What is the last video game that you were completely hooked on?

aCosmicWave@lemm.ee to Asklemmy@lemmy.ml – 139 points –

The kind of game you daydream about while at school or work because you can’t wait to come home and play some more.

238

Baldur's Gate 3, four playthroughs back to back, two of em multiplayer. I still play it every now and then when I want to continue my honor run.

Besides that, Rimworld. Nearly 4k hours.

Ah Rimworld. What are other games except brief distractions from more Rimworld?

It's honestly a neverending stream of new stories. There's new, quality mods nearly every day.

Have you yet done the "all gnomes" playthrough?

Not yet! Waiting on a friend, we're doing an all-barbarians playthrough, so we were thinking halflings. It'll probably get very messy.

All-Barbarians is a classic! Maxing out strength and putting zero effort on mental traits was my favorite playthrough on Fallout games.

Not sure of if that's what it means though, but playing as a group of massive angry toddlers sounds like a grand time.

I am utterly shellshocked by how much I'm enjoying Helldivers 2. It's been a very long time since I've daydreamed about going home to play but I just can't wait to blast some bugs with friends most days. It's like I'm 10 again

I keep seeing so much about it, I really need to give it a shot.

You won't be disappointed especially if you play with friends or people who communicate

Oh.

Yeah it's a 4 player multiplayer game. You can drop in with randoms but it's just not the ideal experience in my mind

I will definitely revisit it as soon as I've made three communicative friends!

I just played a quick game before i do some chores now with random people, all American won't hold it against them but they were good blokes.

Knocked out 2 missions at level 4 cause i just wanted the cruisy experience

I play coop PVE games with random matchmaking, Helldivers 2 is still a lot of fun with random people.

I have had great luck with random people. There is in-game voice chat and you don't run into the really serious try hard types until the very upper difficulties

Yeah it's this dog me too except im forcefully teaching democracy to the robots.

Not to mention i really try to help with all the major orders as i want to see where the story goes

Ive been playing a lot of read dead redemption lately.

Came here to say this (specifically RDR2). I found the story really slow in the beginning but it got me addicted.

This is me right now with RDR2, almost feverish with it for the last two weeks.

Currently on my second full playthrough. This time I'm changing it up by playing with a controller, and doing a low honour run - role-playing as the disillusioned dickhead that hates the world, antagonises almost everyone and gets bounties left and right. I have been avoiding story missions for the last 5-10 hours just because the world is so engrossing, so rich with experiences and possibilities that the thought of returning to the story starts to feel restrictive. But I've added a good 20+ mods to enhance the experience in a lore-friendly way, too.

But man is it fun. God, what a pleasure it is to experience that world, and to know just how much of it I still have left to discover. I love it so much.

I'm still playing Starfield. I'm 120% the targeted audience. It helped me go through depression.

I'm a 45 years old dude, and I started creating a comic with my character in Starfield, by taking screenshots and adding speech bubbles with Figma. I didn't know I had it in me.

As far as I'm concerned, Starfield is self-care.

That's deep rock Galactic and star trek for me, whenever I'm bringing those 2 then times are tough.

I really enjoyed that game, despite its faults, and despite the loud folks yelling about how it was the worst game ever. I put around 150 hours into it.

I've spent a ridiculous amount of time with Balatro, the Steam Deck is Dangerous...

Was just telling my friends, had one of those instances where I lost a run, so I closed the game with the intent of going to go so something else, then found myself opening it again 2 minutes later.. so addictive

I get angry at the game and instead of turning it off, I switch decks...

I really enjoyed the game, until it came to beating it on the harder difficulties. I lost steam when I had all the decks unlocked except for the ones that require bearing the higher difficulties. I did normal, and the next harder one.

Got hooked on Factorio back in 2016. Still am.

Friend gifted me this game just a few weeks ago. It gained more prominence in my dreams than i am willing to admit

What are you in bed dreaming for? Don't you have some iron throughput to upgrade?

Can't dream if you don't sleep. Can't sleep, the factory must grow.

Currently on my 2nd attempt at a Space Exploration run. Part of me wishes I'd just started heroin, it would have been less addictive.

