If you could play one game for the first time all over again, what would it be?
(Saw this question asked on another popular link aggregation website and it got me thinking)
If you could play one game for the first time all over again, what would you choose? This might be because you want to do it all again, or because you don't think you got enough out of it the first time. It could be experiencing the game exactly as you were back then, or experiencing a game with what you know now.
For me, it's Legend of Zelda: A Link To The Past, experienced exactly as I was back in 1991.
Nothing comes close to how jaw-droppingly amazed I was by that opening sequence. The epic orchestral score, the cinematic rainstorm, creeping around in the dark... it was a generational leap above anything I'd played on 8-bit computers and consoles, and even the Megadrive. I'd love to play it again without thirty plus years of Nintendo/Zelda knowledge, or without knowing about the dark world.
OUTER WILDS.
It's a fantastic exploration game if you go in blind and I wish I could forget it all and explore it all again.
Yeah, it really was amazing to play blind. We especially enjoyed the DLC... when we first realised what it was all about, it nearly blew our minds!
Yeah, I've never wtf'd so hard in a game as when I entered the thing and left the other thing in the DLC.
That game was so well done and thought through.
What's sad is that I know I will forget the lore and the journey on how I figured out how I got to the end. But I don't think I'll forget the specifics for the ending.
I'm shocked that this isn't everyone's answer tbh lol
Those are the people that haven't played it yet.
I got it in my library and only played for 10 minutes somehow. After reading als those comments maybe now it's time to play it
The Outer Wilds.
A game you can only play once and that one time is magical.
I came in to type just this. One of the best games ever made!
Played about 2 hours of it and uninstalled. It was incredibly boring. Why do you think it was magical?
Spoilers. ❤️
But seriously, maybe it just didn't work for you and that's okay. Nothing is everything to everyone.
It took me about two or three hours to learn to navigate and find my first "magical thing". When I did I was hooked. But yeah it can be slow to start.
It's definitely a slow start. The way it's designed to allow discovery but not lead you too much makes the moments where points of data click and connect really powerful.
It's hard to talk too much about it without potentially spoiling the enjoyment one might take from it.
But it's not for everyone. But if it is for you, it's really really something.
Same story for me. I've heard it's incredible so I guess I'll have to try again sometime though. The start was just incredibly dull
I was going to say outer wilds too, what an amazing experience.
Half life or Half life 2.
I find Half-Life and Portal are some of the best games ever made regarding world building, story telling and general addictiveness.
I keep coming back because I've never found any other game like those.
I don't how old you are, but the first one was the first very big implementation of scripted scenes. To see something happening in an FPS as in a movie was mind-blowing.
The second one is just absurdly well designed. And the visuals are imbued of this Eastern European architecture and vibe that right now, walking the streets of Warsaw, I am gladly breathing in.
I'm old enough to have been stunned by games like Cybernoid and Exolon (oooh, so many colours and sprites and explosions), Elite (damn, actual 3D wireframe spaceships!), Driller (wow, actual solid 3D at 0.5 frames per second!), Wolfenstein (actually playable 3D, with sprites), Doom (this changes everything), Quake (full 3D, nothing can improve on this), all the Half-Life franchise (you can also have a story to go with the shooting? who knew?), Portal, Portal 2 and The Talos Principle (puzzle games can have riveting stories) and finally Skyrim (damn, this thing is huuuge!). So yeah, I'm old. :-)
Seconded.
Portal 1 / 2 wouldn't be far behind
'Or?' Why not both?
Because that's not the question.
Half life Alyx is top of them all for me! Highly recommend
published VR only, and - from Valve of all companies: Windows only!! F*ck them for that :(
There are mods out there! And honestly as much as it sucks to be an exclusive title like that, it honestly slaps for the same reason. The universe has so much potential to be told through the vr perspective, its absolutely incredible. Don't bash till ya tried it! I'm telling ya, it's a one of a kind experience
VR is not for me. The technology can't replace good storytelling, and HL2 sucked at that compared to HL1, sadly. It was still okay-ish but nowhere near as stellar as HL1. Also, VR is locked to expensive hardware with most drivers limited to the bloatware shitty windows. No thanks.
I strongly doubt it can be a defining game as the other 2 were and are. Plus, for me, there is attrition in the need to use a non-polished control system.
Nah it's hella polished! It's hard to explain but being inside the universe like that is a one of a kind experience. Give it a shot, I swear it's different!
Windwaker.
Don't think its considered retro yet, but I wish I could forget every second of it I played. The complete emotional Rollercoaster I went through playing that game was incredible.
One of the few games where I really felt like I was the "super important protagonist" and the world really depended on me.
It's 20 years old... if Windwaker isn't considered retro now, then Atari 2600 games weren't considered retro in 1997 :)
Oh shit
Hah. You're old.
I mean I am too but.....you.
Probably my favorite Zelda and the most underrated game in the series imho
It might be relatively new, but I'd say Subnautica.
It was such a breath of fresh air when it came out, and instilled both such a sense of wonder at all the vibrant lifeforms of 4546B and also instilling such dread upon encountering reapers or diving deeper than ever before. I still remember the mixed sense of wonder and unease upon discovering the Jellyshroom caves for the first time
I guess I am very picky in games and most of them are boring to me, but Subnautica (first game) has a special place in my heart. <3
Jellyfish caves were nothing, discovering the edge of the map nearly made me start a new game because I couldn't bring myself to continue knowing what my current situation was
Secret of Monkey Island. Like most adventure games you can only really play it once. It'd be nice to enjoy it again.
