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That description does not do the story justice but the story is so good that I do not want to spoil anything.
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Naughty Dog was still riding the success of the Uncharted series when they released The Last of Us, a horror-based game that followed the story of Joel and Ellie twenty years after an infection has decimated the human population. There is a reason this game was close to a 10/10 when reviewers got their hands on this third-person RPG back in 2013. It is a classic that I would highly recommend especially with rumors of a possible remaster of the original trilogy surfacing recently. If you try and play it now it will feel janky compared to the smooth controls of today’s games but back in 1998 and even when I played it and the entire trilogy when I was around six or seven the game was incredible.Įach world was crafted so uniquely, and the third-person RPG was one of the cleanest and smoothest at the time of release. I spent hours trying to 100 percent the game, and it is still one of the few games that I have completed literally everything.ĭo not get me wrong though, this game is old, and it feels old. The first game in the trilogy was one of the first games that I ever played on my sister’s original PlayStation, and nostalgia takes over once again for me. Spyro the Dragon still stands the test of time as an instant classic and for good reason. It is worth picking up if you can find it pretty cheap just to experience how great of a racing game this was. Plus, the soundtrack is phenomenal (I still hum “Riders on the Storm” to this day). At a time when Fast and the Furious was still in its young stages (and its prime) and car culture was at an all-time high this game was as good as it got. So many hours were put into this game that it basically places from nostalgia alone. The game had an open world system where there was no fast travel, so you had to drive across the giant city of Bayview to get to each race and each area that you progressed into was different than the other from the outskirts around the airport that you arrive in to Japanese-style downhill drifting, which was my personal favorite. I remember getting an external racing wheel that I could use to drive the car in game and let me tell you, nine-year old Alex thought it was the coolest shit in the world. Massive body kits, huge performance upgrades, customization levels fitting of a mid-2000s pimp, drifting, etc…never have I wanted a Nissan 350z more than I did when you drive the one in the beginning. While younger me had played racing games before, this brought me into a whole new level of racing and love for cars: street race culture. Need for Speed: Underground 2 - EA Black Box (2004)
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I considered recording an audio version of this list, but there's something impressive about the scale of it.While I would not recommend playing this game because of the massive learning curve, if you are willing to take a crack at it be ready for an investment that is super rewarding in the end. From a video they recorded, I know one game's maker is literally in first grade. I'm always pleased when people celebrate something by creating. The answer to that, mostly, is that they love the game. Many have silly names I must confess to giggling at, or delight in imagining what inspired them. Some game entries on Game Jolt are jokes, some aren't finished, some will never be finished, and I suspect some were never really started. To see this content please enable targeting cookies. I didn't know what to do with my obsession beyond compile it into one huge list so that's what I did, okay. As I write this, the host-o-community has at least 217 entries that are clearly FNAF fan games. I realised how big it was when Fazbear and friends usurped Slender Man as the most popular fan game subject on Game Jolt. Every morning I check Game Jolt, and every morning I see several new Five Nights games. My readme file obsession has tailed off in recent months, replaced by a fascination with fan games for Five Nights at Freddy's - a game I've only played for ten minutes in the demo. I know, right? Game Jolt chose to section Five Nights fan games away from the main stream, as they were flooding everything else out, and currently hosts over 4,712 in various stages of completion. I certainly did start, though, so now I've boshed another 922 games onto this list. At one point, I had hoped to compile a new list of the 2362 games on Game Jolt, but, well, there were 2362 of them. Update, September 14th: Shortly after this post, Five Nights fan games really took off.