I remember Jersey Devil! I hated it, thought it controlled somewhat awkardly then again it has been almost 3 years since I last played it.
In my case, the original Spyro trilogy. One of the most solid series of platformers ever made and it gets absolutely no respect due to the newer titles sucking balls.
The second one is from a franchise that Final Fantasy Tactic based its combat. In fact, the guy who made the Ogre series helped with Final Fantasy Tactic.
Ogre Battle 64 is a long long long long game. Its story is the most intense story I've ever seen. However, it's really slow-paced. If I describe how to play it, it won't sound fun. However, the game grows on you. It's very rare and my fucking brother gave my copy for 10$. I'm still pissed to this day. However, I'm supposed to get it back soon.
Goemon's Great adventure is the wackiest fun that I've ever experienced. It's not really smart. It makes fun of many of Japan's stereotypes and it looks silly. However, you'll have one of the biggest platforming experience ever... I'm searching for a copy right now.
You aren't the only one who remembers it, and you are one hundred percent right, it was the very stuff of greatness.
Now for my own contribution, does anyone else remember Alien Trilogy on the PS1? (I have no idea how to paste pictures so you'll have to Google or Youtube it).
For a basic description, you can check tvtropes' basic description on them [http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/BatenKaitos], but in a nutshell, Baten Kaitos was a pseudo-turn-based card-based RPG for the Gamecube, which didn't have very good voice acting, but had beautiful graphics for its time, an intriguing plot, and a unique battle system. No one really played it since it didn't have many advertisements or word-of-mouth publicity, but it's a cult classic. You can play it on your Wii or Gamecube.
And Baten Kaitos Origins is slightly more obscure; it was released near the end of the Gamecube's life cycle, so pretty much only fans of the original bought it. Origins is a prequel for the original, and has a revamped card-battle system, a better plot, better graphics, and decent voice acting for once. Again, you can play it on a Wii or Gamecube, and both games can be found for cheap in most stores.
Sorry to gush, but I highly recommend both, albeit with the voices turned off if you're playing the first game, mostly because they're very underappreciated RPGs, with absolutely KICKASS soundtracks. Seriously, their soundtracks are better than some next-gen soundtracks.
Here's [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sKPxXRbYl6s] one from the prequel, Origins!
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