For fans of Factorio I highly recommend Dyson Sphere Program. It’s a beautiful factory building game. It’s been in early access for a while now but can already be played like a finished game. There is a combat system coming but that will be totally optional. The only downside is that it’s far more demanding than Factorio when it comes to CPU, especially in the late stages of the game as your factory grows.
Factorio is one of those few games (rim world too) that I can sit down and not realize that HOURS are flying by.
For that alone, Factorio is a must have for anyone who enjoys base building aspects in other games. Also, there is multiplayer on PC. At least with mods it's possible.
My time available for gaming is severely limited, so I'd timebox some time to play, set up a timer and build AFK factories. I noticed that I'd start to find excuses to go to the desk to check an email or pay a bill and would "just check in on my factory" which would turn into "just a quick replenish of my turrets" or to fix an idle driller, then an hour later I'd realize I was 'ate to an appointment.
Later, I set up a private multiplayer server that wouldn't pause on disconnect so that the game wasn't even running on my primary computer.
It's been a while... I should go check on my factory... BRB
Cyberpunk. They fixed most of the issues the game had at launch. There's a dlc coming out soon too that will add a bunch of hours, and with it they are reworking loads of mechanics for free. Can't recommend it enough.
I've got a 1070ti and it runs very smooth on medium-high. Obviously not doing ray tracing or anything, and no mods, but I dial back some of the stuff like anti-aliasing too. Definitely worth giving it another shot if you already have it
Same! Hell, I run it on mostly-ultra, as I prefer image quality to frames most of the time. (also, I'm not 4k or anything.. Just an old 1080p 60hz monitor)
I ran medium to high with 2080 super, 32 gigs of ram, and a ryzen 3600. Frames stayed above 60 in most cases drops in the 40s happened in populated areas.
There's so much variation.. I do the same, wandering around at night, just looking around.
One time I found myself in some dilapidated area with oil derrigs (the big pumps idk wht they're called) and it was all foggy, almost monochrome. mud everywhere.
The problems I have with cyberpunk stem more from the story. It's depressing and has no real happy ending, just an array of at best bittersweet possible endings. Maybe the new DLC will fix that but otherwise it's a bit too much art imitating life for me.
Ahh I love that part. Feels like a nice change of pace that the best ending (for me) is open ended with a little bit of hope. Don't want to spoil for anyone else reading which ending I mean, but I like that it doesn't wrap up in a fully positive way
See I like that one, I just wish it weren't the happiest option. Bittersweet is great for movies but for the best option in a video game that you pour hours into, it can be a bit of a letdown.
I've reeeaaaally gotten into the rogue-like/lite genre. Dead Cells, Hades, Slay the Spire, FTL, Vampire Survivors... Just endlessly fun and entertaining.
Also for all you Vampires lovers, I just picked up a game called Halls of Torment during the Steam sale for cheap. Super fun "vampires-like"
Witcher 3 wild hunt. Game was released in 2015 and we are still getting regular patches 8 years later. Patch 4.03 was just released last May. Engaging storytelling, a vast open world along with 2 expansion pack, deep role-playing elements to create a memorable and immersive gaming experience.
I haven’t been following the Witcher fan discussion group for a while, but what I recalled was that the Netflix show has deviated drastically from the source material (books) which many fans are pissed about, even the main star and fan expert of the material, Henry Cavill left in season 3.
The game dev CD Projekt Red definitely has no rights to Netflix’s Witcher universe and it doesn’t matter. Fans are anticipating the release of Witcher 4 (code name Polaris) which will be a first of a trilogy.
Yeah I've seen the backlash from the community leading up to Henry Caville's departure, but I've been out of the loop so to say since moving over to Lemmy. I kind of assumed that it would be mutually beneficial for CDPR and Netflix to parter on promotions, since I assume it's mutually beneficial in terms of Netflix subs and game purchases. Can't blame CDPR for wanting to focus effort elsewhere though.
Same here, donated to Toady and played for years before moving to masterwork DF, and years there too. Once the keyboard only mode is added to the steam version I'm sure I'll be playing for years there too!
It's kind of funny because I bounced off the game hard the first two times I played it. What really did it for me was the Ideology DLC, gave it a shot on a whim and the amount of structure it gave me for RPing colonies was exactly what I was missing.
Hundreds upon hundreds of hours in now, and it is the game I keep coming back to. Not to mention one of the biggest modding communities I have ever seen in a video game. The only video game subscriptions I maintain currently are to a few Rimworld modders whose work I really enjoy. When I am not playing it, I am working on ideas of themed mod packs to put into it.
Dyson Sphere Program is a close second, it's my favourite factory-builder. It is still in early access but is a VERY polished experience already. Amazing dev communication too.
I haven't see Horizon Zero Dawn in the comments so far. This is probably the best (by graphics, game play, characters, story lines) game I've ever played. I really hope that Horizon Forbidden West is released for PC soon.
Horizon is a great game, it's probably one of my favourite game series of all time at this point. Zero Dawn hit all the storytelling tropes that I typically enjoy in games, and had amazing dynamic combat too. It reminded a bit of monster hunter with the preparation you went into big fights with, but also there was a degree of improvisation when stuff didn't go according to plan.
As someone who didn't think Zero Dawn needed a sequel at all, I actually really enjoyed Forbidden West. I think you'll be in for a good time when you get a chance to play it.
I hit a wall with Rimworld. I've gotten into a slog where I'm doing the same thing every day and can't seem to progress any further. At a loss at what to do next.
Melee is OP if you weren't aware. Put heavy armor and a helmet on a melee specialist and laugh in the face of danger. Alternatively if you prefer killbox combat and you can get a grenade, build 1 pillar or wall with a surrounding roof, throw some rocks under the roof and when enemies shelter beside rocks blow up the pillar, roof collapse -OP
The more villagers you have, the larger the raids. You can have up to 6 villagers without moving up to medium raids. Wealth management is also something to consider, sell/give valuables and unused statues to ally with surrounding villages. This also lowers your chance of getting raided. Finally if Mechs are causing you problems, buy or make emp weapons, they are stupid weak to them. Hope some of that helps.
I have a bunch of mods that allow me to automate garbage separation. Weapons go one way, clothes go the other way, and the bodies are processed into meat and organs accordingly.
It isn't a RimWorld build until people around you ask "what the fuck is wrong with you?"
There's no game I don't eventually get tired of, but here are three that are fantastic and I can recommend playing for hours and hours:
FTL
Slay the Spire
Darkest Dungeon
All indie titles, none of them new, still fantastic and well worth it if you haven't played any on this list. Also all challenging roguelikes, so be warned. =P
I put over 30 hours into this game and ended up not recommending it on steam.
Weird progression in that game. The sushi segments just turned into me cleaning dishes and grating wasabi...and I thought the entire sea people quest was bland... Also, Nexon is a pretty crap company but that's not so much a comment about the game. Another comment about the game is the forced fetishizing of shark murder. It made me deliver a shark head to a customer on a plate and watch them cry from happiness while they ate it. STOP MURDERING SHARKS???
I have launched this game several times and always end up wandering around aimlessly before getting killed in the wilderness. Is it possible to get into without following a wiki?
