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upUPNorth
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Tue Jul-06-21 11:04 AM

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10. "RE: 10 Videogames That Changed Your Life"
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Tue Jul-06-21 11:09 AM by upUPNorth

  

          

This wasn't easy to come up with, and hard to differentiate between choosing stuff from my childhood and still being able to explain it, and recent stuff that makes more sense to my adult expectations.

Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars
This is an old game, but I also just played through it again on my old SNES (made a post in that covid gaming one). This still feels like the most relevant Mario game to me, and I think it's always had something to do with the character and world building, giving everyone (but Mario) dialogue and a personality, that I'm not sure I really realized mattered to me as much in a game until then, even if I didn't realize it.

Conker's Bad Fur Day
N64 classic. Didn't even know what we were getting into at first, Dad rented it with a bunch of games back in the day, thought it was a good 'kids' platformer like Mario or Banjo that my sister also liked to play, she comes out and tells us there's cursing and stuff and it ends up being my favourite game for a long time. I had a Playstation, I know it was more 'adult' than Nintendo at the time, but I feel like this game did more cross so many lines in an interesting way. Played the story, played multiplayer even against bots, had some CTF games against einstein AI that I still have memories of, had to give credit to the AI back then when you could even rely on your teammates to do the right thing.

FF7
I almost didn't include this and the Mario RPG. It's typical, but it was also my first Final Fantasy and probably broke me into games like this, my experiences in previous gens I guess were just limited. The moment in this game that changed things for me the most was actually the first time you leave Midgard and see the World Map. I can't really explain why in retrospect, but before that moment I assumed that game was just going to take place in Midgard entirely, just destroying all the reactors and then the tower, like levels. It was so much more.

Ghost Recon
OG Xbox Live version. This is kinda getting credit in my life for more than just the game, but also experiences with people in it as it was one of my main first intros to online gaming then. A guy who hosted games for a group of us, fostered a real sense of community, is the reason I started watching Stargate lol, and ended up passing away and someone he knew signing in and telling people in his friends list to pass it around, showed how much that could mean. There were also just experiences we created ourselves that new games try to fabricate, like organizing our own squad and targets and firing together on a countdown and watching everyone drop at once, like Wildlands lets you do with markers and your squad AI but way more satisfying and without the UI helping us.

Portal
This one is here mainly because of how immersed I was in that world in my playthrough that one night all at once in the dark. I was so sucked in I was convinced for a moment I was supposed to fall in that pit at the end and die and that the game itself somehow didn't expect me to escape. The kind of thing that is hard to replicate but you wish you could experience fresh again.

Valiant Hearts
The ending of this game makes me cry, in a way few things game or otherwise ever have without any obvious personal relevance. It is great artistic storytelling, and one of the strongest examples of why I think video games can be the greatest form of it, even just with the very last 'level', when executed properly when you are required to 'participate' in the moments that matter and feel like you are taking part in them, and not just watching/reading them.

The Witness
Immersive puzzle game. The stuff behind Braid impresses me, but I didn't really get that deep into the game itself. I still haven't completey finished the Witness technically, but did a lot of the stuff, and just the layers and the design are very cool and I hope to go back to it and start over sometime and hope it feels close to fresh again. To have a game in it's entirety almost be about some kind of philosophical idea and to be so thoroughly thought out has stuck with me. Some games seem to try to be like part of it, but only puzzles, or art style, or something, but never execute all parts like this did.

Night in the Woods
I wish this game never ended. My favourite part about it was how it almost didn't feel like a game, and the experience for most of it of being played day by day (wake up in the morning, go back home to sleep at night). I played it after work every day, essentially one day at a time in game, and never wanted that to stop. Eventually it had it's ending but I just wanted to keep coming back and living in that city and keep talking to people every day.