I finished SE not long ago. I like the added complexity of logistics, but I found that SE was a bit too repetitive for my taste, as every new resource requires pretty much the same setup but on a new planet.

I'm more of an angelbob kind of guy.

Factorio is one of the few games that cause the Tetris Effect for me.

Helldivers 2, currently. I'm hooked on the progression and acquisition of all of the unlockables, but it's the moment to moment gameplay that keeps me wanting to hunt all the loadout options I probably won't use anyway.

Baldur's Gate 3. I just can't get enough. When I'm too tired to play myself I'm watching streams of other people playing. Sometimes I get fed up for a few days but so far it has always pulled me back in.

The "worst" for me was in 2006 with the release of Gothic 3. I had saved up for a powerful new PC and taken two or three weeks off work to play. I played deep into the night. Then deep into the morning. Then deep into the day. Then deep into the evening. Until my sleep schedule was aligned with my regular schedule again at the end of my holidays.

I remember being like that with Morrowind.

You'll laugh.

Bus simulator: Ultimate
Android game that will toast your phone, but it's pretty nice. It has a multiplayer too and a 2nd hand market where people bid on used buses. Naturally this means it's best to attempt to put a bus for auction in specific hours, and bid in others.

Some of the longer routes take well over an hour in real world.
One effect on me, which is also true for trains and busses in real life, is that it makes me sleepy pretty quickly.
Low frequency sound of the engine, trees moving past, road lanes quickly zipping past, you're just staring in front while doing minor adjustments and falling asleep.
I should not drive in real life.

If by "were" you mean "are", then Balatro.

I just got it. Beat my first red deck run, but it has yet to really sink its hooks into me. I’d be curious to hear what makes it work for you.

Have you not seen how big number can be? Number can just get so big. I don't even care that I'm ADHD and I'm playing into all the worst stereotypes about us:

NUMBER GETS BIG

I couldn't say why it got me so hooked. I like roguelikes/rogue-lites as well as deckbuilders, and I think it hits a really good balance of the things that make them fun - challenge, randomness, a variety of strategies that can make different runs feel very different. Also good achievements and unlockables.

Completely hooked on would be Dark Souls 3. Right now I'm playing The Witcher 3, and while it's good, it makes me want to boot up DS3 - less talking more fighting

Come back to DS3! Plenty of people invading and praising the sun on PC...

DS3 is my favorite. I have to fight the urge to play it again fairly regularly. It's an oddly soothing game to play.

Probably WoW tbh. I don't play anymore and don't recommend it, but WoW with friends/guildies at its peak is unparalleled. You can't wait to log on and reconnect with everyone.

I gotta go with Cyberpunk : i waited until very recently to start playing (didn't have a beefy enough computer before) and man am I hooked. The universe feels complete, and the characters feel real to me : truly a fantastic game

I love this game. I got it at launch and never had a problem, and I've played like two complete 100% games already before the dlc, now on my third one.

I also had it at launch and had very, very few bugs. The ones I did were very easy to work around. I think my favorite part is the amount of philosophy some of the side quests had!

The main quest was really good imo. I thought the voice acting and animations were great. Goes for the whole game really but it made you feel like you were in an action movie at times.

Played original game about a year after release and loved it. Expansion came out and didn't get far. Enemies take 80 rounds to kill. All weapons seem like junk. The crafting and "loot" drops are too much maintenance for me to really enjoy.

satisfactory on my 8th full playthrough and the game is not even 1.0 yet

I got so hooked on Factorio for years that after trying Satisfactory for a few hours I had to stop since I had things to do in the next year and a half. One day I hope I’ll have time to give it a real shot.

yeah that is a good idea I have almost 1000 hours in satisfactory and have a real problem of telling myself I will go to bed after I finish this production line then I blink and it's 4am.

Currently hooked on Factorio.

Before that, Baldur's Gate 3.

Before that, Factorio.

factorio is one of the best automation games ever, and also has just about any quality of life feature you could think to add to a game.

i'm in my first ever modded playthrough with space exploration and i'm blown away by the increase in complexity. the vanilla game is great but the mods are definitely worth trying if you want an exponential jump in complexity.