I sat down with my son and let him play it. Seeing him experience it for the first time was a pretty awesome experience. He cracked up at the sword fighting.
And then there is me, who just finished Hotel Dusk again as a ritual hoping Nintendo brings it back as it is about to be with Another Code!
Agreed. I mean, The Silver Case and now Trace Memory are getting re releases so... Hotel Dusk seems like the perfect next choice
I think I’ve played it through more than 20 times. I roughly do it once a year… 1,2 and 3 at least. It’s no longer about the challenge, story or puzzles, it just feels like coming home.
Totally agree. I always play the first three every few years or so
Day of the tentacle, Sam and max, Simon the sorcerer, all the classics
Disco Elysium
The sheer joy of realising it's not "just another" RPG, slowly pulling the curtain on how intricate the worldbuilding is, discovering the main character and in turn reflecting on yourself. It's become a small addiction to watch first time streamers and let's players for me, to vicariously relive that process.
Another candidate might be Ultima 7, the interactivity and how "real" it felt in the 90s was mindblowing for kid me.
Ultima 7 is a great one.
I will also add System Shock as well.
World of Warcraft. Starting out in an MMO for the first time is magical. No worries about the endgame, just the desire to explore and learn.
I responded to another comment here about it. WoW and other MMOs would be my choice -- but to make it any fun you'd have to rewind the whole world. Not only get rid of wowhead, wowwiki, raider.io etc., but get people to forget they ever existed, forget how to do data mining so effectively. Also get rid of streaming and video sharing services so that you had the chance of discovering things on your own. You wouldn't be the first, but you wouldn't know that.
Yeah, the internet ruined online gaming.
Oh yeah, WoW hands down. The sense of wonder as I explored the world the first time was incomparable to any other game.
It's hard to pick just one:
Deus Ex. It's timelessly topical despite being released in 2000. It predicted the War on Terror and a massive pandemic to name a couple.
Spiritfarer, for maximum onion chopping. Saying goodbye to Gwen really messed me up since I became very attached to her, and I can't finish the last stretch of the game because it's too emotionally taxing.
Undertale and wholesome fan-games like Act to Flirt.
Half-Life 2, circa 2004 when it was a leap ahead of everything else. I was unsettled by the teaser screenshots due to how real it all seemed to be during its heyday. (I did re-capture part of that feeling with M Mod and its great yet faithful modernisation effects. Plus there's some blursed mods you can combine with it such as replacing Alyx with Krystal, voiced by the original actress.)
Duke Nukem 3D: Alien Armageddon. It blew me away how much custom content and passion has been invested, so good that it almost felt like I was playing Duke Nukem for the first time all over again.
There's many more worth mentioning such as Unreal, Morrowind, Oblivion, Company of Heroes 1 and the forgotten gem that is Ground Control.
Man, I was born just at the right time to experience a stunning variety of titles and enjoy the mods that improve them.
!!! How did I never hear about https://www.moddb.com/mods/duke-nukem-alien-armageddon ??? Thank you so much for mentioning that! Once I get home from vacation, I know what to do!
Enjoy! Let me know how it turns out!
The first time my friend and I fired up Unreal we were completely blown away. The flyby camera through the castle at the menu screen was unlike anything we had seen before.
Have you checked out Unreal Tournament 99? Also has a fly-through of a building, and boy that game was awesome and still is.
Yeah, that one's great! I played a ton of it back in the day. Lots of fun was had with the ChaosUT and Unreal4Ever mods.
Subnautica.
The first game to make me truly sad that I had finished it. Wow, what an experience!
I loved exploring and piecing together the story. I loved discovering new creatures and ecosystems. I loved finding strange things and figuring out what to do with them.
I've never played a game quite like it before or since. My god, it was really amazing. I beat it without needing a guide or walkthrough. It's great enough to the point where, if you are curious enough, you won't need one!
It's certainly a slower-paced game, as it's not all non-stop action, so it's not for everyone. But if you're a patient and curious person, this may be for you.
I dint think ive ever played a game that made me so anxious. The first time i went into the deep and the giant ghostly leviathan came at me i almost had a panic attack.
It really is something special! Once I started to think of them more as wild animals with their territory needing to be respected, it was just a matter of adapting to their habits and working around it.
The Crabsquids & Warpers, though, fuuuuuck them. Crabsquids spooked me no matter how many times I came across them! And the Warpers are just assholes. Lol
Planet Crafter gives me Subnautica vibes, though it's still in early access. But it has the "build a base and survive in a hostile world with cool things to explore" already and potential to become really great.
That said, Subnautica was the first thing I thought of when I first saw this thread but not planet Crafter.
Same for me yeah, such a great game. I remember doing so many things like setting free all animals i caught in their own habitat before leaving, because i wanted to play the last little bit out of it. Also filling the rocket food for the trip back home. I cried, when i started the flight.
Maybe give outer wilds a try. Exploration and really unique level design.
Outer Wilds. You can't even really replay it, not like you can other games. But boy, I will never forget the unbridled joy of unraveling its mysteries - and ironically, would love to so I can do it all over again.
I’m gonna break the rules and name more than one.
Super Metroid
Link to the Past I beat it with my mom as a kid. I’d love to go back and just be a kid who loves his mom playing that game again.
Ocarina of Time My mom and I snuck and opened the Christmas present every evening after my dad went to bed. We were at the forest temple when I actually opened it for Christmas and pretended to be surprised.