It absolutely is but getting some beginner tips could be a good idea.
For instance if you get bandits to chase you into a shop the gaurds will deal with them. You can then loot all the bodies.
Getting hit trains toughness and defense. Likewise hitting people trains your attack.
So getting beaten up is good but you need to make sure you don't get knocked out (you'll most likely bleed out with low toughness) or have a second person ready to heal you with med kits after the fight hiding somewhere.
Outside of towns is super dangerous until later in the game.
Also running is a very good option if you are out powered. You train your athletics by running. It trains faster if you aren't over encumbered.
I didn't use the wiki until 50+ hours in. You need to make your own goals. I started by making a thief and just stealing my way to the top.
You can fairly easily make money and skill up by just running around carrying and selling shit. Specialize your first characters, make the next companions workers.
It's very much a sandbox where you make your own story.
I kind of had the same experience with it, except I actually managed to get really into it one time. I started as a prisoner in a giant mine, and had a shitload of fun trying and failing to escape. After many hours, I finally did it, and lost interest shortly afterwards because things got too confusing again.
I got Slay the Spire recently from the steam summer sale since it’s so cheap. I haven’t been able to put it down. It’s such a time suck, and I normally don’t even like card games. I would 100% recommend it.
Cyberpunk2077 at the moment. Got more than 250 hours on it. Before that I played Dishonored a lot and that before the very first Deus Ex. The story was just incredible and IMHO still is one of the best in video game history.
I'm in the middle of my first AB playthrough. I'm currently trying to figure out yellow science and it's like like I'm living in a dream world trying to juggle all these fluids. I almost need to start over I've got such a crazy spaghetti mess with all these fluids and minerals
This game is so good, and the mods make it even better
I'm flabbergasted we're getting no metroidvania love in here so I'll list my two favorites: Hollow Knight and Blasphemous. Both with sequels coming out this year which I'm so excited about!
Civilization for me... I don't mind the newer versions but I'm old enough that I've played it since Civ I and I do sort of feel like it's lost something as the graphics have improved and animations were introduced.
Still, irrespective of the version, every game is a little different and eats hours like nothing else.
While they do now have multiplayer modes thanks to their corresponding open source projects, I still think the spirit of these games is firmly in the single player pc game category. Best of all they're both free and available on any OS!
I didn't care about the hype before it was released, then I waited when I heard about all the bugs and tried it in 1.6. The game is really good when you take it for what it is, rather than what you or others think it should have been.
I bought at the same time as you. Waited it out. for me, it was pretty true to the pen and paper game - which I enjoyed. And I loved the story. 10/10 for me.I rarely stick with games. I'm not much of a gamer. The only games I've played through start to finish are Super Mario 64, Neverwinter Nights (PC), CP2077, and Hogwarts Legacy. I tend to play sports or shooters, so it takes a lot for me to stick something out to completion.
A bit more than once a decade I play them on emulator and try to 100% them. Great fun. I also try to make sure to visit the locations in the real world if I'm on holiday nearby where they based a level.
It's kind of sad that the Venice Beach area hasn't existed since the 90s.
Edit: I did just realise this thread is about PC games, but I do play them on PC albeit through a PlayStation emulator. I do believe the games are available on PC.
It just keeps on giving. I had so many playthroughs on my old Xbox before getting into the PC modding in college.
Thankfully, this will run on basically anything now, so I have all the nice stutter fixes and unofficial performance patches on my laptop. Beats the hell out of restarting the game on console every time it crashed.
I heard good things about the New California story mod and recently set that up, so I'm pretty stoked.
Haven't played around with Fallout 3's mod scene as much but I'd guess they may have some story mods that might be worth looking into as well.
It just keeps on giving. I had so many playthroughs on my old Xbox before getting into the PC modding in college.
Thankfully, this will run on basically anything now, so I have all the nice stutter fixes and unofficial performance patches on my laptop lol beats the hell out of restarting the game on console every time it crashed.
I heard good things about the New California story mod and recently set that up, so I'm pretty stoked.
Haven't played around with Fallout 3's mod scene as much but I'd guess they may have some story mods that might be worth looking into as well.
Total: Factorio. Though I do think I need to put that one on hold after I'm finally done with my current save - which is not far out anymore. Also, this game has multiplayer so it may technically not count.
Recent: Derail Valley, a very down-to-basics train simulator, focusing on cargo rail in a fictional rendition of an area in the Balkans. They recently put out a major update, which makes all kinds of simulation features much more expansive.
I understand that this game is popular and has a significant fanbase. However, I've never played it. Could you share the features that drew you into playing this game? I'd like to enjoy it, but simply watching the gameplay didn't suffice to persuade me.
The random generated dungeons and amount of different items do it for me. The game might have a steep learning curve initially though until you figure out the core mechanics
Since nobody has mentioned it, I'll throw in "X4: Foundations". The X series is janky in places but oh so satisfying if you can get past the jank. Build a military empire to take over the galaxy, or maybe a trading empire. Or maybe you want to become an industrialist and build huge stations to print money. You can be a pirate or a salvager or any combination of the above. And there are tons of interesting mods if you get sick of the vanilla game.
Neverwinter Nights is the 2002 Bioware game, remastered a few years ago with its Enhanced Edition, can be bought in GOG or Steam. Pretty good still for those that liked Baldurs Gate I and II
Dying Light, absolutely fantastic pakour zombie smasher with one of the best cities in gaming. Bought it originally (on a disc) many years ago and played it so much the disc died and I was inconsolable until Epic gave away the ultimate edition and I was finally able to play The Following DLC.
Now I go and look at Dying Light 2 on Steam and wish my stupid country wasn't so damn expensive, even on sale at 50% off it still costs almost as much as a brand new AAA game in the states. Regional pricing my ass, we always get stung so hard for tech down here.
Definitely Civilization in general. There’s a lot of other games I like that are completely different, but year after year I come back to the Civilization series. And even though they peaked at Civ5, it’s still one of the few games I’ll preorder as soon as the next one is available.
Hellblade: Senua's Sacrifice made me gain a deeper understanding of what my BFF went through, almost 13 years ago, when she took her life after battling with psychosis and not able to fight her delusions.
It's an incredibly deep storyline, and they did an amazing job at captivating the essence of how some minds work. I cried when I played, and cried when I completed it, yet they were beautiful tears all the same. Very well made game, and I actually came to this post to give it a mention as well.
Cassette Beasts, it's like Pokémon far more different than other pokeclones, and far higher quality imo. The beast designs are great, and there's a cool fuse mechanic you can use to fuse any two Beasts, with unique art (over 16,000 possible fusions). Also the shiny-equivalent is better done and actually useful.
Heard so many good things about it, but I just couldn't get into it. Played it for one evening and haven't picked it up again. It was frustratingly hard sometimes and while the complete absence of clues was a refreshing change from the extensive handholding in contemporary gaming, I think just some more bread crumbs would have improved the overall experience.
Since you seem to basically be me, I would recommend Dyson Sphere Program if you haven't tried it yet. My favourite of the factory games, and they have their big combat update coming in soon too.