My latest game is with Krastorio, and I've been loving the added complexity, though I've heard it's lighter than some other mods. Definitely doing a Space Exploration run next I think.

Krastorio 2 + space exploration on the same file works well together

Haven't touched Factorio in ages. Really looking forward to diving back in with the Space Age expansion!

Few games have captured my attention like XCom2, and it's last expansion.

I often find myself playing something new while also wishing it was XCOM 2...

If you haven't played Phoenix Point yet put that on deck.

Dragons Dogma 2

  • story: garbage
  • storytelling: garbage
  • performance: garbage
  • CAPCOM: garbage

But I tell you what, the world, exploration and gameplay they've put together, it's all A+.

I turned it to Japanese voices so I didn't have to hear the god awful English voice acting and it's improved my experience a lot

I hope they add a localization patch so I can change it to something fun like Spanish or German

Currently Horizon: Forbidden West. So glad the PC port only took 2 years this time around rather than 5 for the first one (or however long it was)

My own work in progress game, an arcade style deckbuilding game with meta-progression.

The current release doesn't include the last part but the next update will introduce it.

It's so fun to try to get a high score, and the randomness gives me the "just one more go" feeling.

It's a good sign. Usually, the project I work on (no matter what they are, be it an edited video, a website etc.) just get boring in the end because of how much time I spend on them.

I feel that way about my high effort YT videos that don't even get more views than my low effort ones.

Metrics on modern centralised algorithmic social media are absolute BS. Views and general interactions are about what hooks people, not about the quality of the creations. I recommend turning them off in your client whenever possible, gonna make your life better.

That's part of what turned me off from YT. I can feel like a neverending treadmill to create content to grow the channel, even when I'm busy doing projects for university.

To the moon. Played it a few years ago. Cried.

There are sequels too!

What? No. Seriously?

Yeah I think Finding Paradise is the second one. I haven't played that, but played Imposter Factory and it was really good!

I totally binged Alan Wake 1 in like 2 days. Then spent a while enveloped by Alan Wake 2! Part 2 really got the AAA treatment. It was funny, spooky, actiony. Lots of stuff to explore, the characters play differently.

I also didn't realize Control was part of the story, so now I gotta go play that!

Control is great. In my top 5.

Spellcaster University.

It's not the most complex game, but you're given control to build your own set of universities, trying to accomplish the goals given to you. You have a limited amount of time before the Great Evil comes and you have to start over.

Each location has its pros and cons, different graduation classes can give benefits that persist through the run, and all the building is done through picking one of 3 cards themed around what they focus on(Gold for general improvement and random magic things, Mana of particular types for rooms/items focused on that school of magic).

I think I got this game through a Humble Bundle, but never gave it a shot. Might have to check it out!

It definitely hits that "Simple on the outside, addictive on the inside" itch. Even playing on Marathon, a School goes by fairly quickly, so you get in that "just one more" mentality.

Ratchet and Clank: Rift Apart

It has a special place for me because a long time ago, when I was younger, I had R&C Size Matters as the only game on my PSP and that's because I bought the PSP in a bundle

And that was the only R&C game I played until Rift Apart and that shit hit me like that scene in the end of Ratatouille mfer

No Mans Sky. Off and on for like 4 years now. But I keep coming back with each new update and I get completely hooked again.

Noita! I've stopped playing it now as I more or less achieved everything I wanted to with it, but it really got a hold of me with how much it rewards creative approaches to problems

Horizon Forbidden West just released on PC, been hooked on it since then.

I watched a 14 hour silent walkthrough of it. It's a game that I actually don't enjoy playing (I played the first), but I do love the plot so much. Fuck Ted Faro

I've got so tired of open world games that I couldn't get to like the first one. I'll blame Ubisoft for it.

Kenshi. Just the sheer dynamic ant-farm nature of it made the grind somehow all the more the worth. Even if you cheat and max out all your stats, you can still invent your own narrative in your head for what you think is happening.

