Era can be defined as a console generation, a decade, one specific year, whatever you want. I’d encourage you to give a list of your favourite games from the generation of choice and why it was the best to you. Nostalgia is a totally viable reason too.

I’ll go first. For me, the 360 era is my GOAT. As someone in their 20s, I grew up with the 360 so nostalgia is definitely a big factor. But on top of that, I still feel like the games during that time were some of the best we’ve had. 2011 alone was a fantastic year, with Dark Souls, Skyrim, Portal 2 and many more great games. I was going to list out my favourite games from 2005-2013 but I love so many it would be far too long of a post.

I’d love to hear some of you talk about your favourite time period of games too, whether it’s agreeing with my choice or giving different opinions

  • ℕ𝕖𝕞𝕠@midwest.social
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    2 months ago

    The present. I can use emulation to play all my old favorites, often for free, and there’s never been such a rich plethora of indie and studio games available.

    • cod@lemmy.worldOPM
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      2 months ago

      Very logical answer. What are some of your old favourites you like to emulate?

      • ℕ𝕖𝕞𝕠@midwest.social
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        2 months ago

        NES: River City Ransom, Crystalis, Zelda ][

        SNES: Super Mario World, Chrono Trigger, Link to the Past

        GB: Final Fantasy Tactics Advance, Minish Cap, Tetris

        DOS: The Quest for Glory series, ZZT

        • Refurbished Refurbisher@lemmy.sdf.org
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          2 months ago

          If you haven’t played Terranigma, you should do that. It’s on the level of Chrono Trigger in how good it is.

          It was never released in North America, so get the PAL ROM along with the NTSC (60Hz) patch from RHDN

      • ℕ𝕖𝕞𝕠@midwest.social
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        2 months ago

        Adding a separate comment to add, if you’ve never played it, Super Mario X was a very fun, apparently not-entirely-legal fangame made my Redigit (who went on to create Terraria). He took it down at Nintendo’s demand, but you can still find a copy.

  • viking@infosec.pub
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    2 months ago

    Around the turn of the millennium. Games were designed for offline use and had way more immersive campaigns, were shipped by and large ready and bug-free, and so were add-on campaigns.

    And since graphics were not as refined as they are now, additional efforts were placed on gameplay.

    My top list (by release year):

    • Diablo II (1996)
    • Dungeon Keeper (1997)
    • Half-Life (1998)
    • Thief: The Dark Project (1998)
    • Thief 2 (1999)
    • Dungeon Keeper 2 (1999)
    • Heroes of Might & Magic 3 (1999)
    • Gothic II (2002)

    Never had a console and don’t get along with controllers whatsoever, so those are all referring to the PC versions.

    • cod@lemmy.worldOPM
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      2 months ago

      I recently picked up a few of those games on my pc. Wanting to try Gothic II out soon ish, and Thief 1 & 2 as well soon

      • 2xsaiko@discuss.tchncs.de
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        2 months ago

        I really hope you enjoy Thief 1/2! The two are some of my top games of all time and the second one is after 25 years still the best pure stealth game.

        As was already said, do make sure to install TFix or T2Fix (depending on the game) to get widescreen/high resolution renderer and just modern hardware support in general.

      • zerofk@lemm.ee
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        2 months ago

        Gothic 1 is my all time favourite RPG. 2 is everything a sequel “should” be: bigger, some mechanics improvements without losing the core, and (with the expansion) callbacks to 1 and familiar characters. And yet it also lost some of the atmosphere. This is why 1 will always be my favourite.

        Despite that, it’s still a great game, and many people’s favourite. I hope you’ll enjoy it.

      • viking@infosec.pub
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        2 months ago

        For Thief and Gothic II there are unofficial graphic mods out there that improve things massively. They basically replace the original models with those from Thief II and Gothic 3, and also fix some bugs.

        https://www.ttlg.com/forums/showthread.php?t=152429 - that’s a user made campaign for Thief, the thread also has links to all the patches and updates. The campaign is also absolutely great with overwhelmingly massive maps, but you should play the original first.

