Showing posts with label Top 50 Video game Moments. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Top 50 Video game Moments. Show all posts

Monday, July 2, 2012

Top 50: Video Game and Video Game Moment #1



Platform: PC (though I also purchased - and beat - the Playstation version. That one was murder on the fingers.)

Absurdly Specific Genre: Weaponized Vertigo

Difficulty: 5

Beaten: Yes, literally dozens of times (I usually play through and beat it once or twice a year)

I've gone on record (if this meager blog counts as 'on record')  as saying that the N64 era represents the awkward adolescence of video games - both overly nostalgic and of questionable lasting quality. It stands to reason, then, that my favorite game of all time is a blocky, nearly plotless shooter most well known for its vertigo inducing controls and confusing level layouts.

You are....somewhere.
As far as I can tell, though, this isn't pointless nostalgia. I've played through this game many, many times, and I'm reasonably sure I know every secret the game possesses, and it still feels as fresh nearly twenty years later as it did that day that I sat down at my uncle's computer and chose to click on the icon with the little spaceship instead of the one with the guy in the crew cut and sunglasses (it's okay, I gave Duke Nukem a few days later). The level design is wonderful - if a little nausea inducing at times. If Doom had really committed to the 3D concept, I'm still not sure it could've sold it half as well as Descent did. The robot's AIs were years ahead of their time. At a time when enemies were generally meant to be bullet sponges that ran straight at you, you had silent, deadly enemies that stalked you, avoided your missile fire, and generally attempted to not get dead.

Yeah. Silent but deadly. I get it. This dude will still haunt your nightmares.
 The Descent series never seemed particularly popular. Every friend I ever showed it to played it for a while and said "yeah, that's cool, I guess, let's play Doom" (though one or two friends and I did have some epic games held via dial-up). I vaguely remember a couple of commercials for it, but anyone who was playing shooter in the mid-90s was playing Doom or Duke Nukem. Descent ended up becoming a bit of a matter of pride for my brother and I. Here was a game that forced you to use tactics, to plan your assault on a room before you ran in. The fact that no one else seemed to recognize that only made it sweeter.

I suppose this is as good a time as any to segue directly to the number one video game moment...

No spoilers. Don't worry.

Saturday, June 23, 2012

Top 50 Video Game Moments: Number 2

I love the Portal series. You should know that by now. Portal 2 has, in my opinion, the best ending to any video game I've ever played.

You could read on not having played Portal 2, but that would be ridiculous. The game  is great. Just go buy it.

Monday, June 18, 2012

Top 50 Video Game Moments: Number 3

Only three moments to go. Now for the ultimate in video game twists.

The game is Bioshock. Don't read if you plan to play it sometime - you will ruin a very integral part of the plot.

If you've played the game, you already know what I'm talking about. Let's do this.

Monday, June 11, 2012

Top 50 Video Game Moments: Number 5

We're here... top 5. Of the final five moments, four are scripted, one is nostalgic. Three of the four scripted events are pretty widely regarded as some of the best moments in gaming history. This is the fourth, a moment that I would consider one of the most underrated in gaming.

I just discussed Metal Gear Solid 3 over the weekend. Let's hear a bit more about the ending...

Friday, June 8, 2012

Top 50 Video Game Moments: Number 6

Great moment in Gaming Moment #7 comes to use from Mass Effect. It comes from the end of one of the best current-gen games (one of the best games of any generation, really), so you really ought to hunt it down. I've said that about all of the moments on this list (they wouldn't really be my favorite gaming moments if I didn't think the games themselves were worth a look), but seriously. If you haven't played the Mass Effect series - DO IT. Don't listen to the bitching about the final game's ending (yes. the ending as it stands is severe weaksauce. The 100+ hours leading up to it are not.)

Monday, June 4, 2012

Top 50 Video Game Moments: Number 7

Forshadow
verb /fôrˈSHadō/
Be a warning or indication of a future event.
See also: everything leading up to the big reveal in Knights of the Old Republic.

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Top 50 Video Game Moments: Number 8

Today's moment comes from the RPG-epic Final Fantasy VI. I loved the Opera House as much as anyone else (it's top 20 on this list, after all), but this is the part that made my go "holy crap".

It's pretty spoilerish, so if you're the type that doesn't want to know how King Kong ends, you might want to steer clear.


Friday, May 25, 2012

Top 50 Video Game Moments: Number 9

Today's moment comes to us from the great game Batman: Arkham Asylum. It's not really a spoiler, but the fun of the moment is a lot more visceral if you don't know it's coming.

Monday, May 14, 2012

Top 50 Video Game Moments: Number 10

We're finally here. Top ten. I think I'm going to start it off with a classic.

Metal Gear Solid. A certain psychic dude in a gas mask. Let's do this.

Friday, May 11, 2012

Top 50 Video Game Moments: Number 11

Today's moment comes from Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2. It's from the very end of the game. If you haven't played it by now, you probably never will, but the standard caveats apply.