Ignoring digital releases of card games, which I've loved since I was a kid, it has to be Valheim. I would spend hours and hours making structures like castles and villages, with their own defense mechanisms against monster invasions. It's a wonderful indie game, very pretty for only taking 1GB in storage.

Completely hooked on: Baldur's Gate 3.

Completely hooked on in the past tense and stopped playing: Overwatch.

Noita - for the longest time the addiction was something along the lines of not letting this 'simple' game beat me, and damn does it beat you...

Then I finally had my first God run breaking the reroll machines and oh my fuck it's like crack. I've been chasing that dragon ever since.

Dragon's Dogma 2 really has me like that now. I've waited years for this, and for the most part it's everything I expected. I love the new playable race, and I'm excited to try out the new vocations. I have a lot of fun just hunting monsters for other players' followers' quests, and finding things for them to potentially tell their own players about. In some ways it feels better than traditional multiplayer.

Also loving Helldivers 2, but now that I've unlocked almost everything it's no longer all I think about all day.

I've unlocked most things in Helldivers but what's keeping me going is the memes and the propaganda lol.

New warbond next Thursday!

Ingress. I was obsessed with it. Couldn't stop playing.

Same. I rocked that game for a year before Pokemon Go came out. It was insanely addictive. I would walk like 3-5 miles a day and I'd take way too many breaks at work to go hit the portals by my office.

Family trips were awkward. I would make detours and hide the reason but just pointed out there was something awesome they should see.

I also took part in global ops where I met irl with other players to move keys.

When I think about it the real life component of that game is amazing.

I participated in a few anomalies, both as support and an on ground person hitting the objectives. Shit was rad, man. I met a couple cool people and even business contacts through it.

I was trying to think of a PC game until I saw your comment. It's totally Ingress for me too. I was hooked and my area (Chicago burbs) had a very active player base. The ops and competition were intense! I really enjoyed the real-world tactical shit, closest I'll ever get to feeling like I was part of a military operation.

I still play it too, but not like before. It's a great way to kill time and explore new places. I think I'm level 12, almost 13, and I'm lazily working towards more badges. I don't understand what the red faction is all about and the other new stuff.

Elden Ring (again) I go back and forth between many games

Just waiting for shadow of the erdtree to reignite this addiction...

Good time to roll a new character so it's beefy when DLC drops.

I did start another ahah. I actually discovered I didn't beat any of the DLC for dark souls 3 because I was in the same boat as now and I had the seasons pass. So I went and finished all that.

Monster hunter world. I bought it to have a replacement for genshin and it worked a little too well. It just feels different from any other game for how many things it does so well: from enemies to armor design to music to mechanics to weapon variety, everything is amazing.

Finally played Half-Life 2 recently. Best shooter I have ever played.

SimCity 3K - played it for YEARS, was involved heavily into the modding communities and basically thought of nothing else.

Even after pouring thousands of hours into the game, I don't feel like it was wasted time.

Elderborn. In its own words, a METAL AF SLASHER. Kind of like a first person souls-like. rolled straight out of beating it into a new game+

The studio that makes those games, makes the best in their genre and is somehow punching above their weight. I got Elderborn too after playing Postal Brain Damaged and was impressed.

Everybody likes different genres, and this one probably wouldn't be mine, but it was entrancing and I basically immediately poured all my free time into it too. Totally worth the buy.

These days I'm more of a boomer shooter dude, but the trailer hooked me and I regret nothing. Haven't tried the newest Postal yet. Played postal 2 back in the day. blood west is likely next up for me.

Devs like Hyperstrange and New Blood are killing it these days, in a time when the big devs are laying off entire teams. It's amazing what happens when you have smaller devs who are focused on the games and not chasing number-go-up.

As New Blood says, "We love you. We hate money."

I only played Postal Brain Damaged because I liked 2 so much, and that's how I found out about boomer shooters to begin with!

As for Postal 4... Would not recommend. Sadly.

This looks right up my alley but unfortunately it’s not on PlayStation!

Project Zomboid.

