Oh, this one's easy: Subnautica.
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Horizon zero dawn.
I agree with this. That game is a movie with good gameplay. Definitely worth picking up for a tenner in a GOG sale.
I've played it for the first time a month ago. I really wanted to love it. Not my cup of tea unfortunately, I'm really upset about it (about the fact I did not like it, not about the game)
That's fair, and honestly I feel like it's a game you either love or hate. And really, play what you love and don't let the haters bring you down. I was enthralled with the story being a fresh take on a post-apocalyptic world. There are some...quirks with the gameplay but still one of my favorite games of all time.
Mass Effect Trilogy
My big one is Subnautica, but Mass Effect is right behind it. Such a great trilogy.
Halo CE, but in 2001 when it released. I remember how incredible landing on Halo felt. Also the flood reveal.
TUNIC. It's impossible to truly explain without spilling anything. But I don't think any other game could do what that game did again and succeed, unless of course whoever is playing it hasn't already played TUNIC.
Fez is also similar in that regard
Myst on the PC
That shit broke my mind as a kid. It was life changing.
Riven is probably even better, just a great sequel all around. Exile too, but then I kinda fell off.
Portal 2
Chrono Trigger.
Because Chrono Trigger.
Maybe FF8.
Also because Chrono Trigger.
I want to go to a con just for Chrono Trigger. I don't meet enough people in irl that love this game as much as me.
Thanks for sharing
Fire watch and portal.
In no particular order:
Undertale, Chrono Trigger, Donkey Kong Country 2, Final Fantasy III/VI, Slay the Princess. All those games "lose" something the more that you've played them.
Portal and Portal2. Epic games that just aren't quite the same on replay
This. I wish I could finish Portal 1 and hear the ending song for the first time again. I remember finishing this game in like 3 in the morning after the party I hosted. I wanted to finish it so badly I couldn't resist. My jaw was so dropped. Still one of the best feelings I had with games.
Try Portal Revolutions if you haven't, I just started and it feels just as "Portal" as any Valve-made game.
Shadow of the Colossus
I mean, it's the Outer Wilds. That's the right answer to this question.
But also, Hellblade was absolutely incredible to play in one sitting with good headphones in a pitch black room. It took a few minutes to get used to the voices, but once I was finished with the game, my mind felt strangely empty for a while
Read Dead Redemption 2. While I didn't like the Intro as much, it really made for quite a journey.
Any of the souls games. The exploration in those games is so damn good.
Playing Dark Souls 1 blind was a religious experience.
Fallout 4, it's taken me ages, but I finally have a console mod set that makes survival mode what I always wanted it be, and being able to explore the world that way with fresh eyes would be amazing.
Planescape: Torment
I've asked my partner... in case I ever get Alzheimer's... to just plug me in front of that game forever.
Stardew Valley...
It's World of Warcraft, and it includes being the age I was with the knowledge I had at the time. Vanilla was such a stabbing in the dark experience, and then stepping through to Hellfire Peninsula, what a vast view compared to the prior landscapes. I miss not knowing who's "bad" and who's "good" and who's "meta"
Maybe that was always there (though I doubt it was there as much without all the third party metric collecting interference) but that's why I caveat with knowing what I knew at the time
Man I just finished the DLC for Outer Wilds, then I went through the main game's ending again. And holy shit if it were possible for a game to make me cry, then that ending would do it.
Mario 64 for that holy shit this is the future of video games moment
Golden Sun and Gothic 2
I'm definitely showing my age here, but for me it would be a PC game from 1996 called The Neverhood. When I played it at age 15 a lot of the biblical overtones were kind of lost on me, and the guy who created it turned out to be kind of a nut job, but it's one of the most fun and creative puzzle games I've ever played. The entire game was made in stop motion with real clay sets and figures. The music is amazing and the soundtrack is definitely worth listening to on its own even if you don't play the game. I've replayed it on emulators a few times over the years, but it was nothing like experiencing it for the first time and discovering all the puzzles and secrets! This was pre YouTube so even if you had to occasionally check the walkthrough you still didn't really know what to expect next!
Oh, yes. This was also a game of my childhood. I first played it when I was six, maybe? Didn't get very far, because I never thought to go back to the place the Weasel popped out of for that final button to get out of the first area. I think I was eight when my older sib and I finally completed it. This was before I had access to the internet, so we called up the family member who had given it to us for hints when we finally put our nose to the grindstone to get it done.
In retrospect, the help we needed was ridiculous and somehow we figured out the harder puzzles with less issues. (Probably not me. My sib is better at those things than I am.)
I also didn't know anything about the biblical overtones, because I wasn't raised with religion. It was just nutty and unique. Yet I still listen to the Neverhood OST and quote Willie Trombone's tapes.
I remember being scared of the first person sections. I genuinely expected something to pop out. XD
Yakuza 0
Both portal games
Dark souls
STALKER SoC
The half life games
Full Throttle.
Kick ass soundtrack Main character has good quips (I'm not putting my lips on that) Good old SCUMM interface Crazy motorcycles Comedy, drama, and most importantly motorcycle fights on desert roads.
Star Control 2
Definitely Littlebigplanet 2. Also, Skyrim.
The Witness is truly amazing to play blind for the first time.
starcraft, warcraft 2, warcraft 3, world of warcraft (up to lich king) descent 2, descent 3, halo CE, the original dayZ (the arma II mod), unreal tournament 2004 multiplayer maps, life is strange
Conker's Bad Fur Day.
Although, really, it was a product of its time - not to mention the endless subtle (and not so subtle) movie references.
Also, classic LucasArts adventure games. Recently played through Grim Fandango for the first time, that was good, but it was nothing like Monkey Island and Loom.
Dayz.
There is no other game that has ever given me the same adrenaline rush as Dayz. It just hits different. The learning curve is a bit steep, but every step and every player encounter is a memory to remember. Really wish I was less experienced and not knowing the maps inside out, really wanting to get lost again not knowing might what happen next.
The game has come really far and more players are playing it now than ever. The game has great modding support and community servers. If you have never experienced Dayz then you really should give it a try as it is often on sale.
But remember: no mic, no life.
Spec Ops:The Line
All I wanted and expected was yet another mediocre military schooter. Mechanically I got that. What I not expected: how hard the story would hit. I am so very glad I went in blind.
RDR2
Breath of the Wild
Assuming it was also back in the relevant time, and not just the current day with memories wiped - the entirety of GTA 3, Vice City and San Andreas.
FFVII, FO3, Homeworld 2 are the three that immediately spring to mind