Monday, May 7, 2012

Top 50 Video Game Moments: Number 12

Geometry Wars 2 is a good game. Today's moment comes from it.

*SPOILER ALERT* it has to do with achievements. On the one hand, I'm probably hugely overrating the idea, but it stands alone in the 'optional challenge I kept at until I got it' category of video games, and as such sort of serves as a placeholder for all optional challenges in general. I don't suppose it's nearly as hard as I make it out to be, but it stymied me for a long time, so if you don't like it, screw you, it's my list.

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Top 50 Video Game Moments: Number 13

Okay, okay... this is it. The home stretch. No more playing around. Everything's been written and scheduled.

Super Mario Brothers was one of the first true video games I ever played (along with Joust and - weirdly enough - Jaws for the NES, where I mostly just sailed the boat around and waited for the shark to devour me). There are any number of nostalgic moments I could've picked from the game.

* The first goomba stomp
* The first fire flower
* The first castle (that music... shiver)
* The first time I found the warp pipe
* That one jump in world 8 that seemed impossible until we played it so much that it became second nature.

I'm not picking any of them, and I'm not picking "your princess is in another castle!" like a lot of other folks do. I remember being so incredibly pumped that I beat the koopa in the first castle that I didn't much care about the princess. In fact, I had never read the manual, so the idea of the princess being in another castle didn't strike me as so much a 'wtf' as a 'oh, there's a princess? huh'. The moment in question actually came a year or two later, when I was 8. There aren't any spoilers, so there's no need for a jump, but jumps are how I roll, so read on.

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Top 50 Video Game Moments: Number 14


I'm not spoilering this, because it doesn't need it.

As I mentioned before, some of my favorites times playing video games were playing Goldeneye with my friends, all huddled around a 19 inch TV. We'd play up in one of the church's upstairs classrooms for hours. I wasn't any good, but it was still a lot of fun.

When Halo first came out, the first thing everyone started noticing was the unparalleled polish that went into the multiplayer segment. There were all sorts of engaging game variants, and on a slightly larger TV (which greatly helped the experience, if I'm allowed to be honest), it supplied all the entertainment we'd need during several Mountain Dew-fueled nights between my friends and I.

One interesting feature of the Xbox was its rarely-used ability to link to up to three other xboxes. This allowed up to sixteen players to play in a single game. Next, we just had to find sixteen players.

We only managed it twice. Both times were honest to God events. Cramming twenty people into a couple rooms, borrowing couches, TVs, and setting up equipment took some time, but once the games started, it was all worth it. Constant carnage, in-jokes that will never die (one girl my brother fancied was dragged along and coerced into playing and given the name 'Grumpy'. It turned out the only people she was any good at killing were teammates, so she ended with a -5 score). My dad - not exactly a video game fan - even got in on things, hopping into a tank a blowing up people left and right, weirdly parlaying it into the top score for one round.

With 90% of the cast of the games having disappeared to every corner of the earth, the odds of ever recreating those games is nearly nil. Besides, Xbox live and its ilk have largely destroyed the idea of getting tons of people to come over for that sort of thing anymore, which is sad, because I have never had even half as much fun playing on Xbox live as I did those couple of days.

Monday, February 27, 2012

Top 50 Video Game Moments: Number 15

Getting back into things, we have a classic moment from the game Bioshock.

It's not the one you're thinking of (that one's coming later). It actually happens at the very beginning of the game, so there's truly no worrying about spoilers.


Friday, February 10, 2012

Top 50 Video Game Moments: Number 16

Today's moment is sort of a video gaming classic. It comes from the fantastic Final Fantasy VI. Even if you haven't played the game, you've probably heard of this part, or seen it referenced. It's not really any kind of spoiler, but I'll hide it behind a jump, anyway, because that's just how I roll.

Monday, February 6, 2012

Top 50 Video Game Moments: Number 17

Today's top video game moment comes to us from Mass Effect. It's a relatively substantial spoiler, so if you haven't played through the game, you'll probably want to steer clear.


Monday, January 23, 2012

Top 50 Video Game Moments: Number 18

Video game moment number 18 comes to us from Half Life 2. I went on a tangent about the Half Life series in a previous post, but the games really do have some excellent moments in them. This moment really sneaked up on me, but it was extremely effective.


Saturday, January 14, 2012

Top 50 Video Game Moments: Number 19

Today's moment comes from Mega Man 2. It's not a spoiler - are there any spoilers in NES-era Mega Man games? I mean, it's Dr. Wily every time. If you honestly believed that Dr. Kossack was the main bad guy, I don't even know what to say.


Monday, January 9, 2012

Top 50 Video Game Moments: Number 20

We begin our top 20 with a doozy. It's from Red Dead Redemption, and contains end of game spoilers. If you haven't beaten Red Dead Redemption yet, don't view this. Instead, go play the game already. I think I told you this before, why are you waiting?