It's bleak and definitely isn't for everyone but I really get sucked into it. The permadeath aspect usually turns me off a game but in this case it completely breaks me of my habit of save scumming. Every zombie encounter is tense, a single mistake can leave you infected. Sometimes there are long quiet periods where I just survive holed up somewhere safe, reading books, exercising or sorting/building. Other times it's extremely intense trying to drive through town with a horde on my tail trying to lure them away and double back so I can loot an area.

I find myself looking up the world map at work and planning a route towards a new area or trying to find a suitable spot for a base that meets my survival needs.

Commandos 3: Destination Berlin The gameplay was so good and I kept imagining about the missions all the time.

If you liked Commandos you should check out Shadow Tactics, Desperados 3, or Shadow Gambit. They're very similar to the style you like with modernized map designs and addicting gameplay.

Space Engineers. I played that shit for at least one ten hour session and a bunch of six your sessions.

Then I got to a certain point in the game and there was just … no goal. And I sorta lost all my steam.

Technically I still have the goal of “kill as many drones as possible in the never surrender thing”, but I’m focusing on work which I neglected while playing.

Runescape/Old school runescape

Been playing since 2009. Sure I've taken breaks, sometimes multiple years, but I always return.

The old saying is true, "You never quit runescape, you just take breaks"

Team Fortress 2, for more than 8 years

Yesterday i started playing custom doom wads at night because i wanted to see what new mods where available and lo and behold; i saw the sun rise.

Ghost of Tsushima is so good it almost makes me want to buy my own ps5, but I think I'll stick to borrowing my gf's.

Good news, It's coming out on PC.

Cyberpunk 2077 when it was released. And then panam made me cry ( ._.) And that scene inside the robo is burnt into my brain xD

I kinda didnt even realise alot of the bugs, cause I really enjoyed the story. I remember seeing the trees through the walls but the immersion/ my imagination was strong enough to mask them .D

I've played it more recently, encountered 1 noticeable bug on my entire play though. They've turned it into an impressive, well polished game now.

I know I was super late to the party, but I'm genuinely surprised that nobody has said Skyrim, yet.

Before that, Subnautica (both of them).

But I've probably spent as much time in Skyrim as both Subnautica games combined.

Well, Skyrim is already 12 years old. Most people played it obsessively a long time ago. Of my 1000s of hours spent in Tamriel, only 100 or so were in the past year.

Kenshi, and I still am. Before that it was Stellaris. Singleplayer sandbox with modding is basically what does it for me.

I think there are two answers to this.

The most recent game I was completely captivated by and just obsessed with was Subnautica. I was deep into it in 2022.

The most recent one I spent a long time playing is Satisfactory, I started my most recent run in mid-December and completed it a week or two ago. Satisfactory didn't quite grab me the way Subnautica did in terms of loving this world, but I get into it. I had a goal of 100% full clearing it including buying all the trophies before it was out of early access, so I did.

Kerbal Space Program, Shadow Empire and Baldur's Gate 3.

Cross Code for me. Ended up putting like 60 hours into it in about 3 weeks while in university and working part time. I could not put it down.

I've had this sealed on my shelf for nearly a year until about 4 days ago. Not bad. Some games take me a bit to get into. Just got the fire ability. Seems interesting so far but the combat at this point is monotonous to me. There's also a ton of garbage quests. "collect me carrots. Run me an errand". No thanks.

I think the game has a great story, but both the gameplay and story takes a while to get going.

majormud

spent forever writing scripts to do all the farming. i kinda miss it, but its no fun without other users and no one else would ever want to play it again

That's a name that brings back odd memories of trying to set it up locally

i ran a public server til 2016.. thats when the TCP drivers mbbs requires became too cumbersome to get working on AWS.

i recently discovered a majorbbs door virtual front end/emulator which works great on some of the older games.. not sure about majormud.

the emulator negates the need for the bbs entirely, i have a dream of webifying them into my fediverse instance.

Tales of Berseria. I loved the 40 hours I spent with Velvet and friends, but that ending really upset me and I couldn't stop thinking about it after.

Do I need to play any of the other Tales games in order to enjoy Berseria? There’s so many of them! Seems a bit overwhelming to get into

No, they're nearly all standalone. Tales of Arise is great too.