My go to would be Skyrim, but i actually stopped playing about a year ago. My current one would be cyberpunk but i'm waiting for the dlc and playing diablo 4 atm.
Such a good game.
I played it so much in hotseat with my brothers when we where kids.
Still playing it, when my brother visits, on the big TV.
Last time we got us 1kg of Mett and some Roles, and played it the whole day. 😅
For a long time it was Heroes of Might and Magic 4 for me -- I know it's the "black sheep" of the series, but I really like that heroes are actual parts of your party (I also played a lot while growing up, so nostalgia plays a role and that's what I got used to)
I've also recently began playing Spacebourne 2. It's janky and unpolished as fuck, but it's proving really interesting thus far. Considering it's done by a single dude, it's a miracle it even works.
For real. I was already over 400 hours logged before I got my Index, and now with the help of Wabbajack, I'm at a number that would likely get an eyebrow from my therapist. 🤪
The Sims 2. I’ve played a fair amount of all four Sims games including their mobile editions, and Sims 2 remains my favorite after a near (yeeesh) 20 years.
The modding community is still relatively robust, especially for a game that’s so old and out of the four, I feel like I can enjoy even the basic gameplay as a storyteller in Sims 2 more than in 3 or 4. In Sims 3, the focus was less on playing multiple families, so it had to be modded right out of the gate to get back to its foundation and I never liked the way the sims looked. Sims 4 “feels” a lot more like Sims 2, which a lot of people hated, but its expansion and content packs are a complete joke. It costs like $2K to have everything, and they’re still releasing packs. I know it’s just the state of gaming these days, but it just sucks the fun out of a lot of the game.
Half the fun these days, though, is just getting the game up and running on modern PCs. I installed a new hard drive a few months ago and it took the better part of a weekend to get the game fully installed and running. I do have Ultimate Collection, but the less time I have to spend in that stupid EA app, the better.
This is probably my second choice, I have actually never made it to the "endgame" of ONI despite that. Never actually lost a colony, but I just particularly like those first 50 cycles of scrapping things together the most.
I love the Klei art style, and the more engineering style approach to colony building is one I don't see that much.
I love to start a new round of Civ 6 or a create a new city in City Skylines, because i learned so much from my previous mistakes and this time i will create a perfect civ/city... only to make super stupid mistakes nonetheless and fail miserably.
It's still great fun though.
Same here. Great game. If you've finished everything the Gungeon has to offer, check out Voidigo. It just released not too long ago and scratches that itch while still being very unique in its own right.
It's not really a single single player game, more a set of specific genres: "Ubisoft open world", "Immersive sim" (especially Arkanes), "Bethesda RPG" (Even 76 which ye cna play pretty much solo), "Walking Sim" (a genre I fell in love with this past year)
Most of them that I play since I'm not big on multiplayer. Lots of RPGs (Mass Effect Legendary), colony sims (Rimworld), city builders (Banished), and grand strategy games (Stellaris)
Ring of Pain. It's a creepy dungeon crawler roguelite.
I don't know why, I've seen everything the game has to offer and somehow I keep coming back to it.
Crusader Kings, Europe universalis and imperator Rome. I know this is three games but it's the same general idea, as a history fan, this game scratches a very specific itch for me
There's also bannerlord/warband, amazing experience, sorta like ck3 on a micro level
I tend to get bored of games fairly quickly. I'll hop from game to game to game, over and over again, never (rarely) beating a game before moving on to the next. Sometimes I come back to these games I've abandoned and start over, only to repeat the cycle. There's only one game that I keep going back to again and again. The Sims. I do wish there were other competing life sim games that offered a similar amount of content and mod support, but alas, there's nothing out there quite like it yet.
Some of mine have already been said, so I'll bring up Barotrauma as one of mine! Give me some mods for extra content and I'll be able to play for many many hours.
I tried a couple of times but I can't seem to progress anywhere past Joppa. I think I've seen red rock once. Anyway, I Either die or I get lost or somehow lose interest in it. Would be really cool if someone could tell me how to actually play the game, what to do when and how and what the overall goal/story is
I've always had a soft spot for Caves of Qud, I love exploring in games and it never disappoints :)
Just don't go to Red Rock straight away, it's way too tough to do that one. Talk to the inventor guy (Argive I think?) and do some quests for him.
Also, there's no shame in playing the easier Roleplay or Wanderer modes. It's all about having fun in the end!
Talk to the zealot in Joppa, get the quest to go to the Stilt, then kill the zealot (you won't get in trouble for it), take his book, then raid the three chests in the enclosed rooms (shut the door behind you first!)
That'll give you some stuff to trade.
Then go up to the Stilt - it's a long trek but you get like four levels worth of experiencre from that quest just for showing up!
Spelunky (HD/2) is my goto chill game. Put Spotify on and just start going for the hard end. It's a 2D, roguelike platformer about exploring a series of caves, and shouldn't be as addicting as it is.
I have no idea why, but I cant get enough of it. 200 hours in HD, 250 in 2, and I also had it on X360 a while back that didnt track time.
In the category of "bullet-heaven" / vampire survivors I have been putting a lot of time into Bio-Prototype. It has a really amazing upgrade/combination system for your weapons. And it also only costs like $4
That's a really good question, I think they should, as the AI just works with what it's given and if that means less thrusting then it's probably happier.
It makes long distance vehicles feel a lot better too. It inspired me to make a runway, add the speed mod and then set the max speed to 300m/s.
Almost perfect "simple" rts. Nothing terribly complicated about how it works. Really the only thing that keeps me from saying it is perfect is the lack of ability to set rally points for units or select multiple planets to move all the seedlings(units) all at once.
The game is designed to be played with multiple players. Even in single player mode, you take turns against the computer which is technically a player in the game. There is no mode where you're just playing with yourself, I would not by any means consider it a single player game and that's by its nature. Basically a computerized board game that requires you to play against an opponent human or ai
If you're trying to argue that Civilization is a multiplayer game first, you're starting a losing battle. Civ was always and still is a single player game front and center.
You might not like that, but that's how the game has always been.
You take turns against other players, real or computer. Doesn't matter who's in control of the players, even since CIV 1 this is how the game works. It's turn based, by nature it's multiplayer. The game is literally designed as a multiplayer computerized board game. This is absolutely not a first player game front and center. A game like that would be pure single player experience like a Mario or Zelda game
Does it though? If all the players start on relatively equal footing with similar goals where only one can win, does it matter who is in control of the other players?
I will say, this topic also spurred a healthy discussion in my house. In the instance of civ, I firmly believe AI opponents who are playing the same game as you qualify it as inherently multiplayer even when playing alone.
Civilization 4: Fall from heaven: Ashes of Erebus. It can be played multiplayer of course, but I almost exclusively play single-player. The lore is fun, the event system can be interesting, the combinations of awesome Civs+Leaders+Religions+Magic really up the replayability. The end game with hundreds of units amongst a large number of factions with hell terrain encroaching makes for a very dynamic endgame.
Factorio. The factory must grow. Started on my Switch until I could no longer save games, then migrated to laptop. Because the Factory. Must. Grow.
Never in my life have I been so hooked on a game.
