I think the Doom-era FPS is my favorite still. Not sure how far I am, but I love every second of it.
Parasite eve ps1 gamespot Pc#
PowerSlave: I believe this is a PC port, but I've had it for years and I finally decided to pop it in the other day. It's crazy that I find myself more engaged by this game than a modern day "platformer" like Sly Cooper 4: Thieves in Time. Some of the stages house some clever platforming and they're are always throwing new ideas at you too. It's actually a fairly competent 3D platformer, despite trying to ride that Crash Bandicoot wave (the boxes/crates you break in this game look awfully familiar). I actually didn't care for this too much at the start, but the more I played the more I'm digging it. Jersey Devil: Just bought this recently and am now 30% through the game. It's still the best Zelda game that isn't a Zelda game, lol! I have so much more appreciation for this game too after finally playing Landstalker for the first time last summer. Game is so much better than I remembered. since I don't have a 100% save file for this game anymore. Going for all Gilded Falcons, Life Vessels, max inventory, etc. It's been awhile since I've given this game a "complete" playthough. Here's my current lineup:Īlundra: Replaying this for the umpteenth time. A lot less painful than SNES collecting at least.īeen playing PSone stuff for the past week or so and I've been having the most fun I've had all year playing games.
Most didn't try to act like interactive movies, the music was a massive leap due to CDs yet many games still maintained a classic charm about them in their tunes. They were raw, colorful, varied, and fun.
Parasite eve ps1 gamespot ps2#
They didn't seem so "gritty" compared to PS2 games. There's just something about PS1 games that has a charm about them. 3d worlds and a tone that moved gaming from toys to teens/adults was such a shift. It was like the wild west with 3D, and for the people that grew up in the 80's and early 90's, we'll NEVER experience a gen that was as mindblowing as that 32/64 bit gen, and the PS1 led that charge. The sheer variety of titles was staggering. Having been a gamer since the Atari 2600, I can easily say that the PS1 was the most "fun" system in retrospect. I think I'll end up buying most of them back, as for the most part PS1 games aren't that expensive.
I think I owned a significant amount of whats considered the "classic" PS1 titles, but sold most of them as I moved digital. Going to have to start collecting this again.