Rain World.

I have some spoilers (including the gist of the ending) but am playing as blind as I can manage. It’s nice to just play and discover without having a guide by my side.

You spelled current wrong.

Right now it’s brawlhalla, free smash clone on steam.

“Just one more game”

SIFU, the "git gud" gameplay really makes me dream about being a kung fu master lol.

The gameplay is so damn fun that I actually don't mind getting my ass beaten... That much.

Play Sekiro if you haven't yet already.

I have not, but I have it in my backlog :)

(holy wall-of-text. Sorry for writing an essay, but maybe indulge me? Lol thanks)

Oh man, you're in for a treat. If you haven't permanently rage-quit Sifu, then I think Sekiro will be perfect for you. It's similar, but far more polished and rewarding. So rewarding.

The boss fights are incredible, and nearly all of them seem downright impossible (looking at you Demon of Hatred and Sword Saint Isshin) at first, and that's not an exaggeration.

But you persist. And then you start to steadily feel yourself progress; you will continue to die over and over, but you start remembering the timing of their moves, and seeing the cracks in the enemy's defenses, etc. And it feels great. Sometimes you'll feel that progress stall, but if you take a break and come back the next day, you're often shocked at the improvement (not sure if sleeping has anything to do with cementing that muscle memory or something?) when you come back to it.

e.g., I spent probably 4+ hours on the final boss one night and quit in frustration to go to bed. Next morning before work I was like "I need to try this one more time"... I literally beat him on my first try. Wish I had a video or something.

Next thing you know, you're making that boss your bitch. You know their tells and time your counters perfectly. To your surprise, you find that you not only survived each boss transformation, you did it without even being touched... And the dopamine rush is second to none (well aside from some drugs probably). It makes you feel like a god, and it truly feels like an accomplishment when that classic From Soft "ENEMY SLAIN" text pops up .There's just something so gratifying about it.

And that's not even getting into the wonderful setting/visual style, level design, and movement/traversal. You get a grappling hook right away, and I still think it's the best implementation of that in any game I've played.

When you get into that flow state in this game, it can almost feel like a rhythm game of sorts. And I'm not the biggest fan of that genre, but it all works so well.

I will just say: I enjoyed Sifu, but every time I started it up, it just made me want to play Sekiro instead (and I usually did). I'm trying to think of a better metaphor than "Sifu is Sekiro's stylized John Wick-Loving little brother"... I'll probably think of something randomly 6 hours from now and won't care anymore by that point...

Anyway, I really REALLY love this game if you couldn't tell lol.

If you're new to FromSoftware games, don't be intimidated by Sekiro and any people who may tell you it's too hard or complain that it doesn't have the usual Souls/Bloodborne/Elden Ring build-focus and weapons/equipments. I think this aspect can make Sekiro a great entrance into the series/genre as it allows you to focus on gameplay and story (that actually exists and is comprehensible)

As someone who attempted to start games of DS1 and Bloodborne on multiple occasions without "getting" it and giving up, Sekiro was their first game that sucked me in. And boy did it suck (me in). I was hooked.

Not only that, but it's like riding a bike. I go back to the game at least once or twice a year now since first beating it, and I can still beat the final boss with only a handful of deaths..

Anyway... Lol

Once again, i cannot recommend this game enough. It's probably my favorite game ever (at least of games I've completed). At risk of sounding cringe, I would say the gameplay loop had very positive effects for me in terms of letting things go, and controlling anger.

Just play it. Sifu on steroids.

I appreciate this wall text.

I have not played any From Software games, but I know what to face when I do.

I think Sekiro will be my first, good to know you advocate for it as a good first entry!

I kinda get what you say about the sleep process, I don't even know if staying up late at night is worth it if you are gonna be better in the morning lol, but in retrospect I think that is how the process works...

I don't plan to quit SIFU though, perhaps I'm hurting myself wanting to carry over the 20 years old age, that is why I have replayed level 1, 2 and now 3 too much at this moment.

Well I'm glad at least one person read it! I never miss an opportunity to evangelize for Sekiro lol.