For fans of Factorio I highly recommend Dyson Sphere Program. It’s a beautiful factory building game. It’s been in early access for a while now but can already be played like a finished game. There is a combat system coming but that will be totally optional. The only downside is that it’s far more demanding than Factorio when it comes to CPU, especially in the late stages of the game as your factory grows.
Factorio is one of those few games (rim world too) that I can sit down and not realize that HOURS are flying by.
For that alone, Factorio is a must have for anyone who enjoys base building aspects in other games. Also, there is multiplayer on PC. At least with mods it's possible.
I have never played a game with such a compelling gameplay loop.
What's your favourite game set up? I just finished the vanilla set up with enemies.
My time available for gaming is severely limited, so I'd timebox some time to play, set up a timer and build AFK factories. I noticed that I'd start to find excuses to go to the desk to check an email or pay a bill and would "just check in on my factory" which would turn into "just a quick replenish of my turrets" or to fix an idle driller, then an hour later I'd realize I was 'ate to an appointment.
Later, I set up a private multiplayer server that wouldn't pause on disconnect so that the game wasn't even running on my primary computer.
It's been a while... I should go check on my factory... BRB
Have you tried Mindustry? It's supposed to be like factorio and it is open source.
I'm really not good at it, but I still love it.
Cyberpunk. They fixed most of the issues the game had at launch. There's a dlc coming out soon too that will add a bunch of hours, and with it they are reworking loads of mechanics for free. Can't recommend it enough.
Did performance improve? I couldn’t get it anywhere close to playable on my 2080 super without dropping the quality to potato, so I gave up on it.
I've got a 1070ti and it runs very smooth on medium-high. Obviously not doing ray tracing or anything, and no mods, but I dial back some of the stuff like anti-aliasing too. Definitely worth giving it another shot if you already have it
Same! Hell, I run it on mostly-ultra, as I prefer image quality to frames most of the time. (also, I'm not 4k or anything.. Just an old 1080p 60hz monitor)
I ran medium to high with 2080 super, 32 gigs of ram, and a ryzen 3600. Frames stayed above 60 in most cases drops in the 40s happened in populated areas.
I have a 2060 super and it ran perfectly on high. I think I had maybe one crash in my entire playthrough
I played it on a 5500XT and it ran fine. Maybe a handful of crashes per 100h and few bugs / glitches.
I played it almost all the way through on a 1080 and it looked and performed great. I did tweak a lot of the settings to get it to peak performance.
Average FPS was around 40. Obviously not running at monitor resolution.
It was a great game even with the issues it had. I'm really looking forward to the DLC, if only as an excuse to revisit the game!
I did much of the same thing
It turns out building a better pc and playing cyberpunk has the same effect as walking around a city on acid.
Who would've thought
There's so much variation.. I do the same, wandering around at night, just looking around.
One time I found myself in some dilapidated area with oil derrigs (the big pumps idk wht they're called) and it was all foggy, almost monochrome. mud everywhere.
It was so beautiful.
The problems I have with cyberpunk stem more from the story. It's depressing and has no real happy ending, just an array of at best bittersweet possible endings. Maybe the new DLC will fix that but otherwise it's a bit too much art imitating life for me.
Ahh I love that part. Feels like a nice change of pace that the best ending (for me) is open ended with a little bit of hope. Don't want to spoil for anyone else reading which ending I mean, but I like that it doesn't wrap up in a fully positive way
See I like that one, I just wish it weren't the happiest option. Bittersweet is great for movies but for the best option in a video game that you pour hours into, it can be a bit of a letdown.
Ahh, one of my favorites. Might install this again.
What??? You uninstalled it?
Now ye are going to have to reinstall all yer mods again (that is a game in and of itself though)
Haha, I'll have to reinstall it. I've bookmarked few hundred mods at least.
You know there is a skyrim mods community here on lemmy? Come break the game with us!
![email protected]
Thanks!
Figuring out which mod pack I want to install took longer than my actual playtime atm 🥲. It’s always the same story with Skyrim
You know there is a skyrim mods community here on lemmy? Come break the game with us!
![email protected]
I've reeeaaaally gotten into the rogue-like/lite genre. Dead Cells, Hades, Slay the Spire, FTL, Vampire Survivors... Just endlessly fun and entertaining. Also for all you Vampires lovers, I just picked up a game called Halls of Torment during the Steam sale for cheap. Super fun "vampires-like"
Rimworld
RimWorld is a time machine. I start it up and then look at the clock and I'm 5 hours in the future.
I've once started a colony right before exams period. It was tough.
Witcher 3 wild hunt. Game was released in 2015 and we are still getting regular patches 8 years later. Patch 4.03 was just released last May. Engaging storytelling, a vast open world along with 2 expansion pack, deep role-playing elements to create a memorable and immersive gaming experience.
Have they discussed any more show tie-in content? Was hoping they would use that for promotions.
I haven’t been following the Witcher fan discussion group for a while, but what I recalled was that the Netflix show has deviated drastically from the source material (books) which many fans are pissed about, even the main star and fan expert of the material, Henry Cavill left in season 3.
The game dev CD Projekt Red definitely has no rights to Netflix’s Witcher universe and it doesn’t matter. Fans are anticipating the release of Witcher 4 (code name Polaris) which will be a first of a trilogy.
Yeah I've seen the backlash from the community leading up to Henry Caville's departure, but I've been out of the loop so to say since moving over to Lemmy. I kind of assumed that it would be mutually beneficial for CDPR and Netflix to parter on promotions, since I assume it's mutually beneficial in terms of Netflix subs and game purchases. Can't blame CDPR for wanting to focus effort elsewhere though.
Idk why, but this sounds like an advertisement so much :)
Dwarf Fortress is beautiful.
This is my answer. Donated to Toady1 a couple times, then bought it on steam.
Same here, donated to Toady and played for years before moving to masterwork DF, and years there too. Once the keyboard only mode is added to the steam version I'm sure I'll be playing for years there too!
Slay the spire. Probably have close to 1000 hours playing it and I'm still addicted.
Same. I also own it on the switch and phone. Most re-playable game I own.
I've heard about it a few times, need to give it a try.
Yes same. I've bought it 3 times now, for PC, Android and Switch. Almost 400 hours on Steam alone.
Mindustry. People compare it to Factorio, but Mindustry (which also has an Android version) is open source.
FTL. Theme song triggers ptsd in my wife.
Dwarf Fortress, been playing it off and on for many years now. I happily bought the steam version when it came out!
Please don't make fun of me but I am a die-hard SimCity guy
Binding of Isaac
+1. Just turned 300hours corner, and I'm not done at all.
Rimworld.
It's kind of funny because I bounced off the game hard the first two times I played it. What really did it for me was the Ideology DLC, gave it a shot on a whim and the amount of structure it gave me for RPing colonies was exactly what I was missing.
Hundreds upon hundreds of hours in now, and it is the game I keep coming back to. Not to mention one of the biggest modding communities I have ever seen in a video game. The only video game subscriptions I maintain currently are to a few Rimworld modders whose work I really enjoy. When I am not playing it, I am working on ideas of themed mod packs to put into it.
Dyson Sphere Program is a close second, it's my favourite factory-builder. It is still in early access but is a VERY polished experience already. Amazing dev communication too.
