Tuesday, November 16, 2021

My Favorite Games Redux

A couple of years ago, I posted a list of my all-time favorite games. While that list still holds up, I think it represents more of what I consider my "ideal" favorite games, rather than the games I would actually go back and play again.

So here's my new list. The following games are ones that I actually keep going back to, sometimes years apart. Most of these are games I've purchased and played on multiple consoles or computers, and have owned both physically and digitally. These are the games I would take if was stranded alone on a deserted island. These are the games I would save if a computer virus threatened to wipe out all other games from existence.

Most of these also appeared on my previous list, but this time they're in a different order. For the most part, I will only include one entry from a series. This is because some sequels make the earlier games in the series obsolete. I put months of my life into The Sims 3, but I never touched it again once I started playing The Sims 4.

I'm going to focus on single player games for this list. Sure, Street Fighter II has earned its place in video game history, and we all have fond memories of the original Gauntlet. But the truth is, I don't game with friends very often. And when I do, we usually just gravitate to whatever multiplayer game is newest, rather than going back to the classics. Heck, offline multiplayer games don't even have to be good, they just have to enhance the time we spend together.

I'm also not including any puzzle games like Tetris or Bejeweled, even though I've put a lot of time into them. When it comes to single player puzzle games, I tend to think of them as ways to pass the time in a waiting room, and I'm just as likely to try a new one as I am to replay an old favorite.

I'm also excluding compilation games (like Super Mario All-Stars or Mega Man Legacy Collection) because I feel like that would be cheating. Individual games only.

Anyway, that's enough exposition. On with the list!

15. Dungeon Siege

    Owned on: PC (Disc/Steam)

    This is just mindless point-and-click fun. The sequels are better, and Torchlight outshines the Dungeon Siege series in every way, but there's something about the simplicity of the original Dungeon Siege that makes me want to reinstall it now and then. This is an RPG for when I don't have time for an RPG, and just want to cut a swath of destruction through enemy hordes.

       

14. Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic

    Owned on: XBox, PC (Disc/Steam)

    I've installed and played through this game several times. The graphics haven't aged well, but remasters are coming, and I do intend to play through it again. This is the best non-theatrical Star Wars story I've seen, with a twist every bit as mind-blowing as the one in Empire Strikes Back.

13. Bionic Commando (NES Version)

    Owned on: NES, Gameboy, GBA (In "Capcom Classics Mini-Mix"), 360 and PC (Steam): "Rearmed" Version

    While I may have blasted the arcade version, the NES version of Bionic Commando is a delightful classic. It helps that it's been remade with better graphics, but even the NES version still has its charm. This is weird, but I've always had a thing for grappling hooks, ever since Luke used one in the first Star Wars movie. Video games with grappling hooks are especially fun, and Bionic Commando uses its grab-and-swing mechanic to great success.

12. Life is Strange

    Owned on: PS4, PC (Steam/GOG)

    It was difficult to restrain myself from putting multiple Life is Strange games on this list. It was even harder to decide which one deserved the spot most. The prequel has some of my favorite scenes, and the newest one has the best script, but ultimately I'm going to have to go with the original. It has the best plot, with all the time travel and the gut-wrenching decisions.

11. Dragon Age: Origins

    Owned on: 360, PC (Steam/Origin)

    Dragon Age is basically Knights of the Old Republic in a medieval fantasy world. But it ends up being way more exciting, IMO. I've played through this one at least four times, and I could easily see going through it again.

10. Super Metroid

    Owned on: SNES, Wii (Virtual Console), SNES Classic

    I've been in love with the Metroid series ever since I first found out Samus Aran's true identity. I love the sci-fi setting, the upgradable power armor, and the exploration. However, the original game has aged badly, and some of the later games leaned into aspects I don't enjoy, such as overly-long boss fights. Super Metroid, the third game in the series, is the best compromise between graphics and classic gameplay. Honestly it was a bit of a toss-up between this and Zero Mission, but the SNES holds a special place in my heart. I often say that Super Metroid is my all-time favorite game, but as you can see there are other games I'd be more likely to pick up and play.

   

9. Mega Man 2

   Owned on: NES, 3DS/PC (Steam): in "Mega Man Legacy Collection"

   Capcom always knew how to get the most out of the NES. The Mega Man games had vibrant colors, memorable character designs, and a creative premise. You have a character who can absorb his enemies' weapons, you can tackle the stages in any order, and you have near perfect controls. The Mega Man games are some of the most solid side-scrolling action games in the history of video games. And for my money, Mega Man 2 was the pinnacle of the series. It had great stage design and some of the most interesting bosses. Later Mega Man games sometimes felt like they were just going through the motions, but Mega Man 2 is inspired.

