the same kind of thing with Melee (I used to make him pick Ganondorf so I could re-enact OoT with Young Link on the Hyrule Temple stage...we never managed to get the Peach turnip/Falco reflector/Super Scope black hole glitch to work but I probably spent an entire summer trying to convince my brother and sister daily to play with me on Hyrule Temple as Peach/Falco so we could try to get it to work...good times)
Oh man, War of the Monsters, some fun times playing that in college for like 10 hours straight. I remember it being weirdly difficult.
I found YouTube links in your comment. Here are links to the same videos on alternative frontends that protect your privacy:
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thanks babe would you like to play War of the Monsters with me & pretend Preytor and Congar are married and going through a divorce/domestic dispute?? ...No? What about if we play Mortal Kombat Armageddon and I'm Bo Rai Cho and you're Kitana & we do the same thing?? (actual things my siblings and I used to do. dunno why my parents had no problem listening to my older sister be like 'where's my money ho!?!' as she grabbed me with Bo Rai Cho and then subsequently hearing me go 'I don't have your money!! I want a divorce, I'm gonna marry Liu Kang!!' before we started the match for real but then again dad used to love being like 'choose any character and I'll beat you with them' and subsequently doing like the hardest fatalities on us....LOL)
Sega GT and Wreckless: The Yakuza Missions on the og xbox
I really loved the menu music in Sega GT and I think about it a lot
Wreckless had wonderful maps and cool game mechanics. What it lacked was a free roam mode (at least version I played) but maybe bc you only got a taste of it during the missions it made the idea of an open world version of HK more tantalizing
For me it's Brütal Legend. It came out at the height of my metal phase and I just became obsessed with it, I think I've fully played through it at least 12 times.
This shit went so hard on the original thicc cobalt blue NDS. I should really replay it on steam deck
I loved playing that when I was like ten. Genuinely felt like a pretty big adventure and the things like the illegal robot fights outside of the arenas were so cool. There was that one gun you could put on your robot that was like bumblebee themed that was a very fast shooting machine gun that immediately stunlocked your opponents, trivializing every fight. Good times.
Speaking of long forgotten DS games I really enjoyed Spectrobes. Mining for minerals was really calming
I think I was too young to understand how to play Spectrobes so I never got far but the concept was always rad to me
Ps1 has so many gems, alien trilogy, lifeforce tenka, tomba, fighting force, silent bomber, mdk or my personal favourite Apocalypse.
Lawbreakers, best movement shooter and Starhawk, loved being able to deploy a mech (exosuit or transformer with jet mode), jetpacks, mini bases, hoverbikes, walls, turrets, etc.
Played starhawk and loved it never got to play lawbreakers it died too fast. These games would still be alive if they just released community server files but noooo just shut things down forever. Every now and again i think about Section 8
lawbreakers is back unoficially I think, I wouldnt even try on pc as a console player lol, the skill ceiling was high and the playerbase was small while it existed (could still find matches fast) was pretty fun to zip around the map and hit the low gravity zones