Cities Skylines for me. It's like building my own little world that I would want to live and work in
I haven't see Horizon Zero Dawn in the comments so far. This is probably the best (by graphics, game play, characters, story lines) game I've ever played. I really hope that Horizon Forbidden West is released for PC soon.
Horizon is a great game, it's probably one of my favourite game series of all time at this point. Zero Dawn hit all the storytelling tropes that I typically enjoy in games, and had amazing dynamic combat too. It reminded a bit of monster hunter with the preparation you went into big fights with, but also there was a degree of improvisation when stuff didn't go according to plan.
As someone who didn't think Zero Dawn needed a sequel at all, I actually really enjoyed Forbidden West. I think you'll be in for a good time when you get a chance to play it.
Absolutely! Hunting Thunderjaws feels epic as all hell!
RimWorld.
Yes, I am a degenerate.
I hit a wall with Rimworld. I've gotten into a slog where I'm doing the same thing every day and can't seem to progress any further. At a loss at what to do next.
As in difficulty spike or out of ideas?
Difficulty spike. Like my drones aren't self sustaining well enough, and i don't know how to fix it.
Melee is OP if you weren't aware. Put heavy armor and a helmet on a melee specialist and laugh in the face of danger. Alternatively if you prefer killbox combat and you can get a grenade, build 1 pillar or wall with a surrounding roof, throw some rocks under the roof and when enemies shelter beside rocks blow up the pillar, roof collapse -OP The more villagers you have, the larger the raids. You can have up to 6 villagers without moving up to medium raids. Wealth management is also something to consider, sell/give valuables and unused statues to ally with surrounding villages. This also lowers your chance of getting raided. Finally if Mechs are causing you problems, buy or make emp weapons, they are stupid weak to them. Hope some of that helps.
Thanks for the tips. I was trying to treat this more like an x4 colony sim than it is I think.
I have a bunch of mods that allow me to automate garbage separation. Weapons go one way, clothes go the other way, and the bodies are processed into meat and organs accordingly.
It isn't a RimWorld build until people around you ask "what the fuck is wrong with you?"
There's no game I don't eventually get tired of, but here are three that are fantastic and I can recommend playing for hours and hours:
All indie titles, none of them new, still fantastic and well worth it if you haven't played any on this list. Also all challenging roguelikes, so be warned. =P
The most recent, Dave the diver!!
Just picked this one up yesterday and I’ve totally been hooked. Reminds me of stardew valley mixed with subnautica.
I put over 30 hours into this game and ended up not recommending it on steam.
Weird progression in that game. The sushi segments just turned into me cleaning dishes and grating wasabi...and I thought the entire sea people quest was bland... Also, Nexon is a pretty crap company but that's not so much a comment about the game. Another comment about the game is the forced fetishizing of shark murder. It made me deliver a shark head to a customer on a plate and watch them cry from happiness while they ate it. STOP MURDERING SHARKS???
The Outer Wilds. Best space exploration game with environmental storytelling I have ever played. And that ending...chef's kiss made me cry.
The best gaming experience of my life. I wish I could forget everything and play it again. Did you play EotE?
I am in the middle of playing it. I am usually pretty immune to jump scares but with this I have to take a break.
Minesweeper.
Kenshi. It's very unique and one of my favourite games. It also has an amazing modding community.
I have launched this game several times and always end up wandering around aimlessly before getting killed in the wilderness. Is it possible to get into without following a wiki?
When you start the game you are incredibly weak.
It absolutely is but getting some beginner tips could be a good idea.
For instance if you get bandits to chase you into a shop the gaurds will deal with them. You can then loot all the bodies.
Getting hit trains toughness and defense. Likewise hitting people trains your attack.
So getting beaten up is good but you need to make sure you don't get knocked out (you'll most likely bleed out with low toughness) or have a second person ready to heal you with med kits after the fight hiding somewhere.
Outside of towns is super dangerous until later in the game.
Also running is a very good option if you are out powered. You train your athletics by running. It trains faster if you aren't over encumbered.
I didn't use the wiki until 50+ hours in. You need to make your own goals. I started by making a thief and just stealing my way to the top.
You can fairly easily make money and skill up by just running around carrying and selling shit. Specialize your first characters, make the next companions workers.
It's very much a sandbox where you make your own story.
If you're taking suggestions I recommend watching https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXFIaWk23rSznUxxUMAiNoo24Nx4IPBsX You can learn the basics as you watch him suffer.
Here is an alternative Piped link(s): https://piped.video/playlist?list=PLXFIaWk23rSznUxxUMAiNoo24Nx4IPBsX
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
I'm open-source, check me out at GitHub.
I kind of had the same experience with it, except I actually managed to get really into it one time. I started as a prisoner in a giant mine, and had a shitload of fun trying and failing to escape. After many hours, I finally did it, and lost interest shortly afterwards because things got too confusing again.
It's not unlike Valheim in that way, to be fair. Use a wiki sparingly, just to get your feet under you, and then leave it behind. 🤌🏼
Age of Empires 2 in campaign mode
Roller Coaster Tycoon.
Kenshi
Can't get enough of pain?
Me either, brother.
Can't get enough of pain?
Me either, brother.
Can't get enough of pain?
Me either, brother.
I got Slay the Spire recently from the steam summer sale since it’s so cheap. I haven’t been able to put it down. It’s such a time suck, and I normally don’t even like card games. I would 100% recommend it.
Cyberpunk2077 at the moment. Got more than 250 hours on it. Before that I played Dishonored a lot and that before the very first Deus Ex. The story was just incredible and IMHO still is one of the best in video game history.
RimWorld, I can't stop playing it for at least 6 hours every time I launch it.
Also Factorio until I got stuck on making the fucking trains work
The trains aren't that mad to figure out.
As for station stopping instructions, that'll take a few more lines to go into.
You just need s good intersection blueprint to make trains work, after i found that i became adicted to expand the train network.
factorio trains were a mess to get into without mods and prior to train limits. they're kinda fine now :)
Factorio
The factory must grow...
I'm in the middle of my first AB playthrough. I'm currently trying to figure out yellow science and it's like like I'm living in a dream world trying to juggle all these fluids. I almost need to start over I've got such a crazy spaghetti mess with all these fluids and minerals
This game is so good, and the mods make it even better
I'm flabbergasted we're getting no metroidvania love in here so I'll list my two favorites: Hollow Knight and Blasphemous. Both with sequels coming out this year which I'm so excited about!
Subnautica and Planet Crafter.
The best "just one more thing!" games I've ever found. Huge chunks of time just disappear for me and the people that I've had play it. Very rewarding.
Factorio, Satisfactory, and Minecraft. Generally sandbox games keep me interested the longest since you're just limited by your creativity there.
Came here looking for factorio. Great game and possibly the most stable piece of software I've come across
Civilization for me... I don't mind the newer versions but I'm old enough that I've played it since Civ I and I do sort of feel like it's lost something as the graphics have improved and animations were introduced. Still, irrespective of the version, every game is a little different and eats hours like nothing else.
Kerbal Space Program
Have you played KSP 2 yet?
