Question of the Day, September 6, 2010

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PPB

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May 25, 2009
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Easily Baldur's Gate.

Unfortunately, I don't think Neverwinter Nights really had an influence. The strength of that game was the toolset that allowed people to create full single-player modules and multi-player persistent worlds. It was a success for NWN itself, but the idea didn't carry on in other games. Although the Dragon Age toolset technically allows you to create distinct modules, the vast majority of mods for it are more akin to Morrowind's and Oblivion's plugins: small enhancements to the existing game world, rather than new adventures altogether.
 

Aurora219

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Aug 31, 2008
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I think your titles are a little too new to be in the "influential" zone. I'd say that:

Baldur's Gate, and before that, Icewind Dale, influenced the top-down party style RPG. Hell, they defined the genre. NWN and it's ilk were some of the best games I can mention, but thy took their silhouette from the originals.

Morrowind made the free-roaming RPG, which then morphed into Oblivion, which in turn created Fallout 3.

And then of course there are the JRPGs. I've not played many, but every single one seems to be a Final Fantasy clone.

EDIT: But the "new" Bioware titles, Mass Effect and Dragon Age, they're pretty influential in their own right. I mean, they're almost identical in play style, but that's not a bad thing and I find them fantastic games.
 

Talvrae

The Purple Fairy
Dec 8, 2009
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Dragon Age? seriously how could it have influenced the grandra the most when the game is not even 1 year old... I would say Baldur's Gate 1&2 and Fallout 1&2 on about about even grounds
 

Talvrae

The Purple Fairy
Dec 8, 2009
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SideburnsPuppy said:
DnD. Brought the wargaming experience into a fantasy setting, and pretty much all early video RPGs were attempting to be it.
Warhammer did that first... DnD had put the emphasis on individual instands of armys
 

the Dept of Science

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Nov 9, 2009
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When you are talking about influence, it is almost always just a matter of how far back you go.

But I digress, if Deus Ex counts then that definately would be where my vote lies. To my knowledge, its the first game that really had an actions=consequences thing, which have been massive buzzwords in the past couple of years.
 
May 25, 2010
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I voted for Final Fantasy obviously. It's the one that introduced the West to RPG's in general.

Also, why is Zelda on the list? That's not an RPG.
 

Evil_Weevil

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Sep 5, 2010
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Um, i voted for FF but only because its the most important JRPG series, and there are a lot of JRPG's.

Personally I'd like to see some love for the hack and slash god that is Diablo (2nd one mainly)
 

Flying-Emu

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Oct 30, 2008
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dragonslayer32 said:
Oblivion obviously, that game is epic. Final Fantasy has too many cut scenes, if it were not for this, I would choose final fantasy.
The question was "Which of these is more influential?" not "Which do you like the most?"

I hate Final Fantasy and everything related to it, but I can still recognize that it was one of the key turning points in RPGs.
 

Talvrae

The Purple Fairy
Dec 8, 2009
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akibawall95 said:
I wonder why Fallout is not one of the options?
That and Baldur's Gate.... damn they have put Dragon Age... the game who was sold as the Spiritual sucessor of Baldur's Gate
 

JackRyan64

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May 22, 2010
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Zelda. The original Zelda. It may not be an RPG, but it's influence on the genre is undeniable. It was the first free roaming game, one of the first to include a save function, and it was one of the first games to nail a truly adventurous feel.
 

Spookboy666

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Sep 10, 2008
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D&D and Baldurs Gate are Obvious choices for this, but I'm also gonna throw in Call of Cthulu cause I love that game and it does things differently and really broke the standard combat based mold of RPGs.
 

Sarah Kerrigan

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Jan 17, 2010
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Final Fantasy Mostly.

But then I also have to put out System Shock 2, since it kinda started the whole 'pick your own class' thing.
 

starrman

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Feb 11, 2009
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Baldur's Gate for pretty much defining the fantasy RPG genre. Games like Dragon Age simply could not have existed without them.

Deus Ex for defining the morality/philosophy driven nature of free choice in action RPGs. Games like Alpha Protocol and Splinter Cell could not have existed without them.

I do have to wonder why anyone would put Zelda and Dragon Age in this survey at all, and why put Oblivion in over Morrowind, or even Daggerfall.