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Tell me the platform, the type of game, and why you think it is amazing....

2007-02-07 20:07:11 · 28 answers · asked by crazydawg 3 in Games & Recreation Video & Online Games

28 answers

These are only my opinions.

Wii - Twilight Princess
PS2 - Final Fantasy XII
N64 - Ocarina of Time
GC - Resident Evil 4
X360 - Gears of War
DS - New. Super Mario Brothers
GBA - Kingdom Hearts: COM
PSP - Sonic Rivals/Daxter

2007-02-08 03:32:38 · answer #1 · answered by lord_spectre_x 2 · 0 0

My favourite game I own is Vampire The Masquerade: Bloodlines on the PC, which if you don't know is a first person RPG in the same guise as games like Oblivion in which you can fight with weapons and use magic as well. The game is very bugged though and I think I probably only love it because the story and atmosphere are great and probably also because I must be into slutty female vampires (who'd have known).

On a side note I'm also fond of the Mech Warrior series, the Dark Forces/Jedi Knight Series, The Halo series on the Xbox, Fable on The Xbox and of recent I've had a sudden urge to play Golden Axe (the old side scrolling beat'em'up from Sega) so I'd have to add that too. All in all though Vampire has been played so much of late that's the one at the top for me!

2007-02-08 05:50:52 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

For it's time I think the first Quake (PC) was amazing. It brought first person shooters all the way into the realm of 3-D, whereas before the worlds were 3d, but everything else including the characters were two dimensional sprites. Quake had a large hand in creating the mod revolution, with the team based multiplayer mod Team Fortress leading the pack. The gameplay was excellent, fun in single player as well as multiplayer, and (for me at least) never got repetitive. Second place goes to Half Life (PC) for taking the genre to a whole new level. I could go on and on about both these games, but I'll just sum it up by saying if you haven't experienced either of these, you should definitely do so as they are still excellent games which you can pick up at the bargain bin at your local game shop for a very reasonable price.

2007-02-08 04:17:27 · answer #3 · answered by Jack S 5 · 0 0

Major thumbs down for me but: Final Fantasy 6. For the SNES. It's the best for a mutlitude of reasons.

1) It's an RPG that is basically and suprisingly two huge games in one. And it presents that in a creative way later on in the game. No other RPG or any game for that matter has done that to my knowledge....at least as wel as FF6 did. It was like a grand movie to me when I experienced it.

2) There were 12 main characters to use and each had their own very important story. And they were all incredibly unique characters in every way. Haven't seen that done before in an RPG....it's usually just a hand ful of characters who are all the same ol thing we've seen before.

3) The music, graphics, story, gameplay, and sound effects, and art style was all equally phenomenal in those times. Now days, just one or two of these elements will be good, but everything else falls short.

4) The game play took skill, and had very unique moments in how to fight certain enemies. But at the same time, the game wasn't so ridiculously difficult that you had to go online just to figure it out like most games today. The game actually gives you a reasonable chance, but it's difficult at the same time.

5) Each enemy was presented gloriously to the player, not like most games now where it ends up being lame and obvious.

6) You get your money's worth since the game is so incredibly long, and so suprising like a really good miniseries Tv show.

7) The logic of the story in the game made sense and was complete, unlike many RPG's today were it's just the same ol story, and parts are unclear or riduculous, or incomplete.

8) It's one of the only games that I replay over again and enjoy it all the same. And even the special items are reasonable to obtain, not ridiculous like some of these newer games were your forced to buy a strategy guide or puss out and look online.

9) It has just about everything you want in a game, fighting, mystery, well done drama, interesting puzzles, eye candy, good music, stealth, etc, just a really great game.

2007-02-08 04:24:17 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 2 1

I have two on the PS2.... The GTA series as it combines, fighting, driving etc with a story line and there is so much involved in the game for hours of fun.... and two. The resident evil series as the have great gameplay with solving puzzels to get through as well.

Ive just thought of a couple more that i got addicted to as well... metal gear solid and syphon filter.... I suppose i cant just choose the one game

2007-02-08 04:11:33 · answer #5 · answered by 2 good 2 miss 6 · 0 0

Phantasy Star Online Episiodes I & II gamecube

it's great fun time consuming and rare to find (max lvl is 200)
plus no one has beaten the game yet in single player mode in ultimate mode and it's been out for like 3 years

2007-02-08 08:28:18 · answer #6 · answered by boreddude 5 · 0 0

UNO - Card Game
The Sims (Only those available on Gameboy SP and Nokia N-gage phone)
Marvel VS Capcom / The King of Fighters - PS1
Street Basketball (Those at arcades)

2007-02-08 04:47:53 · answer #7 · answered by Nonsensical 2 · 0 0

Well for me it has to be Resident Evil 4 on the gamecube. This one totally revamped the resi series with improved graphics and some sweet gameplay(although i always mess up the fight with Krauser) not to mention some adorable characters(that chainsaw guy for instance) and a fairly decent amount of replay value.

2007-02-08 09:09:57 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I would say

God Of War for PS2

Grate story and Game play I would rate it 10 out of 10

I can not wait for God Of War 2

should be out May 6-7 2007

2007-02-08 07:17:36 · answer #9 · answered by Bullz_ eye 6 · 0 0

Pong... and that "Blow up the other guy's castle" game from the Apple II.

Cuz they are totally fun, competitive, easy to learn and don't rely on software work-arounds. They are based on simple principles of physics.

And if you want to go old-school, try Simon, the memory game with a disco-looking computer contraption that progressively tested your recall ability to greater and greater lengths. Twister is another one of those old-school "Groovy Baby" type of games.

2007-02-08 04:33:05 · answer #10 · answered by Schmalski 2 · 0 0

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