I started Kerbal during it's alpha, but I haven't read anything at all about the sequel.
The Mass Effect trilogy.
Rollercoaster Tycoon / OpenRCT2
Transport Tycoon Deluxe / OpenTTD
While they do now have multiplayer modes thanks to their corresponding open source projects, I still think the spirit of these games is firmly in the single player pc game category. Best of all they're both free and available on any OS!
OoenTTD is amazing
Those plus Tropico. The first one. Scratches the same itch as RCT for me.
Ive heard good things about Tropico but have never actually played it. I really need to get on that!
My friends make fun of me for it but...
Football Manager.
I know it's a spreadsheet simiulator but I can't stop.
Cyberpunk 2077 story
I didn't care about the hype before it was released, then I waited when I heard about all the bugs and tried it in 1.6. The game is really good when you take it for what it is, rather than what you or others think it should have been.
thats the problem i personally had with it. overpromises and underdeliverances, even after the patches
I bought at the same time as you. Waited it out. for me, it was pretty true to the pen and paper game - which I enjoyed. And I loved the story. 10/10 for me.I rarely stick with games. I'm not much of a gamer. The only games I've played through start to finish are Super Mario 64, Neverwinter Nights (PC), CP2077, and Hogwarts Legacy. I tend to play sports or shooters, so it takes a lot for me to stick something out to completion.
I miss when CDPR included the DLC when you bought from them direct.
Tony Hawk's Pro Skater games 1 through 4.
A bit more than once a decade I play them on emulator and try to 100% them. Great fun. I also try to make sure to visit the locations in the real world if I'm on holiday nearby where they based a level.
It's kind of sad that the Venice Beach area hasn't existed since the 90s.
Edit: I did just realise this thread is about PC games, but I do play them on PC albeit through a PlayStation emulator. I do believe the games are available on PC.
You should try the remaster of 1+2 on PC. It's legit. And it has a park creator, you can share parks too.
STALKER - with mods this game looks amazing and it's so immersive. I had so many fun/terrifying hours on this
Bayonetta
Dwarf Fortress
Cyberpunk
Mass Effect
Morrowind
Inscryption
For basically daily consumption, definitely Paradoy Grand Strategy games for me, EU4, Vic3, CK3, HoI4, one of those almost always manages to work out.
As a game that I can endlessly revisit with short pauses in between, Disco Elysium, never fails to resonate with me.
On my 3rd playthrough of Fallout: New Vegas
It just keeps on giving. I had so many playthroughs on my old Xbox before getting into the PC modding in college.
Thankfully, this will run on basically anything now, so I have all the nice stutter fixes and unofficial performance patches on my laptop. Beats the hell out of restarting the game on console every time it crashed.
I heard good things about the New California story mod and recently set that up, so I'm pretty stoked.
Haven't played around with Fallout 3's mod scene as much but I'd guess they may have some story mods that might be worth looking into as well.
It just keeps on giving. I had so many playthroughs on my old Xbox before getting into the PC modding in college.
Thankfully, this will run on basically anything now, so I have all the nice stutter fixes and unofficial performance patches on my laptop lol beats the hell out of restarting the game on console every time it crashed.
I heard good things about the New California story mod and recently set that up, so I'm pretty stoked.
Haven't played around with Fallout 3's mod scene as much but I'd guess they may have some story mods that might be worth looking into as well.
Looking at my steam:
Total: Factorio. Though I do think I need to put that one on hold after I'm finally done with my current save - which is not far out anymore. Also, this game has multiplayer so it may technically not count.
Recent: Derail Valley, a very down-to-basics train simulator, focusing on cargo rail in a fictional rendition of an area in the Balkans. They recently put out a major update, which makes all kinds of simulation features much more expansive.
I recently just played through the whole Bioshock series for the first time. Top tier games for sure, and still hold up very well.
OpenTTD.
Yeah baby. I don't know how many hours I've spent on this.
For a hot month at a time, The Sims, then never again for the rest of the year
The Binding of Isaac. It is too addictive
I understand that this game is popular and has a significant fanbase. However, I've never played it. Could you share the features that drew you into playing this game? I'd like to enjoy it, but simply watching the gameplay didn't suffice to persuade me.
The random generated dungeons and amount of different items do it for me. The game might have a steep learning curve initially though until you figure out the core mechanics
Since nobody has mentioned it, I'll throw in "X4: Foundations". The X series is janky in places but oh so satisfying if you can get past the jank. Build a military empire to take over the galaxy, or maybe a trading empire. Or maybe you want to become an industrialist and build huge stations to print money. You can be a pirate or a salvager or any combination of the above. And there are tons of interesting mods if you get sick of the vanilla game.
Love this game!
Outer Wilds. You can really only play it once though but it’s amazing!
I love the Fallout universe and crafting in games, so with the amazing mod community I've wasted (?) nearly 6,000 hours on Fallout 4.
I know it's arguably the weakest of Fallout 1-4 and New Vegas, but it became a refuge for me to escape from the real world into.
Workers and resources. It's like cities skylines on steroids.
Surviving Mars. Every time I get back to it, I enjoy it.
Give Per Aspera a try!
Portal 2
Vampire Survivors I just love that game, after that Tetris.
Deep Rock
Rock and stone!
For KARL!
The Binding of Isaac. One of the GOATs for me.
Neverwinter Nights, I enjoy playing some of the campaigns and modules every so often, trying out different builds.
Warcraft 3, just for the original campaigns and also the stupid amount of custom campaigns made by the community.
Is Neverwinter free now? Or are you playing another version?
Neverwinter Nights is the 2002 Bioware game, remastered a few years ago with its Enhanced Edition, can be bought in GOG or Steam. Pretty good still for those that liked Baldurs Gate I and II
Dying Light, absolutely fantastic pakour zombie smasher with one of the best cities in gaming. Bought it originally (on a disc) many years ago and played it so much the disc died and I was inconsolable until Epic gave away the ultimate edition and I was finally able to play The Following DLC.
Now I go and look at Dying Light 2 on Steam and wish my stupid country wasn't so damn expensive, even on sale at 50% off it still costs almost as much as a brand new AAA game in the states. Regional pricing my ass, we always get stung so hard for tech down here.
DragonDarkBloodEldenSoulsBorneRing.
Same. Doing my tenth or more replay of it right now, in fact 😂
doom
Transport Fever 2. It's like Transport Tycoon (/Deluxe) from the 90s/OpenTTD but way more beautiful and 3D.
I still play OpenTTD, happy it got added to Steam.
Openttd for me, gotta try these new versions
Skyrim, Fallout 4 and Might & Magic VIII
Prey. I enjoyed it more than Dishonored, it holds a real special place in my heart.
Stellaris and Factorio
Medal Of Honor 2010 & Call Of Duty 2
COD, United Offensive and COD2 are games Ive been playing since they released and never tire of.
Fallout 2
Modded Minecraft. So many good mod packs available.
Exactly. I paid 15 bucks 12 years ago and got god knows how many thousands of hours out of it
Definitely Civilization in general. There’s a lot of other games I like that are completely different, but year after year I come back to the Civilization series. And even though they peaked at Civ5, it’s still one of the few games I’ll preorder as soon as the next one is available.