      • viking@infosec.pub
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        2 months ago

        I’ve recently replayed Thief and Thief 2, they still hold up well!

        Tried Gothic II, and unfortunately the controls feel very clunky today. Or maybe it’s just me. But somehow third person view doesn’t really work for me anymore.

  • spyd3r@sh.itjust.works
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    2 months ago

    For PC I’d say 1999-2010 was absolutely amazing time to be a gamer. PC parts were dirt cheap, you could overclock the hell out of your hardware, and micro-transactions and pay-to-win didn’t exist.

    • cod@lemmy.worldOPM
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      2 months ago

      Micro-transactions and pay-to-win are reason enough, those are some of the worst things to come to video games

  • B0NK3RS@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Probably the period of '95 thought to '05. Mostly because they were the days of local multiplayer with friends and also the jump in technology made things even more interesting.

    Combined we had all the 4 player games on the N64. So Goldeneye, SSB, F-Zero, Mario Kart, Snowboard Kids, DK Racing, Perfect Dark, WCW vs NWO and more.

    • Ashtear@lemm.ee
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      2 months ago

      Local multiplayer–especially couch co-op–is a lost art. I definitely miss it.

  • Refurbished Refurbisher@lemmy.sdf.org
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    2 months ago

    The 90s era of gaming, extending to the early 2000s. SNES, Genesis, PC Engine, N64, PS1, PS2, GameCube.

    It was the era before the Internet and video gaming became extremely linked. The sheer number of classics that still hold up today, even compared to modern games, are very numerous.

    • cod@lemmy.worldOPM
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      2 months ago

      There’s lots of late 90’s-early 2000’s answers here. You’re definitely not alone in that thought

      • lunarul@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        Add one more here. Some of the greatest games came out in that period.

        I made before a list of the top 10 games that impacted me the most and a large part are from that period. In no particular order:

        • Worms (particularly Worms World Party)
        • The Settlers II
        • Master of Orion II
        • Heroes of Might and Magic (particularly the first 3)
        • Phantasmagoria
        • WWF WrestleMania
        • Monkey Island (especially 1-3)
        • Dizzy (all games in the series)
        • Jet Set Willy
        • Refurbished Refurbisher@lemmy.sdf.org
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          2 months ago

          The best thing about this reply is that literally none of those games are on my list, since I haven’t played any of them (except for a Flash clone of Worms as a kid). That just goes to show the sheer amount of quality gaming that there was.

          My list is moreso comprised of console games. In no particular order, and includes some later indie games:

          • Chrono Trigger (GOAT, ranked number 1 above all the rest of these. Fantastic story, gameplay, music, pacing, etc. I haven’t played any other game as polished as this one)
          • Terranigma (A surprisingly deep and philosophical game for the time, even compared to other great JRPGs of the same era, or of any era)
          • Yoshi’s Island (just raw fun)
          • Super Mario 64 (also just raw fun)
          • Majora’s Mask (Surprisingly deep and emotional for a Zelda game)
          • Silent Hill 1, 2, and 3 (2 in particular opened my eyes to actually being able to feel emotions for the first time)
          • Super Meat Boy (Addiction: the video game)
          • The Binding of Isaac: Rebirth (Crack: the video game)
          • OMORI (another fantastic and emotional game, almost on the level of Silent Hill 2, but replay value isn’t very high IMO)
          • A Link to the Past (Just raw fun, but in Zelda form)
          • Guitar Hero 1, 2, and 3 (I was especially involved in the customs scene back then)
          • Final Fantasy VI (A fantastic story in general)
          • Super Smash Bros (the series as a whole)
          • lunarul@lemmy.world
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            2 months ago

            I didn’t have any consoles, so couldn’t play a lot of those games. But on PC (and on 8-bit computer before that), I played hundreds of games. There were no copyright laws in my country when I was a kid and my dad got everything he could get his hands on. In the 8-bit era he collected over 40 cassette tapes (8-10 games on each). Then when we got the PC there were boxes and boxes of floppy disks (I remember Need for Speed was on over 30 disks). Then CDs came out and I remember one CD that had 200 games on it. And as my dad collected, I tried every single one of them.