Wind Waker I was so disappointed over the cartoon graphics I almost didn’t play it. Once the game won me over I fell in love with everything about it.
Twilight Princess My first Zelda as an adult living on my own. I bought it on GameCube and played it with my ex. We had no cable, no internet, no phone. It was the only entertainment we had (video games) and it was an experience that made us closer.
Symphony of the Night I just fucking love that game.
World of Warcraft I want to go back and play with my son. We did arenas and we were an unstoppable team. Some of the best nights of my life were spent side by side playing WotLK and Cata.
I could go on but someone is standing here bugging me now. Take care folks.
That's a fun memory with your mom. With parents like that, how did you grow up to be an angry seal?
Symphony of the Night is $2.99 on play store and istore. Using the native touchscreen controls gives you a hotkey for your spells, you only have to "cast" them once to unlock them.
I'm amazed Secret of Mana, and Chrono Trigger weren't on your list.
Final Fantasy VII
I went straight on from super Nintendo to this. You can imagine he level of amazement I got.
I picked it up blind after getting carried away in the magazine hype and excitement. I'd not played any FF games before that... man, that was quite an experience!
I remember beating this game on a school night at like 11:00 pm when I was supposed to be sleeping and then just staring at the ending credits absolutely stunned. What a great game.
Oblivion. I liked Skyrim but Oblivion quests were so much better
I didn't like shutting down the gates which felt like the same thing over and over. But mostly it was awesome, especially the Grey Fox quests.
Its so dated now, but morrowind felt soo deeply built. The culture, the religions, the different political faction houses. How the empire influenced certain areas.
The quest were raw. No waypoints. Just go to lake and go north*. The morag tong(assassin guild for morrowind) had a basic questline. But it did feel different. The morag tong was sanctioned by the politicians. So you could murder someone in the middle of a city and just show a writ of execution.
Maybe Stardew Valley? I found that very enjoyable.
Knowing how to min max on your 5th farm does kind of take out the charm, but it was a very fun to always start a new farm on a new map.
Just play Stardew Valley Expanded with all the new farms & such, it's quite the unique experience that blows base Stardew out of the water
Chrono Trigger. Hands down the greatest JRPG I've ever had the pleasure of playing.
Omg of I could go back!
I was shocked I had to scroll down so far to find this. I’m right there with you my friend!
Diablo 2 of course. It's the best game ever made. I still play it for a month or two every year.
Recently bought the remastered version, still holds up for me, played for a good while.
I don't think it works on the remake but I've been playing the Median XL Sigma mod. It's very good and they're still updating it.
Outer Wilds. It's the best game I have played, and it can't really be played a second time.
Not retro, but Celeste hands down. That game is an emotional roadtrip of a platformer. My favorite indie game out there.
Deus Ex
Undertale
That game fucked me up good on a personal level
I'm glad I accidentally got the neutral ending first, thus making the best ending even better.
So very true. It pains me to hear of others who did extensive research for their playthrough(s)
The Last of Us.
It's very linear and short to the point most of that sense of wonder goes away immediately after you finish it once.
Also being a horror game, the more you play the less scary it is.
The big moments hit really hard the first time around, but then that's kinda it. Still love it though.
Portal. I thought it was just a puzzle game. I love twists in movies and this one really caught me off guard.
Mass effect 2
That game was such a wild ride from start to end! The final mission made my heart thump and I appreciated the fact that nobody is truly safe, more-so with a few mods that make it less predictable.
Dark Souls. It was a game that had so many surprises just to fuck you over randomly. Random boulders, hidden enemies, boss mechanics, mimics, hidden gems. Played the hell out of it but the first time was like magic. 2, 3, bloodline, elden ring... I had expectations. Only played a couple hours of demons souls before I dove hard.
you only ever get one true blind playthrough. I would gladly blank all of my soulsborne knowledge to play through all of them again with fresh eyes.
it's not the same, but if you're playing on PC there are some decent mods for DS 1, 2, and 3 that make them a little more fresh. particularly, the randomizer for DS1 makes it a pretty hilarious challenge, since you can no longer plan your runs in advance, and have to roll with absolutely mismatched gear
My heart says it should be Dark Souls, but my head reminds me I absolutely hated it until I'd figured out that the run from Undead Burg bonfire to Taurus Demon couldn't be rushed, and the point of the game was to be slow and methodical. Then I loved it.
For me it's the fact that it took me YEARS to git gud. Bought Demons souls before the hype, and had no clue. After a couple trys it went on the shelf. Went on to buy every souls game, cause I knew they were amazing, but never finished one or even got half way.
It was watching walk throughs, speed runs, and various challenge runs on youtube that, along with hours and hours of grinding, got me comfortable with these games.
Playing DS1 with fresh eyes and my current skills and knowledge of the other games would be amazing, as it really has the best world.
Having said all that, my answer is the Mass Effect trilogy.
World of Warcraft. 2005 was a hell of a time for that game.
Star Wars Knights of the Old Republic.
The universe! The characters! The plot! That reveal! Oh, man. To be able to experience that again for the first time. Wow.
The Secret of the Monkey Island
I'm not going to take your insolence sitting down
Your hemorrhoids are flaring up again eh?
I'm rubber your glue
celeste every day, that game got right to my heart
Metal Gear Solid. Going from tooling around in the NES Metal Gear to sneaking thorough Shadow Moses while figuring out 4th wall breaking puzzles was amazing.
Mine would be bioshock 1.