Wolfenstein
This is kind of a cheat one. I may be referencing both Return to Castle Wolfenstein (X-Box Live) and The New Order. Xbox live is similar to Ghost Recon in the social gaming aspect of it's importance, playing with Brits who never slept until the late hours, coming up with knife games in rooms where no one joined, then getting one guy who tried to break in on his own to die on the barbed wire. The New Order I feel deserves credit as such a great re-introduction to the franchise, in a way I wasn't even completely expecting. I'd heard good things but it took ages for me to finally get my disc copy to work (it had known download issues, had to go back and uninstall and re-do it offline or something but I procrastinated), but when I did I regretted not doing so earlier. There was one random article that makes a point of stating that the sex scenes in the game are actually really good, and that stuck with me, especially when you realize just how true that is and honestly they feel better and more genuinely executed than a lot of the sex scenes they throw in tv shows nowadays, which is something you don't expect a game to do but that I think it deserves a lot of credit for and I wish it could serve as some kind of example lol.

Starcraft
possibly a cheat too. Definitely Starcraft and Brood War were important in my random early pc gaming along with some others that could be on this list, but I had way more consoles and crappy pc's. Part of this is what Starcraft is to me now, which is more than a game. I didn't have much experience back then, one month of playing with a friend thanks to phone line internet until his mom got the bill. He reached out to me ages later about SC2 and we both got it and played together for a bit, don't anymore, but with more internet access now I discovered it as an eSport and what was going on in Korea all that time and got completely sucked in and still follow it. Hard to think of anything else that ever had me up at 4 in the morning on multiple weekdays to watch GSL, or attending some of the Live events in Toronto and them feeling like they held as much importance to me as my trip to see two Moto GP races in Portugal/Spain. Even if I don't always watch and keep up with everything as much anymore, I always have my eye on it, and it exists as a sport I follow as importantly as Soccer essentially.

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Obviously White

  

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10 Videogames That Changed Your Life [View all] , LeroyBumpkin, Wed Jun-30-21 12:15 PM
 
Subject Author Message Date ID
RE: 10 Videogames That Changed Your Life
Jun 30th 2021
1
lol
Jul 01st 2021
4
      Autocorrect is a ratfink.
Jul 01st 2021
6
I'll try to go chronologically
Jun 30th 2021
2
The Last of Us 2 fucked me up
Jul 06th 2021
9
      Playing Last of Us 2 right now
Aug 24th 2021
28
COD 4 Modern Warfare, Halo Combat Evolved, Tekken 3
Jun 30th 2021
3
10. Perfect Cell (iOS)
Jul 01st 2021
5
RE: 10 Videogames That Changed Your Life
Jul 01st 2021
7
RE: 10 Videogames That Changed Your Life
Jul 11th 2021
14
Yeah, the game takes a turn about halfway through
Jul 12th 2021
15
      Crimson heads don't sound fun lol
Jul 13th 2021
16
Eternal Darkness!!!!!
Jul 16th 2021
18
      FAM! The first time I walked into a room and my head exploded...
Jul 18th 2021
22
RE: 10 Videogames That Changed Your Life
Jul 05th 2021
8
this is a really good question.
Jul 09th 2021
11
GAMEDAY 98
Jul 10th 2021
13
RE: 10 Videogames That Changed Your Life
Jul 10th 2021
12
Holy shit! How did I forget Metroid?
Jul 16th 2021
19
      theres a new side scrolling Metroid drooping soon...
Aug 23rd 2021
26
I might not have 10, but I'ma try
Jul 16th 2021
17
RE: 10 Videogames That Changed Your Life
Jul 16th 2021
20
NHL Hitz 2002 might be my favorite sports game of all time
Jul 17th 2021
21
RE: 10 Videogames That Changed Your Life
Jul 19th 2021
23
damn good list
Jul 21st 2021
24
      hell yeah
Jul 22nd 2021
25
RE: 10 Videogames That Changed Your Life
Aug 24th 2021
27
RE: 10 Videogames That Changed Your Life
Aug 24th 2021
30
Hmmm this is harder the more I think about it
Aug 24th 2021
29
RE: Hmmm this is harder the more I think about it
Aug 24th 2021
31
      Yeah I used to play the multiplayer religiously
Aug 25th 2021
32
RE: 10 Videogames That Changed Your Life
Apr 19th 2022
33
RE: 10 Videogames That Changed Your Life
Apr 21st 2022
34
Fallout 1, 2 and 3.
May 04th 2022
35
DOOM (OG on the PC - Shareware first episode)
May 04th 2022
36

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