Hellblade: Senua's Sacrifice Sayonara Wild Hearts
Hellblade: Senua's Sacrifice made me gain a deeper understanding of what my BFF went through, almost 13 years ago, when she took her life after battling with psychosis and not able to fight her delusions.
It's an incredibly deep storyline, and they did an amazing job at captivating the essence of how some minds work. I cried when I played, and cried when I completed it, yet they were beautiful tears all the same. Very well made game, and I actually came to this post to give it a mention as well.
BPM: Bullets Per Minite
Doom meets dungeon crawler meets Crypt of the Necrodancer.
Playing it makes me realize I really can't multitask (aiming for enemies and shooting to rhythm) lol
Factorio, Rimworld, Terraria. In no particular order, they're all perfect at what they do.
Fallout 4 ☢️
Cassette Beasts, it's like Pokémon far more different than other pokeclones, and far higher quality imo. The beast designs are great, and there's a cool fuse mechanic you can use to fuse any two Beasts, with unique art (over 16,000 possible fusions). Also the shiny-equivalent is better done and actually useful.
Cassette Beasts is so good! They are bringing out an update soonish with a new area too.
Tunic
A cross between Legend of Zelda exploration and discovery with Souls-like combat. Very tight controls. Fantastic art and soundtrack.
Heard so many good things about it, but I just couldn't get into it. Played it for one evening and haven't picked it up again. It was frustratingly hard sometimes and while the complete absence of clues was a refreshing change from the extensive handholding in contemporary gaming, I think just some more bread crumbs would have improved the overall experience.
Minecraft Rimworld Cities Skylines Satisfactory
Since you seem to basically be me, I would recommend Dyson Sphere Program if you haven't tried it yet. My favourite of the factory games, and they have their big combat update coming in soon too.
My go to would be Skyrim, but i actually stopped playing about a year ago. My current one would be cyberpunk but i'm waiting for the dlc and playing diablo 4 atm.
Heroes of might and magic 3. What a gem! With the HD mod and Horn of the Abyss fanmade expansion (with a new town YARRR!), it's never dull.
I can't wait for the next update of HotA with a second town.
Such a good game. I played it so much in hotseat with my brothers when we where kids. Still playing it, when my brother visits, on the big TV. Last time we got us 1kg of Mett and some Roles, and played it the whole day. 😅
Ha good times.
For a long time it was Heroes of Might and Magic 4 for me -- I know it's the "black sheep" of the series, but I really like that heroes are actual parts of your party (I also played a lot while growing up, so nostalgia plays a role and that's what I got used to)
I've also recently began playing Spacebourne 2. It's janky and unpolished as fuck, but it's proving really interesting thus far. Considering it's done by a single dude, it's a miracle it even works.
Tetris.
Total War Warhammer games. I keep starting new campaigns to play all the races and subfactions.
Rogue Legacy 2
If you enjoy platformers and roguelikes, you'll like this.
Skyrim. I've probably topped 1000hours over different platforms since release
For real. I was already over 400 hours logged before I got my Index, and now with the help of Wabbajack, I'm at a number that would likely get an eyebrow from my therapist. 🤪
Hitman: World of Assassination
Minecraft
I’m gonna add Space Haven to the list. Still early access but I can’t stop. Been playing it on and off for the last year, 200 hours!
Great game. I've been playing it since it first came out.
The Sims 2. I’ve played a fair amount of all four Sims games including their mobile editions, and Sims 2 remains my favorite after a near (yeeesh) 20 years.
The modding community is still relatively robust, especially for a game that’s so old and out of the four, I feel like I can enjoy even the basic gameplay as a storyteller in Sims 2 more than in 3 or 4. In Sims 3, the focus was less on playing multiple families, so it had to be modded right out of the gate to get back to its foundation and I never liked the way the sims looked. Sims 4 “feels” a lot more like Sims 2, which a lot of people hated, but its expansion and content packs are a complete joke. It costs like $2K to have everything, and they’re still releasing packs. I know it’s just the state of gaming these days, but it just sucks the fun out of a lot of the game.
Half the fun these days, though, is just getting the game up and running on modern PCs. I installed a new hard drive a few months ago and it took the better part of a weekend to get the game fully installed and running. I do have Ultimate Collection, but the less time I have to spend in that stupid EA app, the better.
Subnautica, I just keep going back to it it's like my comfort game.
Ultima and Wing Commander, I know I'm showing my age but I guess it's the nostalgia. I still go back and play through them.
Freelancer was so good as well!
I'm going to have to try it, I stick with 1 and 2 the most. Something about those sprites.
Freelancer is really good. There's a whole mod scene for it that enables multiplayer as well
7 the most, but all on occasion... except 2 and 9.
Ultima 3 is still my fave. Evocare
I am playing Skyrim. For the second time, now in Special Edition.
Oxygen not included
This is probably my second choice, I have actually never made it to the "endgame" of ONI despite that. Never actually lost a colony, but I just particularly like those first 50 cycles of scrapping things together the most.
I love the Klei art style, and the more engineering style approach to colony building is one I don't see that much.
I love to start a new round of Civ 6 or a create a new city in City Skylines, because i learned so much from my previous mistakes and this time i will create a perfect civ/city... only to make super stupid mistakes nonetheless and fail miserably. It's still great fun though.
Kenshi! Getting your ass beat by slavers again and again has never been so fun!
Risk of rain 2, shit's addictive when you start getting decent at it
Quake (1996). Still playing it more than 25 years later :)
Another vote for Vampire Survivors. It feels like a game that has given the developer so much joy to make.
Same here. Great game. If you've finished everything the Gungeon has to offer, check out Voidigo. It just released not too long ago and scratches that itch while still being very unique in its own right.
Dwarf Fortress and Minecraft. I don't play the latter online at all.
Factorio and rimworld
Recently, The Stanley Parable
Cataclysm: Dark Days Ahead
It's not really a single single player game, more a set of specific genres: "Ubisoft open world", "Immersive sim" (especially Arkanes), "Bethesda RPG" (Even 76 which ye cna play pretty much solo), "Walking Sim" (a genre I fell in love with this past year)
Most of them that I play since I'm not big on multiplayer. Lots of RPGs (Mass Effect Legendary), colony sims (Rimworld), city builders (Banished), and grand strategy games (Stellaris)
Rimworld and factorio cause time to disappear
Minecraft I keep coming back to year after year.
FTL is pretty fun too
Oblivion
Secret of Monkey Island.
Every so often, I play it again ( thank you, @[email protected] )
Even though I know every puzzle, it's still fun 2½ decades after I played it for the first time.
Ring of Pain. It's a creepy dungeon crawler roguelite. I don't know why, I've seen everything the game has to offer and somehow I keep coming back to it.
Stardew Valley!
I know it's not 100% single player, but it's how I play it anyway, D2 and all of its mods.
Vampire Survivors, The Binding of Isaac and Civilization 6, absolutely
Red Dead Redemption 2 for so many reasons.
Metal Gear Rising Revengeance
I'll still install Duke Nukem 3D every couple of years to replay or to play the custom maps that were so easy to make.