Ocarina of Time, or Final Fantasy VII. Both of them had just incredible impacts on me as a teenager, and I'd love to be 16 and experiencing them for the first time again.
TUNIC
This 1000x. The "I could do this the whole time??" Moments are so incredibly cool, and I've never felt smarter than when we pieced together the final puzzle
It's a game that bounces off of some people, and that's kinda sad.
I had so many goosebump-inducing moments of having my mind blown by the game. And the soundtrack and sounds do such a great job adding to the ambience.
World of Warcraft.
What a great game to be a noob in.
Final Fantasy 6. Still my favorite game of all time.
Everyone always mentions FF7 but I think 6 is superior and slept on.
Final Fantasy 6, Chrono Trigger, or Super Mario RPG. I couldn't get enough of Squaresoft in the SNES days.
Chrono Trigger for the "trippy" story.
Pretty much any NES game for the "gamer" soundtrack (beep bops.)
Shining Force
Final Fantasy 7 (the original).
And it's not even close. What a journey.
Man, I fucking LOVE the storytelling in 7. It's so insanely well done and the music just makes it all the better
That music lives inside my head. I often play it as background music when I'm doing stuff at home.
I played 8 first and fell in love with it, then I played 7 and it was so fucking incredible to my little brain, I had so many dreams back then about that game. I really liked 9 and gave 10 a shot but neither of them really hit me the way that 7 and 8 did.
Earthbound. It’s been my favorite game since I first rented it from blockbuster
Sid Meier's Civilization!
Nier Automata. Every thing about the game is amazing, but would love to experience the endings and heart wrenching moments again for the first time.
Have you played Nier Replicant? It's not as good of a game as Automata, but I think the the story is better. Getting all the endings is a bit repetitive since you have to replay a chunk with small changes, but it all pays off with ending E, which was added in the remaster. (ver.1.22474487139)
Metal Gear Solid on PS1
Mass Effect trilogy.
Or maybe Bioshock.
Either/both.
Very late edit: Deus Ex. I still play it every once in a while and while the graphics are terrible, it's a lot better with GMDX and you get used to it very quickly. That game is still a masterpiece.
I was thinking ME trilogy as well, but while ME1 is a great game it doesn't really hold up in terms of graphics today. ME2 and ME3 still look fine though.
Oh the graphics don't bother me at all, the Legndary edition holds up fine, I think. But ME1 has the best story in the trilogy, it's why I still play it. I still remember the first time I played it. Being made a Spectre, speaking to Sovereign, the attack on the Citadel. How scary and unknowable the Reapers were. Hanging up on the Council. ;) The main storyline is better than 2 and 3 combined, imo. However, you are right that ME1 has some issues. While the Legendary Edition fixed a lot of the issues (and it does play smoothly, I do think), there are some things in ME1 that have become so tedious I don't even do them anymore. Mainly talking about the exploration of unchartered worlds and the terrible handling of the Mako, or how every outpost looks the same, every mine looks the same, with the exact same layout. Makes it feel way more dated than it feels if you only go through the story. Not to mention the headache that is inventory management and swapping weapons and mods and grenades, turning everything into omni-gel because the stupid mini-game is even more annoying than inventory management!
For this reason I made a few save games that I 100%ed (one paragon, one renegade, different romances, etc). And I backed those up. Now, whenever I play ME1 I only do the main storyline and some side quests, and ignore the rest, lol. Then in ME2 I import one of the files I saved. Cut out all the tedium. ;)
Dark Souls.
But I suck and this time I don't get sucked into the entire series. That oughta save me some time and money.
If I had to take a Retro game, Chrono Trigger for sure.
Considered Dark Souls... but, honestly, the first time I played it, I hated it. And every successive playthrough, I've loved it more and more. Playing it for the first time would feel like a step back.
Earthbound. Even on my subsequent yearly-ish playthroughs, it's so easy to get immersed into the beautiful quirkiness of the world.
Came here to say this one. It's been ~30 years and there still isn't another game that quite hits in the same way. The perfect combination of jrpg, weirdness, emotion, humor, horror/dread, and lightheartedness. Earthbound has it all.
I'm reading the book about Satoru Iwata and in it he talks about Earthbound and says (hardcore paraphrasing) that Earthbound on the surface has a lot of regular RPG conventions, but through a combination of its non gameplay aspects it becomes something incredibly unique that even today has very few comparisons.
There are two games I would love to play for the first time again and those are Portal and Dishonored.
Portal is obvious - it's a well-refined and immersive puzzle game with enough story and atmosphere to keep you invested, but never so much as to pull you away from its puzzles. It may only be a short game, but it is one of the best!
The only people I know who haven't given this game the upmost praise are those who've never played it before.
Edit: Portal 2 is also a fantastic game, but it definitely leans on the story more. That is by no means a bad thing though, as we wouldn't the absolute menace that is Cave Johnson without it.
As for Dishonored, the original is Arkane Studio's best game IMO - the world it's set in is so interesting and brimming with lore; the levels are well crafted, and reward the player's creativity and exploration without ever feeling forced; The gameplay is challenging, but without ever feeling overwhelming. I'm sure it has it's flaws, but all these years later, I still remember how much it got right.
Edit: Dishonored 2 was very much like it, and I remember it for all the same reasons, but the first is the one that really captured that lightning in a bottle for me.
I also loved Prey. It plays in a similar style without feeling too much like it's predecessor. I can't say I liked the Roguelike DLC very much though.