8. Final Fantasy VI

   Owned on: SNES, GBA, PC (Steam), SNES Classic, Android

   This was the first console RPG I really liked. I'd always shied away from games like Ultima and Dragon Warrior because they looked boring. At the time I felt like video games should test your manual dexterity, and having your attacks based on math just sounded dull. But then I read a glowing review of Final Fantasy III (the American name of FFVI for the SNES), and it convinced me to at least rent it. It seriously blew me away. The way these primitive little sprites could convey so much emotion, the sheer enormity of the plot, the huge variety in the way different characters worked... it all added up to something huge. And not to mention the length. Just when you think you've beaten the game, the bad guy shows up and destroys the world, and you realize... this game's only half over.

7. Crazy Climber

   Owned on: PS4

   This is one of the few games on this list that I've only bought once, but it's not for lack of trying. Crazy Climber was the first arcade game I really fell in love with as a child. I must have really tested my parents' patience, always making them drive across town for the one arcade that had Crazy Climber in it. I always wanted it for home consoles, even though I knew it would lose part of its charm - without twin joysticks, it just wouldn't have been the same game. It didn't matter, though, since it never seemed to come out for any consoles I owned. I'm just glad that when I finally managed to play it again as an adult, it was on a system with twin joysticks. And it holds up. Sure, the graphics are positively ancient, but like Pac-Man and Dig Dug, the visuals are exactly as good as they need to be. It was one of the first games I bought for my PS4, and I still keep coming back to it now and then.

6. Super Mario World

   Owned on: SNES, Wii (Virtual Console), SNES Classic

   I knew there had to be a Mario game on this list, but it was hard to decide which one. I didn't want to include Mario Maker because I consider it a multiplayer game - one of the best motivations to design cool levels is to show them off to other people. So it really boiled down to Super Mario Bros 3 and Super Mario World. But I have found over the years that I am a little bit more likely to go back and play Super Mario World. The controls are tight, the graphics are colorful, and every level is just pure, undistilled fun.

5. Chrono Trigger

   Owned on: SNES, DS, PC (Steam), Android

   Where do I even begin? Time travel! Multiple endings! Double and Triple Techs! A "New Game Plus" feature that gives the game infinite replayability! A lot of JRPGs lose their charm once you beat them, but Chrono Trigger is one of those games I can keep playing forever. It never hit me emotionally as much as the Final Fantasy games, but it's so much more fun. Honestly, in what other game can your party consist of a robot, a cavewoman, and a frog?

4. Super Castlevania IV

   Owned on: SNES, Wii (Virtual Console), SNES Classic, PS4/PC (Steam): in "Castlevania Anniversary Collection"

   Oddly, this is probably one of the less popular Castlevania games. It's not as nostalgia-inducing as the NES games, and it's not a "Metroidvania" like some of the other games in the series. It's basically a generic action game with a Castlevania theme. And I love that. There's no story to get bogged down in, there's no running back and forth to collect powerups, it's just a fun afternoon whipping monsters. It has gorgeous graphics and an excellent soundtrack. The controls are fantastic, with a multi-directional whip you can even use like a grappling hook in some places. It's just a solid platformer that I can pick up and play whenever I want.

3. Saints Row IV

   Owned on: PC (Steam), PS4

   This is one of the newer games to make this list, but I think it will stand the test of time. I believe this because before I tried the Saints Row series, I was resintalling GTA3 and/or Vice City every few years. But SR4 outshines those GTA games in every possible way, and it adds character customization, humor, and sci-fi elements. Open world games always have more replay value than other games, and SR4 is the best GTA-style game I've played. It's one of those games where I can spend hours driving around town or jumping from building to building, ignoring actual missions in favor of self-imposed challenges.

2. The Sims 4

   Owned on: PC (Origin)

   The Sims games have always been a guilty pleasure. In no other game can I spend so much time accomplishing nothing. It's one of those games I can play for an entire weekend, sun up to sun down, and then not play again for a year. The first Sims game came out more than 20 years ago, and I would bet good money that I've played a Sims game at least once a year ever since that first release. When your real life is having a downturn, nothing beats living vicariously through your digital avatars.

1. Skyrim

   Owned on: PC (Steam), PS4

   I know people tend to think that Skyrim is overhyped, or has at least outworn its welcome, but honestly? It's the one game I can always go back to, time after time. It's my comfort game. I've beaten the main storyline at least twice, spent hundreds of hours on sidequests, and yet I'm positive I've only seen half the game. I can't tell you how much time I've spent just running through the countryside, seeing what pops up. Admittedly the actual dungeons are a bit repetitive, but I can always find something to do that keeps me entertained.

And there you have it. Sometimes I don't think I know myself as much as I should. I've spent a lot of money buying classic games, trying to recapture my youth, only to see those games gather virtual dust in my Steam account. But the above list represents my actual gaming habits, not counting the weekly matches of "Beach Buggy Racing 2" and "Puyo Puyo Tetris 2" I play with my wife, or the solitaire I play on my phone when I go to the doctor.