I probably wouldn't suggest Sekiro as a first From Software experience for most people (that would probably be Elden Ring. Or maybe Bloodborne), but given your obvious love for Sifu, and it seems that clearly you're pretty good at it which means you're good at timing parries (you'd have to be).

So I don't think you'll have much issue adjusting to Sekiro. Worst possibility is that it "ruins" Sifu for you lol.

Ah man, might be time to finally go back and finish my first NG+

I really enjoyed Absolver and was looking forward to playing that but didn't get around to it until very recently. I did enjoy it, but it ended up making me want to go back to Absolver.

Thanks for sharing this, I actually also have Absolver thanks to PS Plus (same for SIFU) and didn't know they shared game mechanics... Gonna try it, but not right away, for my sanity.

While I enjoyed Sifu, I probably enjoyed Absolver more. I also loved the mechanic of learning moves from fighting people using those moves and was somewhat disappointed they didn't have a similar mechanic in Sifu. Though it likely wouldn't have meshed well with the leveling mechanic.

I did really like the unique aging on death mechanic though. I love seeing unique ideas like that in games.

The last game that truly gave me the feeling you described is Lies of P. It was my favourite game of 2023 and the 60 or so hours I put into beating it were very well spent.

Currently hooked on Humanity, which I just got. I played until 6am the other day...

Help me.

Games really have to strike a chord with me to stick around in my memory. The last ones that truly left an impression were from when I first got into gaming. I can still vividly remember the impact of Mafia: The City of Lost Heaven, GTA 3, and Vice City and San Andreas—they consumed my thoughts entirely. The allure of uncovering hidden secrets, areas left unexplored, that's what really drew me in. Half-life 2 was a mind-blowing breakthrough with its physics and storytelling. But nowadays, that spark just seems to be missing. The closest I've come recently was with Blizzard's Heroes of the Storm. The thrill of snatching a victory against the odds, the sense of connection with total strangers—it was something special. It's the only game that still gets my heart racing these days. However, I've found myself drifting away from HotS more and more; it feels like the game is losing its luster (or maybe it's Blizzard who's letting it fade... or perhaps MOBAs in general are falling out of favor). As for recent gems that really struck a chord with me, I'd have to mention Hollow Knight, Control (seriously underrated in my opinion—easily one of the best metroidvanias out there, if not the best), and Baldur's Gate 3, which was unexpectedly captivating.

Dayz currently. Before that, Rimworld. Before that, factorio.

Age of calamity is most recent. Not so much for the gameply but i got hugely into the BOTW lore and seeing everything before it got nuked to shit latched onto my obsessive little heart.

PC gaming, War for the Overworld

The Finals has been my default game — if none of my friends are playing anything else — since it launched

A link to the past, I couldn’t put that down once I started it

I got back on the Warframe wagon with the Whispers in the Walls update. After a long break, I'm impressed how much better it is, and it's hooks are firmly back in my brain. The new location and the throat chanting type soundtrack from the semi-hidden boss regularly flash into my brain at awkward times.

Modded Factorio and elden ring.

The factory must grow! Im over 1700h help me

There is no help. The factory is the only thing there is. I am not even on 1500 hours yet but sometimes i just need a mental break from the game and that period varies... Greatly. I always come back and longing so much for the expansion.

What do you mean "a mental break from the game" the factory must grow!

My poor brain can only take so much abuse from more advanced mods. When i look at what i have to build next and I see that it will be days of building without reaping the reward, my brain says "not today".

But yes, the factory is always growing if not in the computer, it is in my brain.

Currently obsessed with BG3 and getting back into Hyper Light Drifter. It just feels too satisfying to go sicko mode on a room full of assholes and then grumpily stick my sword in the ground.

+1 for HLD also excited for Hyper Light Breaker!

I have a lot of trust in Heart Machine, at the same time I wasn't that into Solar Ash. HLD has such a tightness of vision and execution in terms of aesthetic, world building, and gameplay. How that translates to a procedurally generated open world BotW-like is beyond me, but I'll probably give it a go.