Edit 2 Electric-Boogaloo: I keep forgetting Dishonored uses the American spelling. I always remember it in the British spelling. Oops.
Dishonored absolutely holds up, just replayed it a month or two ago. I do also believe it's just a tighter, more well designed experience than Dishonored 2. It's hard to properly explain without taking notes, but Dishonored 2 felt like "well, we have to make a sequel, what can we expand on and add on?" Where Dishonored 1 just felt like they knew exactly what they wanted to do and expertly executed every single thing just like they wanted.
Still a blast to play today, and the art style holds up.
I think you've hit the nail on the head there. Dishonored 2 felt like it had to be made, rather than wanting to be made like the original.
Having said that, it is still a sequel worthy of it's predecessor, which is better than can be said for a lot of sequels.
Agreed, I would still recommend it since I enjoyed it, beat it, and got part ways through an NG+ playthrough, and that's a lot more than I get out of a lot of other games.
I just finished Dishonored 2 for the first time. I played it like 6 years ago, got to the second-last mission, and realized that even though I'd been playing ultra stealthy and non-violent, somehow someone I knocked out had died in an earlier mission, so I wasn't going to get the stealth achievements so I shelved it.
This time, I'd forgotten enough so I started from the beginning again, remembered to keep checking the stats page to ensure I was fully stealthy, fully non-violent, and got to the end with the achievements.
The funny thing is that the game gives you so many ways to play -- lots of gun upgrades, lots of ways of disposing of bodies, lots of health boosts and strength boosts. But, I play my way, and so both runs I did ultra stealthy, no killing. I've played almost the entire game twice, and have no idea what most of the powers are like because they're oriented around combat / killing, not stealth.
Factorio of course, because that's what people already do. They start over and over again with ever bigger plans.
Probably Planescape: Torment
Good one, especially if you can go into it blind, and not be tempted into looking up solutions online.
Gothic
My first open world game, unmatched freedom to do what you want and to go where you want, exploration rewarding with handplaced loot everywhere. I lived in that game for a whole year.
I wish I could experience Portal for the first time again.
Monkey Island 2: lechuck's revenge.
Definitely Subnautica in VR. I didn't play it on flatscreen, only in VR, and it was the most immersive and amazing experience out of any game.
Haven't played it on VR, but man that sounds great. My girlfriend is deep into a hardcore play through now and it's so much fun to watch.
I did a regular one first, and then later a hardcore one, but it just wasn't the same. Now I wish I had done hardcore first :D
The first time I played it, I did about an hour to get my feet wet, ha ha, but then switched to hardcore mode. It took a long time, but I did finish the game in a single life. Subnautica without a real fear of death just isnt the same.
Playing through again as a vegan, and recording it to make a tips video. If you haven't played it without catching a fish I highly recommend it. Only thing you miss out on is the air bladder, but not getting distracted all the time chasing fish really changes the way I explore the game.
Another fun challenge is never making a compass or becans, forces you to learn the map.
Half Life or Command & Conquer for me
System Shock 2 or Thief: Dark Project. Those two were the games that impressed me most in my 40 years of playing games.
Honourable mention: Minecraft. The first few weeks playing that come very close.
Freelancer
Freelancer but without being spoilt by modern graphics. The space scenes are gorgeous, but the characters have aged.
I looked it up just now and there is a HD-mod out. And wow so many other Mods with new Content. Maybe I have to try it again
Yeah I wanted to try the HD mod, but haven't found the time yet to do all the patching.
The freelancer community is still actively creating content and mods! Check out HD edition or Crossfire.
Crossfire is silly difficult to begin though. I am still stuck in the early missions :)
Baldur's Gate 2. Would love to re-live the feeling of wonder and suspense this game offered, although it'd probably help to forget about modern RPGs too, to keep with the nostalgia.
Doki Doki Literature Club. Because I got spoiled the first time I played it.
Either:
Or
I remember playing Mario 64 at my grandparent's house back in the day. My grandpa had pretty much ignored video games, but had probably casually noticed games like Pong and Pacman over the years. Then he caught a glimpse of Mario 64 in 3D and was just blown away.
Came here to say Mario 64 but I have to agree with Morrowind as well, both of these were such ground breaking games for their time.
I still havent played Morrowind, though somewhere along the line I picked up a PC version. One of these days I'll have a gaming machine.
Morrowind was my intro into elderscrolls and it blew my mind. So many options, dialog, spell crafting, dlc, mods on pc... every iteration after felt kind of empty and lacking. Being able to kill a god or three was something else.
Everquest. No other game I've played before or after instilled that feeling of exploration and wonder that this game did. I'm so glad I got to experience that before I got older.
Lanys T'Vyl, later Antonius Bayle, then p1999. I loved that world and community to bits (despite the trolls).
Jesus, eq is life hijacking.
Try project Lazarus, it's the best of eq without all the painful time consuming bs.
Either Oblivion or Fable: The Lost Chapters
Yes! Oblivion and Fable were my first experiences with RPG's.
Picking one is quite hard, but since it's retro only, my vote goes to Super Metroid. That game is a rare gem.
The first Mass Effect. That moment when Sovereign speaks... instant goosebumps. ("Rudimentary creatures of blood and flesh, you touch my mind, fumbling in ignorance, incapable of understanding.") This also presupposes that I haven't played the other parts as well of course. I actually played the second one before the first one back in the day.
Brothers: A Tale of Two Sons
Inside
BioShock
All great stories with some very powerful moments.
