Name and describe obscure games that you want people to play.

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Onyx Oblivion

Borderlands Addict. Again.
Sep 9, 2008
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I've always been interested in this old Game Boy game called "Revelations: The Demon Slayer"
It had the concept of pokemon in that any creature you encountered could join you...but it was different in many ways. It was an RPG, with creature collecting on the side. You obtained human party members that you could fight with, but if you would go through a philosophical conversation with the monsters, they might join you. It was a priceless little gem.
 

Zac_Dai

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Oct 21, 2008
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Red Orchestra and its various mods

Its a WWII FPS with the eastern front as the setting. What makes it stand out is that it focuses on realism and historical accuracy but still manages to be amazing fun and immensely intense.

Its quite hard though. The basic class is armed with nothing more then a couple of grenades and a bolt action rifle and you don't get cross hairs so you have to rely on ironsights.

Oh it and it has tanks.
 

mark_n_b

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Mar 24, 2008
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Zac_Dai post=9.75219.860491 said:
Its a WWII FPS with the eastern front as the setting. What makes it stand out is that it focuses on realism and historical accuracy but still manages to be amazing fun and immensely intense.
A WWII game? Standing out because it focuses on realism and historical accuracy? I am so sorry, but unless it opens a time vortex in your living room to pull you onto the front lines I am left shaking my head, I mean it is a WWII FPS after all, how much different can it be from the eight billion other WWII FPS out there? Maybe a WWI FPS.

There are two games that come to mind immediately for me. One is Atlus' Rule of Rose, frustrating game play but it is such a beautifully artful story in an incredible world. This tale is a tragedy for sure, but such a sophisticated offering to the culture of gaming.

Blade Runner, 1997 by Westwood Studios. Ridley Scott dystopian future fanboyism aside, this game truly changed depending on how you played it. Where you went, when you went there, what you did opened up a whole new set of options and potential paths for you to take. Playing through the game three times meant three different completely different games with three completely different endings. This is one of the greatest games for letting the player choose what the game became through how they chose to play it. Something that has been completely lost in contemporary gaming, something we need to get back.
 

Gxas

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Sep 4, 2008
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OKAGE: SHADOW KING!!!

Ok, so its not that unknown, but I'm sure most people haven't actually played it.
great game, great story, funny as shit to boot.
 

Gxas

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Sep 4, 2008
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Gotham Soul post=9.75219.862326 said:
Jet Force Gemini.
Me and my buddy are about to start perfecting that game. We just hundred-percented Banjo-Kazooie in under 12 hours. JFJ is next.

Oooh damn... double post... my bad.
 

Sir_Montague

New member
Oct 6, 2008
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Mmmm.... Well none of my friends seem to know about red faction, but I'm sure it's well known... Mmmm... I'll be back around.
 
Feb 13, 2008
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Zac_Dai post=9.75219.860491 said:
Red Orchestra and its various mods

Its a WWII FPS with the eastern front as the setting. What makes it stand out is that it focuses on realism and historical accuracy but still manages to be amazing fun and immensely intense.

Its quite hard though. The basic class is armed with nothing more then a couple of grenades and a bolt action rifle and you don't get cross hairs so you have to rely on ironsights.

Oh it and it has tanks.
As does Mare Nostrum, the 'add-on'

A WWII game? Standing out because it focuses on realism and historical accuracy? I am so sorry, but unless it opens a time vortex in your living room to pull you onto the front lines I am left shaking my head, I mean it is a WWII FPS after all, how much different can it be from the eight billion other WWII FPS out there? Maybe a WWI FPS.
Give it a try, you might be pleasantly surprised.
 

Gxas

New member
Sep 4, 2008
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fedpayne post=9.75219.862338 said:
gorillas.bat

/thread.
Agreed. That game was the best. Nothing like pixellated gorillas throwing exploding bananas at each other.
 

mintsauce

New member
Aug 18, 2008
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Uplink.

Amazing hacking game from a few years back, the first game from Introversion, who went on to do Darwinia and Defcon. The interface is very clean and minimal, and almost looks like you're just running an operating system rather than playing a game.

Wonderful music, pretty varied missions and a decent story, and huge amounts of panic when you're about to be discovered rooting around on someone's network. The atmosphere is really what makes the game, you can cut the tension with a knife. I'd say it's essential for anyone looking for something a bit more unusual.

www.introversion.co.uk/uplink/
 

The Youth Counselor

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Sep 20, 2008
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There are so many Half-Life fans and people playing Counter-Strike Source and Team Fortress 2 online, yet the only mod I see with a notable sized fanbase is the somewhat generic "realistic shooter" Insurgency. Here are some of my favorite Half-Life 2 mods.

