Spyke
Voroxpetereply
sh.itjust.works

And I have no idea which specific joke you're referring to because so many of them would qualify.

3

Same, just finished last week the Return to Monkey Island, after 20+ years played the Cursed Monkey Island.

This series is something special.

4

People (not me), seemed to really like Thank Goodness You're Here. Undertale is a popular one. Date Everything seemed funny from what I saw of it, and if playing with friends things like peak, baby steps, or getting over it. Lots of different genres there, but steam also has a tag for comedy games. Even if you don't end up buying it on steam, you can always check that out in case you don't get enough options via comments.

23

Thank Goodness You’re Here is quite possibly the funniest game I’ve ever played - good suggestion.

12

Thank goodness you're here is utterly brilliant. Full of very British humour akin to the Viz comics.

6
lemmy.zip

I dunno if it’s “comedy based” but I find Grim Fandango really funny.

13

It can be a little moon logic at times and might be frustrating to play without a guide, but yeah it's great and quite funny.

2

South Park: The Stick of Truth and its sequel were really funny and the RPG gameplay was a lot more fun than I expected. I’ll also second the recommendation for the Monkey Island series.

11

Thank goodness you're here (already suggested and upvoted) and McPixel

10
lemmy.world

HITMAN! The core story/cutscenes form a very serious, grim premise. But, the actual gameplay, and the writing of the many dozens of NPCs in each level, is filled with humorous charm and tongue-in-cheek Bond-eque silliness. Characters will acknowledge 47's often paper-thin disguises, make silly remarks about excuses to take off early, or alluding to how horrible it would be if some freak accident occurred. Plus, the mechanics can involve things like dropping banana peels for people to slip on, or luring people with a cartoony explosive rubber duck.

It takes a bit of time to get used to how the game wants you to explore, and stop trying to brute-force it like a stealth game. Quite often, some of the main intended ways of going about a mission involve little to no stealth. It's a lot of fun and very replayable.

9
SharkAttakreply
kbin.melroy.org

Just the other day I saw the bit where the guard gets a phone call telling him it's NOT prostate cancer, and he's all happy and relieved, and you're just out of the window and have to make a tough decision.

4
Katana314reply
lemmy.world

Is this Absolution?

Before the World of Assassination trilogy, I think the tone was often very grim and mocking even on the player’s side, eg “welp, gotta murder for a paycheck, that’s how the world is”

For the newer trilogy, there’s still a lot of grim humor, but it’s usually on the part of targets. They’re painted as VERY savage billionaires deserving everything coming their way, and the guards around them less so.

You also get far more tools to be nonlethal, to the point any kind of gunfire is heavily punished and no speedruns really acknowledge runs where you kill non-targets.

I did kind of have that feel that previous games were too grim about a lot of things; ended up enjoying World of Assassination quite a bit more.

2

Also, because the conversations have to be so exposition heavy to drop all the relevant hints, it makes some exchanges seem soap-opera-like and absurd. I love it.

1

Grim Fandango!

Never has a game made me laugh out loud like when I first discovered it. Clever humour, unique characters, and each line of dialogue is packed with effortless charm and wit. Not to mention the philosophical themes disguised as one man's quirky Day of the Dead -themed quest to get to the afterlife.

The puzzles are a product of its time so a walkthrough might be needed. But that's forgivable for the game's big picture.

Wish I could wipe my memory of it and play it all over again.

9

The original ace Attorney trilogy is pretty good with humor, some people enjoy the humor in the somnium files, yazuka zero's side content is pretty funny.

7
4am
lemmy.zip

Unmetal is a fun spoof on Metal Gear/MGS games

7

I was surprised how much it's able to hold its laughter to tell a worthwhile story. It makes sense, because every single line just being pure parody/silliness can get really grating.

2

And Unepic is a spoof of RPGs (same author). Funny, but atrocious controls and some sort of pay to win/real money shop I never truly understood.

1
piefed.blahaj.zone

West of Loathing and Shadows over Loathing are two really funny and silly games.

7
lemmus.org

Deadpool the game is super funny if you can get it. There is no legal way to get it.

7
lemmy.world

Damm, if there's no legal way I can't play it.. Just impossible...

5

I mean i can't even remember when I first played it how did I acquire it... Arrr...

2
PodPersonreply
lemmy.zip

Been a while, but I thought there were a few that came out back in the day (computer only).

1

There is one old: Hit the road

Then 3 seasons of Telltale's Sam and Max

And apparently there is a VR title as well…

3

Played it over a decade ago but Jazzpunk remains very fond in my memory. Can highly recommend it

5

If you're enjoying The Stanley Parable, you'll probably like Do Not Press The Button To Destroy The Multiverse.

5

Both MediEvil games on PS1. Yes they're kind of dated now, but I'll always have a soft spot for Sir Daniel Fortesque and his skeleton slapstick.

4

Depending on when you were born: Class of '09

I'm not sure how it would hit for non-millenials but if you went to school in the early aughts the entire series is great.

4

High on Life is full of jokes from beginning to end. There is a surprising amount of detail and commitment to most of the jokes. It's a shame about Justin Roiland though.

4
lemmy.world

Tales from the borderlands is one of the funniest games I've ever played. It's a telltale game.

West of loathing is a turn based game but it's too unserious with lots of jokes.

South park: The stick of truth is probably the best comedy game I've ever played. You can also try the sequels.

There was an old deadpool game but I can't remember the name. If you know deadpool, you can expect the type of humour in it. Might not have aged well though.

And if you want a great game with comedy, the YAKUZA series is in a class of it's own. One minute you'll be laughing your ass out, and the next minute you'll be bawling. I'd recommend not to start with yakuza 0. It's a prequel but the story is so phenomenal that, after playing, other parts feels average in comparison.

4

Unfortunately Deadpool got delisted everywhere, there's nowhere to buy it.

1

Have you got the deluxe edition of Stanley parable? It really got me laughing how much it jokes about sequels.

4

It's rather dry humor but I had a pretty good amount of laughs and chuckles from "Thomas Was Alone"

3
  • Nelly Cootalot: The Fowl Fleet (written by British comedian Alasdair Beckett-King who is occasionally on the telly)
  • Yorkshire Gubbins

I think there's free "prequels" or other ones from both series, if you wanted to test your reaction to the humour.

1

Super Bunny Man and Heave Ho for multiplayer games. Single player is doable, but multiplayer is where the laughter really hits.

1

The Dragon Quest series has lots of comedic moments and dialogue, but its a very specific brand of a bit antiquated japanese humor that falls flat for some people.
Xenoblade 2 as well, especially in the cutscenes, and the dialogue delivered by the cutesey mascot "Nopon" race characters.

1

Ink Inside.

Made by ex Cartoon Network + horror devs. Game is basically a cartoon show you play. But with unique combat, a funny narrative, and game mechanics that often can make you laugh with how silly it is (if you like slapstick)

It's two player co-op as well, with some killer VO.

Brian David Gilbert is one of the leads, so if their humor works for you, you should check it out! 😁

1

A little older, but Bard's tale cracked me up pretty good when I first played it.

1