Neverwinter Nights
Roller Coaster Tycoon, 2 preferably. Like, if OpenRCT2 could magically time travel back and exist on 12 year old me's computer, it would be bliss.
Champions of Norrath on PS2. I played through the entire game with my dad and it was the most fun I ever him.my mother said he used to play video games all the time, but then stopped (having kids probably does this to many). So when he said he’d play the game with me i was very excited. i only wish i could have found the games sequel, return to arms, before heading off to college. that would have been a summer to remember.
i don’t know why he never shared his love of video games with either me or my sisters. some dads are weird like that. i bought him a series s for the holidays and while i don’t think he plays it, he enjoys watching his grandkids play.
Champions of Norrath has ruined every single isometric RPG for me.
Baldur's Gate 3 is meh to me. I acknowledge it's technical, narrative, and gameplay achievements. I can't get into it.
My backstory was the game is good and gameplay is immediately in your control. No rolling of dice, no pauses between moves. Just loot, aim, and kill. Hack/slash at its finest.
Minecraft, botw
CrossCode
There's a couple I'd have to choose from on this:
Portal 1 and 2 (if it can only be one game and not the series then portal 2),
Legend of Zelda Tears of the Kingdom or Breath of the wild maybe,
Prey,
Firewatch,
Fallout: New Vegas,
FRACT OSC,
Donut County,
... This may have been more a list of my favorite games rather than play for the first time again...
Super Mario Galaxy
Final Fantasy 6
Super Mario 64
Super Mario World
Resident Evil
VVVVVV
Probably Red Dead Redemption. It was an amazing game and even fun to 100%. The soundtrack was the icing on the cake.
Half-life is close too. That game blew my mind as a kid.
Death Stranding
I still have dreams about that masterpiece of a game. There's just so few like it.
Agreed, that was the first game in a long while that I'd played that at once felt extremely novel but also felt executed incredibly well.
Super Metroid
Factorio
Wow OP it's like we had the same childhood. That opening sequence and the early parts of LTTP are seared into my memory. +1
Definitely Dragon Age Origins. Loved it all, from the weird combat mechanic to the relationship scores. I only wish Varric had been available to romance.
Stardew Valley or Terraria.
Ultima Online. It was my first MMO. I could own a friggin house that other people could visit! I've been chasing that high for 20+ years now.
I actually bought LTTP before I bought a SNES.. The game itself wasn't easy to get in my area and I happened to be out of town and ran across a copy, so it was an easy decision
Inscryption. One of my favorite games to come out in years, but the secondary playthroughs don't have anywhere near the appeal without the mystery/intrigue sadly. The first time for me was magical though.
Hollow Knight
Final fantasy tactics, or 7.
Half Life 2, New Vegas and MGS all blew my young mind and would be great to relive.
A link to the past is my top Zelda game for sure.
... Have you ever tried the randomizer for it? It will give you a rom where all the items are randomly distributed around the map, making you do the whole sequence out of order.
I will play though a random Rom one a year or so and it's a blast.
https://alttpr.com/en
Halo reach. Such a masterpiece.
Easily Metal Gear Solid 3 for me.
Oh man.... I would love to experience Zork again for the first time. 😊
"West of House
You are standing in an open field west of a white house, with a boarded front door.
There is a small mailbox here."
Wing Commander 3 and Black & White.
Played both of them when i was a kid and it'll be nice to be able to play them again as an adult.
Portal or Minecraft.
I've played so much Minecraft that I have everything down to a science.
Like quickly making a wooden pickaxe, mining exactly how much cobble I need for a furnace and a stone pickaxe, and how to find coal and iron in less than 5 minutes.
Wood and stone tools, outside the two pickaxes, are skipped entirely.
Before the end of the first night I am almost entirely decked out in iron stuff.
Farming cows for bookshelves for enchanting is quick and easy, and then getting fortune 3 and looting 3 pretty much makes the game easy mode. You print ores and food.
Not to mention you can get mending from a villager easily. Just pick up and put down the job station until they give you mending. It's not skill, it's just luck. You can get it in less than 2 minutes if you're lucky. Now you'll never have to worry about anything ever breaking again. You can also get fortune and looting this way as well, removing the need to waste time and materials on the enchanting table.
It's sad. I wish I could erase my knowledge of it, and play Minecraft how I used to. By savoring my enchanted items, creaming my pants at the sight of diamonds, and grinding hard for food.
If you haven't already, try some modpacks. For extra difficulty, the packs based on GregTech are pretty amazing, like GregTech: New Horizons or Nomifactory. They make it so complicated to produce items that you're kind of forced to automate things, and then you keep expanding what your automation can do.
GTNH takes like 2 years to build a pair of star gates if you're playing alone, and they keep making it harder. It's a massive amount of content.
I've never heard of those, but I'll take a look. Thanks!
I've actually been playing a bunch of Vintage Story to fill the void, but when I go back to Minecraft I'll give those a try!
I loved Bioshock, so probably that.
Runescape, 2006 sort of era
I know it's not really retro yet, but either Nier game. True perfection those two.
Chrono Trigger, Castlevania SOTN, Pokemon BW and B2W2, Dead Cells
94 NHL Hockey on Sega. That game blew my mind then after years of playing pretty bad ports of hockey games like Ice Hockey and Wayne Gretzky's hockey on NES. I was hooked from the very first moment and played the franchise for years until they got into 14 buttons and FPV. The older overhead version was peak for me.
