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16 votes
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Favorite out of bounds experience?
Currently going down a rabbit hole of out of bound areas in games. I’ve always loved seeing what we aren’t supposed to and how the devs make it work. I was curious on what you guys thought were...
Currently going down a rabbit hole of out of bound areas in games. I’ve always loved seeing what we aren’t supposed to and how the devs make it work.
I was curious on what you guys thought were some fun experiences you’ve had out of of bounds? Share below!
30 votes -
Zones & signature buildings | Feature highlights #4 | Cities: Skylines II
8 votes -
What is "that part" for you in any game?
We all know it. The boss/area/section of any of your favorite games/well liked games that gives you pause whenever you consider replaying it. An area or boss that sucks so much to go through that...
We all know it. The boss/area/section of any of your favorite games/well liked games that gives you pause whenever you consider replaying it. An area or boss that sucks so much to go through that you may even reconsider entirely. Who/what hurt you?
For me it'd have to be either Pontiff Sulyvahn from Dark souls 3, or Nyx from Persona 3. Pontiff just straight up sucks to fight. Unless you're a parry god, it's just nonstop aggression with seemingly few windows, and then the second phase kicks in and you're just skewered endlessly. I can't hack it. Did it once, never again. For Nyx, besides being a long and grueling fight, it loves to pull out the ol' Marin Karin making you pull out the ol' Diarahan. Can't do it. There's a reason I emulated it. Thank god for save states.
52 votes -
Street Fighter 6 | Rashid gameplay trailer
7 votes -
What kind of gaming details do you guys like to see?
For me, I love seeing parts of missions occur before and after we (the playable character) are involved. Like how after a cut scene a character will contribute out that action. It really helps...
For me, I love seeing parts of missions occur before and after we (the playable character) are involved. Like how after a cut scene a character will contribute out that action.
It really helps with the immersion and continuity.
Share what you like to see!
34 votes -
Do you know any games with excellent gameplay but horrible graphics?
^^^ List of games people have mentioned ^^^ @tenkuucastle Dream Quest @Another_KnowItAll Valheim @simo Easy Red 2 @larcohex Heart of Darkness @KreekyBonez Pizza Tower @KyuuGryphon Half-Life...
^^^ List of games people have mentioned ^^^
- @tenkuucastle Dream Quest
- @Another_KnowItAll Valheim
- @simo Easy Red 2
- @larcohex Heart of Darkness
- @KreekyBonez Pizza Tower
- @KyuuGryphon Half-Life
- @DontCallMeDari Factorio
- @daychilde Simutrans
- @PossiblyBipedal Dragons Age Origins
- @igemnace Nethack
- @spidercat Vampire Survivors
- @DarthYoshiBoy Baba Is You
- @cain Project Zomboid
- @NibblesMeKibbles Cogmind, Devil Daggers, Final Upgrade, Luck be a Landlord, Nightmare Reaper, SNKRX, Vampire Survivors
- @TMarkos Aurora 4X
- @Seagull_McBoye Deadly Premonition
- @monkeywork Rimworld, Shattered Pixel Dungeon, Dwarf Fortress, Vampire Hunter
- @Zelkova Mount and Blade: Warband
- @paddirn Hyper Light Drifter
- @elight Rimworld, Caves of Qud
- @Face BattleBit Remastered
- @hamstergeddon World of Warcraft
- @Lamchop the Combat Mission series
- @GalileoPotato Ocarina of Time
- @an_angry_tiger every 3D game for the PSX
- @RM8 the first Injustice game
- @disk Ravenfield; Brutal Doom/Wolfenstein
- @BreakfastCup Deep Rock Galactic
- @belak Runescape, Minecraft; older games like Deus Ex, Morrowind, System Shock 2, early 3D Final Fantasy games; modern indie gems like Stephen's Sausage Roll, Vampire Survivors, Pizza Tower, West of Loathing, Undertale
- @Plik Tron 2.0 multiplayer frisbee game mode
- @ThrowdoBaggins Outwitters
- @joshbuddy Steven's Sausage Roll
- @Naxes Cruelty Squad
- @de_fa Dwarf fortress; Ultrakill
- @Maxi games from the 70s: Pong, Tetris, age of empires, starcraft, FFVII etc.
Something that exemplify the mantra "don't judge a book by its cover".
For me it's the puzzle game SquishCraft. The mechanics is innovative and the puzzles are hard as hell. But looking at any videos of it and you might think it's a throwaway flash game from the 2000s or something. Here's a playthrough by a Youtuber in case you want to see the game in action.