-The Battlegrounds: A game set in the American Revolution (or the American War for Independence for you limeys.) you fight alongside either the British Empire or American Revolutionaries. The game is filled with hilarious animations, history geeks and guns so inaccurate and slow to reload it takes an entire firing squad to kill one or two people most of the time, before they charge with swords, knives, and bayonets. (Just like in real life.) One of the aspects of this game I find fascinating, is the level of cooperation and teamwork that you rarely see in other multiplayer games. To see strangers organizing in ways such as making line formations, with people stacked behind each other on a hill and waiting for the order to fire is awe inspiring.

-Eternal Silence: With the success of games such as EVE Online and the X-Series I find it mind boggling I've only seen up to six people playing this game at any one time. Like the aforementioned games you pilot several types of customizable spacecraft and dock for supplies. The kicker though is that you are able to leave your ship in a space station, to go in first person shooter mode, and even steal another player's ship. The amount of work put into this game and the amazing possibilities (exploding debris physics and hiding in asteroid fields anyone?) make this a worthwhile experience.

Besides mods, I have another game to add although, it is also on the Source Engine.

Vampire The Masquerade: Bloodlines: This was one of the best games to have come out in 2004, and yet barely anyone I know has touched this. The colorful ensemble of characters, detailed world, and interactions made this one of the most well thought out and designed RPGs since Fallout and Deus Ex. However Activision's rushing of the team to release this before Half-Life 2 left it full of bugs, unfinished animations, and rushed level design and gameplay elements. The folding of the developer Troika, killed the large fanbase they deserved. Yet this still remains one of my favorite RPGs.
 

Elurindel

New member
Dec 12, 2007
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Ahhh, good old Jet Force Gemini. Took me years on and off to achieve the full ending, trackign down every little nook and cranny of it to find the hidden ship parts. The final boss wasn't amazing, but I was just so glad to have completed it that it didn't matter.

My own personal reccomendation would be Star Crusader. Playing the part of the wing leader of the Gorene (eg. Space Romans), Gold Squadron of fighter ships, you got to fly against a wide variety of aliens races, each with different cultures, backgrounds, ships and weaponry. You could manage everything about the ship you pilotted from priority of the ship's power to repair priority, and whether or not to overcharge shields or lasers. Fighting everywhere from dead space to asteroid fields, minefields, even nebulas. The characters were believable, if not always likeable, the plot was complex (at least I thought so when I was 7), and there was always the possibility that the game would go a different way each time. Failed to capture a freighter full of Zemun fgighter craft? Then we'll have to try the harder emthod of capturing live craft patrolling the edges of their border space! So fail at your peril, only to have to try something even riskier!
There's even one point where you're forced to choose either to join the alien alliance by letting an unarmed cruiser full of the alien planetary leaders blow up, or to let them die and continue to pummel the alien races into the ground, using increasingly unethetical methods like biological weaponry, sending an entire race mad, etc.

So even then, the game has replay value, as increasingly, there are other missions that you could have played. I would heartily reccomend it to anybody who can track it down.
 

Baby Tea

Just Ask Frankie
Sep 18, 2008
4,687
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Phantom Dust (Original Xbox).

I had so much fun with that game, an nobody has ever heard of it/played it. The time between combat is a tad annoyingly slow, but the combat is awesome. Sweet game.
 

Chartist

New member
Jul 28, 2008
30
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Terranigma on the snes. You can affect the game world more than in any more recent game i've played. And the original Dune that was an absolute beast of a game, call me easily pleased but you can ride sand worms around. Nuff said.
 

Lvl 64 Klutz

Crowsplosion!
Apr 8, 2008
2,338
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Dark Cloud 2

Action RPG where instead of leveling your characters (There's 2 of them), you level their weapons, evolving them up through a branching hierarchy of different models and powers. Even a fishing pole you get can be given points and upgraded.

Part of the game is to go around and collect materials, to go back to "towns" and use the materials to build them from he ground up. Advancing through the plot requires meeting certain building requirements, such as "build 4 trees, 2 houses, and an iron fence" or stuff along those lines.

Lastly, the game has a nifty invention system where you take pictures of different items to get "ideas" then combine those ideas into items.