God this just unlocked a core memory for me but I don't remember the name of the game, it was a hockey game maybe on Atari or PC where you could fight 1v1, you'd push the other guy around and eventually it would zoom in on you two and you'd both throw your gloves on the ground and punch on
Blades of Steel! That was a pretty decent game Port. It was pretty great in the Arcade.
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.
Homeworld
Learning Team Fortress 2 for the first time as a teenager was such a crazy fun experience.
ICO
such an amazing game that never seems to get any love
It does seem to have been overshadowed by Shadow of the Colossus somewhat.
My hunch is that it was really tarnished by the idea that it was "an escort quest, except that's the whole game", and with the hate those sorts of quests get I think that really turned people off, undeservedly, as the game is going for more than that reductive summary.
Grandia on ps1. I refuse to replay it out of a morbid certainty that it's basic as all hell. But it was my first jrpg and it blew my mind.
I swear it took me weeks to make it to the wall, but searching my memory it's the first scene after your hometown.
I played through Grandia 1 a couple of weeks ago (for the first time, so no nostalgia) and I felt like it very much holds up. From the artstyle to the mechanics, I really enjoyed my time with it.
Oh wow really? The art style really was amazing. I think i might have to test my curiosity.
Phantasy star 4, though it's still great to play now anyway.
I actually just played this for the first time recently and loved it. Grandia II was one of my favorite dreamcast games ever, and while the first one had nothing in common with it I was still really impressed with how well it held up to modern standards.
I've got two candidates for that:
Ubcharted is visually stunning and I really like the story it tells.
GTA 5 STILL is a game where I find new things.
Have you tried a link to the past randomizer . It makes it very fun and you can find different ways to progress through the game . Sometimes you have to do some of the dark world first or find clever ways to get into areas .
These are great, just make sure if you don't like glitches to configure the randomizer to make a path without them. Otherwise you might get stuck. Keysanity is insane with 267 checks there is some backtracking but finishing is great.
Minecraft, specifically Beta 1.7.3.
Final Fantasy 7 or 9, Earthbound, Secret of Mana, Phantasy Star Online
Nier Automata
A game I will never forget
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.
StarCraft's campaign was a masterpiece. I get to include Brood War here too.
Since StarCraft and SC2 are free, you should check out SC2:Mass Recall. It's a mid for SC2 that brings in not only the original campaigns, but three other mini campaigns that I have never seen before.
Good to know, thanks for the recommendation!
Shadow of the Colossus and some Silent Hill stuff
Shadow of the Colossus is a good one. Up until that point, I'd never played a game that felt like that. You didn't feel like an awesome, powerful hero destroying monsters, instead you felt like you had to make a tough choice to destroy beautiful creatures.
Monkey Island or Little Big Adventure
First thing that popped into my mind too. Monkey Island, Loom, Zac McKraken, and all the other LucasFilms (but even after they rebranded as LucasArts) too.
Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis is still my favorite point and click adventure. Purchased it three times too: on floppies when it came out, the enhanced *talkie *edition on CD, and then on Steam when it came out.
Indie 4 is on steam? <3 I wish they had that movie instead of the stupid "we don't talk about it" fridges protect you from atomic bombs one. Also, I wanted to ship a big-screen Sophia Hapgood!
Yep. https://store.steampowered.com/app/6010/Indiana_Jones_and_the_Fate_of_Atlantis/
The ScummVM talkie version is better, but I just couldn't pass purchasing also this one... 😅
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.
Portal 2 and Undertale the true pacifist run
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.
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.)
Are you aware of the Zelda: ALLTTP randomizer? https://alttpr.com/en
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.
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!
Half-Life 2 and Shining in the Darkness.
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.
Hotel Dusk.
Spyro the Dragon as I was back in the day. That game has always been so magical for me.
I know this is almost a stereotypical answer, but the Witcher 3. because after that game i went and read through all the books. so if i got to re experience it would be the difference of finding siri after 100 hours of gameplay and finding siri after 5000 hours of story. "find siri' is Geralt's primary motivation throughout the books. i can only imagine how satisfying and emotional that scene would feel for the first time with the weight of the books behind it.
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%.
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.
Wings for Amiga, flying in WW1 and a cool story between missions. Everything I know about ww1 air battles, I know from that game :)
Morrowind but it wouldn't matter because I don't have enough time to get immersed in it anymore.
Might and Magic 3
F-19
Wow
Half-life
Dishonored
Silent Hill 2
I've replayed that game so many times but the first playthrough hits different
Bioshock. I am sure you can just replay it. The twist at the end... I wish I could relive the surprise again.
This is one of those franchises that I never liked because of over hype. My buddies were talking this game up so damn much, talking about how awesome it was. I just kept thinking "ok when does it start to be fun? "
When I got to the twist, I was so disengaged that it just soured it even more for me. I wish I could play it without the hype so i could form a different opinion
It's funny that you say that because my first playthrough was when the prices had dropped on Steam (a couple years after release). So the hype was gone for me. Its probably a big reason I enjoyed it so much
What's not to like about carrying around an "extra" medpack that you then use to telekinetically blast at/bludgeon to death your enemies? That shit was hilarious.
Ghost Trick: Phantom Detective
The story has so many great twists and turns even up to the very end. There was a distinct point about 75% of the way through when I came to the realization that I had to binge the rest of game. Even if it meant I got zero sleep that night, I had to see how it ended.
It was so good I wish I could experience it again blind.