Meta: Let me know how you feel about having a compilation of the comments included in the topic like this, first time trying so looking for feedback.
55 votes -
Feature highlights #3: Public & cargo transportation | Cities: Skylines II
13 votes -
Cozy games
Ever since I caught the FromSoftware bug in 2020 it's been difficult for me to enjoy action games anymore, but on the plus side, it has led me to spend more time exploring and enjoying cozy games!...
Ever since I caught the FromSoftware bug in 2020 it's been difficult for me to enjoy action games anymore, but on the plus side, it has led me to spend more time exploring and enjoying cozy games! In particular, I love cozy games that don't involve any kind of violence or death mechanics.
It seems to me like these games are what people think of as being targeted towards kids, but kids these days aren't really interested in them because they are very calm, slow, relaxing and meditative, and everything kids actually consume in the "Screen Era" tends to be the exact opposite.
For me, these cozy games are a great way for me to get in touch with my inner child as an adult and they help me a lot with emotional regulation, making sense of my own childhood, all sorts of stuff, really.
Do you play cozy games? Are you interested in exploring cozy games? Do you stream cozy games? I'd love to hear from you and your experiences playing cozy games as an adult! Everything from recommendation requests, to reviews, to let's plays, and beyond.
59 votes -
TF2 but Sniper is banned. What happens? I tried it out - gameplay experiment & analysis
16 votes -
Valorant | Deadlock gameplay trailer
10 votes -
Traffic AI | Feature highlights #2 | Cities: Skylines II
20 votes -
Feature highlights #1: Road tools | Cities: Skylines II
29 votes -
Metal Gear Solid: Master Collection Vol. 1 | Releases October 24 (PS5, Xbox Series, Switch, and PC)
27 votes -
Favorite "cozy" games?
I'm a HUGE lifestyle sim player. I've played Animal Crossing since Wild World came out on the DS. I've put waaaay too much time into the Sims. Stardew Valley is my absolute favorite farming sim. I...
I'm a HUGE lifestyle sim player. I've played Animal Crossing since Wild World came out on the DS. I've put waaaay too much time into the Sims. Stardew Valley is my absolute favorite farming sim.
I just decided to buy Kingdoms and Castles Complete Edition because it's on sale. What other games should I check out? I have a Switch and Mac ecosystem for my games.
48 votes -
Naafiri: The Hound of a Hundred Bites | Gameplay trailer - League of Legends
6 votes -
I built the city for the Cities: Skylines 2 trailer | My experience playing Cities: Skylines 2
9 votes -
Starfield gameplay
67 votes -
What video games have a player insert character who actually reacts like you would?
I'm looking for some new rpgs to play and I'm interested in stories that they and act like tye player character is some clueless out of towner to basically act as an avatar for the player. I feel...
I'm looking for some new rpgs to play and I'm interested in stories that they and act like tye player character is some clueless out of towner to basically act as an avatar for the player.
I feel like most of the gltimes I've seen this done its pretty hamfisted and doesnt seem like the interactions go right. I'm wondering if anyone has encountered good examples of this idea?
28 votes -
Star Wars Outlaws | Official gameplay walkthrough
18 votes -
Avowed | Official gameplay trailer
10 votes -
Stormgate | Gameplay reveal (pre-alpha)
4 votes -
Norland | Gameplay overview - medieval strategy/city builder
5 votes -
What makes Tetris the Grand Master so good?
7 votes -
Does adding story to open world survival games work well? An agonising deep-dive into the strange game that is The Forest.
5 votes -
Amnesia: The Bunker | Gameplay demo
4 votes -
Armored Core VI: Fires of Rubicon | Official gameplay reveal and release date trailer
7 votes -
Spatial Ops | Room-scale gameplay demo
3 votes -
Hyper Light Breaker | Gameplay reveal trailer
9 votes -
The Expanse: A Telltale Series | Official gameplay trailer
6 votes -
Kerbal Space Program 2 | Early Access gameplay trailer
7 votes -
Pacific Drive | Gameplay trailer
5 votes -
Minecraft Legends | Official gameplay trailer – released 18 April 2023
2 votes -
S.T.A.L.K.E.R. 2: Heart of Chornobyl | Official 'Come to Me' gameplay trailer
5 votes -
Why it's rude to suck at Warcraft
8 votes -
Racing / driving games: What do they get right? What do they miss?