OpenTTD is also great to mindlessly play while listening to podcasts.
Subnautica and Enscryption :)
Monster Hunter (I rarely play multiplayer), MGSV and Xcom 2
Europa Universalis IV
Fromsoftware games and Monster Hunter games
Nethack
You can play single player or
to play online
Crusader Kings, Europe universalis and imperator Rome. I know this is three games but it's the same general idea, as a history fan, this game scratches a very specific itch for me
There's also bannerlord/warband, amazing experience, sorta like ck3 on a micro level
War for the overworld. I have thousands and thousands of hours logged.
I tend to get bored of games fairly quickly. I'll hop from game to game to game, over and over again, never (rarely) beating a game before moving on to the next. Sometimes I come back to these games I've abandoned and start over, only to repeat the cycle. There's only one game that I keep going back to again and again. The Sims. I do wish there were other competing life sim games that offered a similar amount of content and mod support, but alas, there's nothing out there quite like it yet.
Assassin's Creed Odyssey
Stellaris Cyberpunk No man's sky (idk if it counts as single player per se)
Starsiege Tribes versus bots. Wish it's ported to Android touch and motion sensors. http://playspoon.com/wiki/index.php?title=Spoonbot https://www.TribesUniverse.com or Outwars https://www.mobygames.com/game/3686/outwars/
Outer Wilds, played it once loved it so much I still get tons of enjoyment by watching others do full play throughs
What's a good playthrough you can recommend?
Two Point Hospital
Some of mine have already been said, so I'll bring up Barotrauma as one of mine! Give me some mods for extra content and I'll be able to play for many many hours.
Same with Doom, actually.
Caves of Qud
I tried a couple of times but I can't seem to progress anywhere past Joppa. I think I've seen red rock once. Anyway, I Either die or I get lost or somehow lose interest in it. Would be really cool if someone could tell me how to actually play the game, what to do when and how and what the overall goal/story is
I've always had a soft spot for Caves of Qud, I love exploring in games and it never disappoints :)
Just don't go to Red Rock straight away, it's way too tough to do that one. Talk to the inventor guy (Argive I think?) and do some quests for him.
Also, there's no shame in playing the easier Roleplay or Wanderer modes. It's all about having fun in the end!
Talk to the zealot in Joppa, get the quest to go to the Stilt, then kill the zealot (you won't get in trouble for it), take his book, then raid the three chests in the enclosed rooms (shut the door behind you first!)
That'll give you some stuff to trade.
Then go up to the Stilt - it's a long trek but you get like four levels worth of experiencre from that quest just for showing up!
I'm sad I'm the only one here that's going to say Xcom2 War of the Chosen
Solitaire
It's 240 comments and no reference to Touhou?????
I play Taisei Project (FOSS bullet-hell shooter) and 3D Pinball: Space Cadet because it was #1 game in the list on Discover app.
Minesweeper. I can always guess the first one right, but after than it gets way harder.
Expert mode can be so annoying when the entire game boils down to a guess at the edge of the screen.
Beginner can be fun for speed runs. Somehow I managed 4 seconds once.
Tyrian, but I'll just go to the main menu, enter the secret code and play the hidden turrets game for hours.
Technically not a single player game but Elden Ring.
I play far too much cities skylines
Spelunky (HD/2) is my goto chill game. Put Spotify on and just start going for the hard end. It's a 2D, roguelike platformer about exploring a series of caves, and shouldn't be as addicting as it is.
I have no idea why, but I cant get enough of it. 200 hours in HD, 250 in 2, and I also had it on X360 a while back that didnt track time.
In the category of "bullet-heaven" / vampire survivors I have been putting a lot of time into Bio-Prototype. It has a really amazing upgrade/combination system for your weapons. And it also only costs like $4
Vampire Survivors on the steam deck.
This shit is so addictive. Also available in android https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.poncle.vampiresurvivors
Empire Earth 2. Old but good.
Space Engineers with my 1.5k hrs of played.
Get the wings mod if you don't already. Such a game changer.
Is the AI blocks work with wings mod? I'm a more or less vanilla player.
That's a really good question, I think they should, as the AI just works with what it's given and if that means less thrusting then it's probably happier.
It makes long distance vehicles feel a lot better too. It inspired me to make a runway, add the speed mod and then set the max speed to 300m/s.
Eufloria Classic
Almost perfect "simple" rts. Nothing terribly complicated about how it works. Really the only thing that keeps me from saying it is perfect is the lack of ability to set rally points for units or select multiple planets to move all the seedlings(units) all at once.
X4 and Farm Manager 2021 (I'm super fun at parties)
Ultrakill
Nioh 2
BlockOut aka 3D Tetris
Zombies vs Plants.
Vampire survivors
Civilization 6, this game is a time sink
This game is also famously multiplayer
It has a multiplayer mode, yes. So?
The game is designed to be played with multiple players. Even in single player mode, you take turns against the computer which is technically a player in the game. There is no mode where you're just playing with yourself, I would not by any means consider it a single player game and that's by its nature. Basically a computerized board game that requires you to play against an opponent human or ai
If you're trying to argue that Civilization is a multiplayer game first, you're starting a losing battle. Civ was always and still is a single player game front and center.
You might not like that, but that's how the game has always been.
You take turns against other players, real or computer. Doesn't matter who's in control of the players, even since CIV 1 this is how the game works. It's turn based, by nature it's multiplayer. The game is literally designed as a multiplayer computerized board game. This is absolutely not a first player game front and center. A game like that would be pure single player experience like a Mario or Zelda game
Turn based automatically makes it multiplayer? Interesting. Thanks for letting us know.
No, not necessarily. But the fact that you have all players starting on relatively equal footing competing for a win condition does
Multiplayer means against other humans.
Does it though? If all the players start on relatively equal footing with similar goals where only one can win, does it matter who is in control of the other players?
I will say, this topic also spurred a healthy discussion in my house. In the instance of civ, I firmly believe AI opponents who are playing the same game as you qualify it as inherently multiplayer even when playing alone.
Yes it does.
Riveting rebuttal. Way to explain your reasoning. You won me over /s
Railroads! Like Railroad Tycoon but more casual.
Rock and roll racing
Yeah it’s Farm Sim. Something wildly calming about just tractoring around, watching the sunset, feeding the sheep, etc.
Mass Effect LE.
I wish there was some local split screen coop. I would buy it on a whim!
Titanfall 2's campaign. I don't replay a lot of games, but I've played through that one a good few times.
Played it on a whim a few years ago. Hugely surprised about how good it was.
Protocol 3: Protect the Pilot
Ruiner. F'kin banger soundtrack.
It's 240 comments and no reference to Touhou?????
I play Taisei Project (FOSS bullet-hell shooter) and 3D Pinball: Space Cadet because it was #1 game in the list on Discover app.
Fallout: New Vegas
Civilization 4: Fall from heaven: Ashes of Erebus. It can be played multiplayer of course, but I almost exclusively play single-player. The lore is fun, the event system can be interesting, the combinations of awesome Civs+Leaders+Religions+Magic really up the replayability. The end game with hundreds of units amongst a large number of factions with hell terrain encroaching makes for a very dynamic endgame.