FF6, FF9 and Links Awakening
Quake 3 Arena. Or more specifically OpenArena + baseq3 and other mods like ratmod. Most fun I have had playing a game ever.
Space Invaders
Asteroids
Pitfall
I have seen no mention of Planescape Torment, so there you go.
Read dead redemption 1. A masterpiece.
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.
You might like Black Mesa. It's a faithful remake of the first Half Life. It really nails the atmosphere and feel with modern graphics.
The Binding of Isaac.
This is the eternal game of ever. It is balanced, fair, excellent feedback (time to win), super I'm depth unlocks, one of the best meta games. Take the time to learn the basics and this game is infinite.
Mmmm Delirium would disagree
For retro games my answer is probably Yoshi's Island. If you include modern games I'd likely go with Hollow Knight. If VNs count then Echo.
I'm gonna say Skies of Arcadia, just love that game, and it saddens me to this day that Sega have abandoned it.
I would love to see a remaster of this one, but also there is nothing wrong with the original.
The end of the game blew my mind out of the water in a way no other twist has ever quite captured. It might have been the mental space I was in at the time too. Whatever the case, I will always remember the first time I played it.
I also wish I had played the first Golden Sun before the second, so if I could put a duology and that caveat in there? Definitely those two.
I love that game, too. I'd hate to spoil it for anybody, but it is a great example of a story that works better as a video game that you play, with all the returning to older sections to get the correct path, all for the payoff of the ending.
tales of phantasia.
the op intro song is very memorable
Breath of the Wild or Tears of the Kingdom. BOTW was my first Zelda game and I honestly loved it. I would sit for hours in the living room zoned in to the game with checklist paper and notebooks next to me to keep track of what I was doing. If I could do it again I'd instead use an interactive map like I did with TOTK.
As for TOTK, the Rito dungeon was my favorite and if I could experience that adrenaline pumping battle for the first time again, I would. Tulin is a baby and I love him.
FF3, US version.
There was magic in that game.
Star Control 2
I think this is a tie between Bloodborne and Panzer Dragoon Saga. Absolute masterpieces, both. I replay both of them at least once a year, but it would be wonderful to go back in fresh.
Max Payne. The original game was just amazing and the story was incredible.
Mother 3. I really don't know what else to say, this series impacted me so much in my youth and I wish I got to experience it raw.
gives me nostalgia
Noita
For pure amount of enjoyable play hours: Skyrim, hands down.
For emotional/philosophical impact: Either Journey or SOMA. Both had a big impact mentally for me.
Dark Souls 1
Part 2, 3 and not even elden ring did manage to reach the same athmosphere and i mainly atribute it to leveldesign: Dark souls 1 is an apocalypse brought about the fact that every last being is slowly but surely driven insane before losing any semplence of self altogether and bekome huskless zombies. And the world is reflecting this: It's like a surealist painting. When you zoom in very far everything makes sense, ther is a wall and a medieval city and beneath is some sewers, but when you zoom out the city is actually in front of the wall, but then you are on top of the wall which is kinda acting like an entrance the the next area and not like a wall at all. In the other directen you go down the sewer, but then drop into a hole to be on top of a wall again with another city beneath you. And you can go even further down, either to a hell like environment to yet another city even lower, or throug a giant dead tree to come out on a beach with a clody sky above which absolutly does not make any topological sense at all. And yet this map is intricatly interconnected with several passages and elevators. Not from me: It's like with the first flame fading it's not the dead rising, but time and space itself is collapsing, that's why you can't die, that's why other players can be summoned to your world, and that's why the whole world, while still being connected, makes no sense at all.
Also 2nd choice: Obligatory: "Spec Ops: The Line"
If you haven't played it yet: Do it without reading any Spoilers.
one game I didn't see in the whole thread: A story about my uncle While not necessarily my pick, that game is beautiful storytelling and I recommend it to everyone.
The Journeyman Project 3 - A legacy of time. I got it as a gift when I was a kid it was only in English and I didn’t speak the language yet. That game was my tally on my language learning skills. I also have a love for point n click games (Myst, Atlantis, Amerzona, Versailles and all of Cryo games)
Probably Pathologic 2, assuming I'd retain my fondness towards it.
On my way to completing my first playthrough, I had to spend at least 2 months warming up to the game and actually going through the first hour, after which it was absolutely amazing. I'm still replaying it once a year due to how much I love it.
All the story based games:
TT The Walking Dead most, but Firewatch and Life is Strange in a close second/third. So many feels I wish I could relive.
Same as OP!!!
The S.T.A.L.K.E.R series & Metal Gear Solid 1
Ark Survival Evolved.
Peak Ark is when you have no idea what you are doing and keep being shitmixed by velocipators. Huddled in a darkened shack with the outside chewing it's way inside while you scream in terror.
Then you finally get a bit of a handle on what is going on, tame your own raptor and BAM giant snake knocks you out and as you swim back to consciousness a giant croc grabs you in its mouth and launches into the stratosphere.
Later on it's all iron man suits and minmaxing every fucking thing.
This is Zelda 2 right? Where the princess is in a coma in the bed from the very beginning? First side scrolling Zelda?
I seem to remember some guy named Ragu, and I always thought about the spaghetti sauce.
Somehow I never played this again after emulators.
I did Kid Icarus on an emulator. Loved that game.
The Witness
Definitely Xenogears on the PS2. I loved that story
Sure as hell wouldn't be Zelda. It would probably be Fallout 2, M.A.X., one of first Diablo games. Etc.