I was playing Mario Kart 8 Deluxe with my kid the other day and it was a blast. Nintendo have really nailed this game, especially in the balance of accessible enough for beginners to have fun but...
I was playing Mario Kart 8 Deluxe with my kid the other day and it was a blast. Nintendo have really nailed this game, especially in the balance of accessible enough for beginners to have fun but hard enough for people to have a challenge too.
My other favourite game (although I haven't played it for a while) is Sega Rally Championship on Sega Saturn. This game has 4 tracks (one of which needs to be unlocked) and 3 cars (and again, one of these needs to be unlocked). The tiny number of cars and tracks means that you get to do the same corners over and over. This might sound tedious, but when you hit the corner just right you know it. You can get a sense of mastery over it. I've spent many hours playing games in the Gran Turismo series, and I really enjoy them, but fair play some of the tracks and cars are just shovelled into the game and you don't spend much time with them
In the first Gran Turismo the licensing tests were properly hard. They weren't messing around. Getting bronze requires people to read the manual and understand what the point of the test is. Getting all gold is an actual challenge for experienced players. I feel like the tests (at least, the bronze levels) got easier in later games. The UK soundtrack was small but pretty good.
My final mention is the Burnout series. I loved the crash junctions. I'm not sure the open world of Paradise was fun - it meant spending a lot of time driving across a map to get to the start line of various events. I feel the same way about many games - I'd rather just have a menu of levels and what I need to do to complete them (GoldenEye, SNES PilotWings, BlastCorps are all good examples) than have this stuff obscured by the open world. Burnout on the Nintendo DS was a genuinely awful game. I think Burnout Dominator was my favourite in the series.
So, what do driving games get right? What do they miss? What interesting game mechanics do you enjoy?
7 votes -
Did Real Time Strategy games die? Why?
There were a few years when RTS was a popular genre with games like Total Annihilation, Age of Empires, Command and Conquer, and Starcraft being very popular examples. But these games have mostly...
There were a few years when RTS was a popular genre with games like Total Annihilation, Age of Empires, Command and Conquer, and Starcraft being very popular examples.
But these games have mostly died out, and I was wondering if maybe I'm just not aware of modern RTS variants, or if there are good reasons why these games died off.
Like, are Tower Defence games a form of RTS?
Are there any RTS games where teams play against each other, so 2v2 rather than 1v1?
17 votes -
Have MMO's lost the RPG?
7 votes -
'It gets better after 100 hours...'
7 votes -
Learn about the economy in Victoria 3 – master the basics, find your niche, expand horizontally or vertically and lead your nation into a brighter future
4 votes -
The immoral design of Diablo Immortal
6 votes -
Homeworld 3 | Official extended gameplay trailer
5 votes -
Please spoil Outer Wilds for me
Note: Outer Wilds, not The Outer Worlds. If you do not want the game spoiled for you, please do not read any further into this topic. I have given the game two honest tries, and I've stopped each...
Note: Outer Wilds, not The Outer Worlds.
If you do not want the game spoiled for you, please do not read any further into this topic.
I have given the game two honest tries, and I've stopped each time. I like what the game is offering, but I don't like playing it.
What I'm wanting isn't just a traditional "spoiler" -- I can look up the plot and lore and details and such -- I'm more wanting to know about the full experience of playing the game. People talk about this game with the same awe and cultishness with which people talk about The Witness (which I loved). I saw a few glimpses of something that in my time in the game (e.g. the Quantum Tower puzzle). I've read so many comments warning me to not learn about the game and people wishing that they could play it again for the first time, that I know there's definitely something more here.
Unfortunately, I'm not the player to discover that more.
Thus, I'm hoping someone here can take me on their journey through the Outer Wilds instead. Tell me about what the game was like for you, how it unfolds, and, most importantly, what is it that makes people talk about the game the way that they do.
13 votes -
Victoria 3 | Gameplay trailer
8 votes -
Every new trailer from the Xbox & Bethesda Games Showcase 2022
7 votes -
“Rounds” gameplay - 1v1 chaos mashup of Duck Game and Slay the Spire
9 votes -
Ghostwire: Tokyo | Official gameplay deep dive
4 votes -
Tetris' rotation system is wonderfully broken
11 votes -
Elden Ring | Gameplay reveal
10 votes -
Tiny Tina’s Wonderlands | Official gameplay reveal trailer
6 votes