Palworld! Couldn't stop playing it with my friends, it was such a blast! I say "was", because we quickly all got to level 50 and now we're waiting for a big update that'll make the game fresh again!

Right now, Death Stranding.

Edit: I went back to look at the reception of this game from at its release. It did great at the VGAs, but general consensus on Reddit and other forums negative. I also remember how much The Giant Beastcast shat on that game (I stopped listening to them pretty soon after that too, but for unrelated reason).

World of warcraft. With season 4 coming out soon and spending time with guildies doing mount achievements, I'm getting hyped for new stuff to do

Same deal, but FFXIV for me, DawnTrail is kookin' juicy.

Desperados 3. I've put in close to 100 hours on it and I'm just 4 achievements away from completing all its challenges. I'm so bummed its developer had to close down a few months ago because their games are criminally underrated and are from a very niche genre.

Postal Brain Damaged. If you like boomer shooters,

It's got charming art and level designs, satisfying weapons, and a whole lot of irreverence.

I'm out of the daydreaming phase because I've beaten it a few times, but it's still my comfort food game of choice.

Returnal. I went hard for a few weeks working those biomes.

I am currently going down the rabbit hole of sim racing. It's dangerous, and I'm trying my best not to drop tons of money into it.

I almost went down that rabbit hole after watching the Netflix F1 show haha. Never watched a race before that.

Right now for me, that's Persona 3 Portable. These games have their issues, but the stories really make you care about the characters!

One sandbox that recently grabbed me was in Automation: The Car Tycoon game. You can make custom cars and engines and export them to BeamNG and I got pretty into that and made my first ever mod or two.

I wanted Anno 1800 to be this but man, the income fluctuations are fuckin uncontrollable

I usually play on easier difficulty. The fun in the game for me is trying to optimise everything, and not having to worry about money running out at all times makes that a lot easier.

HoloCure out of all things. It's a more advanced Vampire Survivors clone centered around HoloLive vtubers. Being so simple yet cute and addictive is what made me hooked. Even now I still play once in a while on my breaks, althought there is nothing to surprise me left in this game.

Previous to that, I remember being absolutely blown out by Fallout 1. I'm young enough not to be on the wave of games of that era and the game design amazed me. I look forward to playing the 2nd game fo the series but I will have to do some tinkering since I'm Linux-only now.

Dirt Rally 2.0 with Force feedback wheel and pedals.

Ugh, I just can't get enough of it. Who needs crack when you have sim racing?

Signalis. Which is weird, its over in 10 hours but I got hooked on the fandom crack until recently.

The Finals, can't get enough of it since launch. Pushing for top 1000 this week.

League of Legends. Please send help.

I used to enjoy trying to get better at that game.

But once they went hardcore on their kernel-level "We're basically admins on your machine" anti-cheat I just uninstalled and dumped it. :(

The e-sport teamplay quality of it was really neat though and I loved the characters. I'll always miss Lux-sniping LOL.

RDR2

How is it so far?

I started playing RDR2 in 2022 but I felt it to be so cumbersome. Running around on horse doing shit that doesn't matter.

Maybe I am not recollecting it correctly. Just wanted to know more about it from you.

It took a while to get going, but eventually the story worked well to pull me in. I was hooked on the character development and the plot.

The world is so vivid and beautiful too. Lots of things to look for, hunt, explore, etc. I really liked it.

I also had my character grow a big mustache. My wife won't let me do that so I lived vicariously through the game for that too.

Only game that’s hooked me in years is Quake Champions, great shooter

Meet Your Maker was probably the last one. I would day dream about the bases I could make and stuff. I think there's a community for it here but it's a lot more dead than the one on Reddit.

Last one was dark souls 3... But now it is Voices of the Void.

I guess Dark Cloud 2 (aka Dark Chronicles) again, because I'm playing it again and I'm hooked.

Endless Space 2, ever since the Re-Awakening update. And it's still the best 4x space game out there.

Civ4. I still play that shit weekly, often even more. Specifically the latest iteration of the Fall From Heaven Mod, but still, great game.

Path of Exile.

Still am, but used to be too. Eagerly anticipating poe2 release.