Just those last three games - Saints Row IV, Sims 4, and Skyrim - could probably keep me satisfied for many more years, especially if I have access to mods. Sure, new games are nice, but there's something about replaying old favorites that just makes me feel whole.

Monday, November 15, 2021

Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings

I thought Shang-Chi was pretty good. If I had one complaint, it's that it doesn't really fit the rest of the MCU. It feels like a martial arts movie that just happens to take place in the Marvel universe. But that's not really a complaint; in fact, that's what I've been wanting from the MCU.

Sometimes the MCU feels like watching the same movie over and over with different characters. This one is different. It still has that same Marvel tone we've grown to love, with lots of quippy dialogue mixed with physics-defying action. But the sci-fi/superhero aspect has been swapped with mysticism and legend. And it works. I wish this creative team had handled the last Mortal Kombat movie.

The visuals are beautiful, though a couple of the CGI creatures could have used more work. The fight choreography is amazing, and the action scenes are frequent and inventive. I can only remember one spot where I started to get a little bored, but every movie's got to have an exposition dump somewhere.

Beyond that, there's not much to say. It was a good story, but I don't know what they're planning to do with the character. The ending implies greater plans for the title artifact than for the character himself. Not to mention setting up a villainous organization.

This feels like it might be an important movie going forward, setting up whatever MacGuffin is going to replace the Infinity Stones. I'm worried that some people might think this one is skippable, because it doesn't feature heroes they grew up with. If you're on the fence, don't skip it. Shang-Chi may not be Captain America, but it's still a fun movie, and it might be required viewing to understand the next big threat.

Sunday, November 14, 2021

The End of the MCU

Earlier I saw a clickbait article on "Why the MCU Needs To End Now" or something like that, complaining that the quality is about to go down now that the best heroes are out of the way. It reminded me of something a friend of mine recently said: "Do we really need a movie for every single minor Marvel character?"

Both of y'all are missing the point. Now that the big heroes are out of the way, the fun can begin.

You know what my favorite comic book was when I was a kid? Captain Carrot and his Amazing Zoo Crew by DC Comics. It was a comic about a superhero team, on a world full of animal people. It's like if Zootopia had a Justice League.

Do you know how many movies DC would have to put out before they decided to make a Zoo Crew movie? They release a new Batman cartoon every couple of years, but do you think we'll ever see a Captain Carrot animated series?

The fact is, not everything is for you. When it comes to reviewing movies, the best mindset you can learn is that you're not every movie's target audience. When you walk out of a romantic comedy complaining that it didn't have enough action, or whine that the Pixar movie you just saw was too juvenile, remember that some people in the audience probably loved it. Learn the difference between "This movie is bad" and "This movie isn't for me."

So here's the thing:  Every comic book hero, no matter how obscure, is somebody's favorite. Right now, somebody is waiting patiently for a Squirrel Girl movie, and it might even be me. But if they were to end the MCU, then it would just get rebooted in a few years, starting with brand new versions of Captain America, Iron Man, Thor, and Hulk. And the clock counting down to a Squirrel Girl movie would reset.

The longer they keep this continuity going, the greater the chance that some of the lesser known heroes will get a chance to shine. Plus, we'll eventually get to see some of the generational heroes, like the Young Avengers. You're reading this and probably thinking, "But they could do that anyway, separate from the MCU. Even if they reboot, there's nothing stopping them from making a Squirrel Girl movie or a series about Tony Stark's daughter." And you're right. But the current continuity makes it so much easier.

Already having an established series where the audience is in love with the universe, where big name heroes have already made their mark on the world, where the relationships are already in place to set up a new generation of teen heroes... I mean, you don't just want to throw that away.

Plus, how do you know you're not going to love the next obscure hero?  I barely knew anything about Guardians of the Galaxy before the movie came out, and those ended up being two of my favorite MCU films.  So if the MCU is still going strong ten years from now, and you see the first trailers for a "Night Nurse" movie, keep an open mind. You never know.

Granted, none of our opinions matter here. Realistically, the MCU will persist as long as it continues to be profitable. One bad movie won't kill the series; it's too strong. It would probably take three consecutive bad movies for them to consider a reboot, and maybe not even then. I mean, look at Star Wars - at this point there's more bad Star Wars movies than good ones (at least according to most fans; personally I love almost all of them), and it hasn't been rebooted.

I'm not saying the MCU should go on forever, I'm just saying that ending a continuity isn't something to be taken lightly.  So bring on Ka-Zar.  Bring on Wonder Man.  Bring on Spider-Woman.  No idea is too silly, no character is too obscure. I'd much rather see a Hellcow movie than an Iron Man reboot, wouldn't you?