            That just goes to show the sheer amount of quality gaming that there was.

            I made that top 10 list years ago from some silly Facebook game that was going around at the time. The hardest part was picking just 10. My initial list had about 70 games on it.

              • lunarul@lemmy.world
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                2 months ago

                Yeah, I remember when I first got ZSNES and suddenly I had access hundreds of games I wasn’t able to play before. Played through Super Mario RPG, spent so much time in Harvest Moon, and finally played the first Final Fantasy games and Legend of Zelda.

        • Ashtear@lemm.ee
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          2 months ago

          It’s not just that. 2023 was a very good year for gaming, right? A lot of the heavy hitters last year were from long-running series. Look and see how many of those series had either their genesis or consensus fan favorite entries in that time period.

          Not only that, Steam, Unreal Engine, e-sports, the mainstreaming of game mods, and even AAA development itself all trace back to innovations from that time. Historically, it’s a massively important time period for video games.

  • CleoTheWizard@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    I loved the PS2 era of gaming a lot. This may be a controversial take, but the PS2 era did not last long enough.

    Everything about the aesthetics of the games that the PS2 produced were excellent. In my opinion, this is the point when low fidelity and high quality assets overlapped just enough to make games more comprehensible to their players. That enabled a lot of innovation that the PS3/360 era handled entirely differently. Forget an era, the PS2 is the last part of an entire age of gaming that delineates what I’m referring to.

    The PS2 was a huge turning point in what games were and could be in 3D. Prior to this, many games were abstract and the characters were a lump of polygons. With the PS2, this began to change. So we began to get games that our minds had to do a lot of interpreting but could see reality through. Nowadays, I’d argue that your mind does less interpreting and so the resulting picture has glaring inaccuracies.

    It also helped that ps2 was primarily played on CRTs or at least plasma which helped the picture look better in plenty of scenes than a PS3. Not to mention the color palette of games after the PS2 turned to muck.

    • steeznson@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      PS2 coincided with a lot of good handhelds too. Nintendo DS is a strong contender for best handheld ever, IMO.

      • CleoTheWizard@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        Oh absolutely, I was going to reference the Gameboy Advance that I grew up on as a part of this phase. Unfortunately, I don’t think those handhelds even got their time in the light that they could’ve had. It seems like they’ve had a long legacy but the DS and GameBoy came and went in but two generations of consoles.

        I mean imagine what we could do with a gameboy today. Or imagine how we could easily transform a modern phone into a DS form factor. We’re talking now about running a modern resident evil game in the palm of your hand. Insane power really.

        All this is largely due to the mobile play stores having no competition or curation. Our mobile games absolutely suck now. There are gems, sure, but otherwise I hate phone gaming despite my phone being my most used device.

        I think you’re absolutely correct though, the DS is the best handheld. Slim, powerful enough, very interactive, and a great game library. I highly recommend buying one and modding it, you won’t regret it.

        • steeznson@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          My first console was an original GameBoy and I probably got the most hours of use out of it compared to any other console. Despite the horrific backlight (lack thereof) and small screen. I love handheld gaming in general. Still play my 3DS all the time.

  • Essence_of_Meh@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Probably fifth and sixth gens (PSX-PS2 era), for three reasons:

    • graphics - there’s something about art styles used at the time that aged surprisingly well and is just pleasant to look at, even compared to later games.
    • variety - both gens were filled with mid budget titles trying out new, often weird ideas that didn’t always work but can be really interesting even to this day (as long as you can overcome jank usually present there).
    • (least important point) there’s a lower chance I’ll find games from this era to be too old-school for me. I have a high tolerance to old game design but I’m not immune to it. Sometimes there is such thing as “too old” and that’s alright.
    • cod@lemmy.worldOPM
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      2 months ago

      Do you have any favourite games from those console gens? My first console was an original Xbox but moved on to the 360 very quickly so I don’t know too many games from then, especially not on the PlayStation

      • Essence_of_Meh@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        Couple of disclaimers to start with: I’m primarily a PC player, even most of the console games I played happened via emulation so I’ll drop stuff from both. I’m also really fond of games willing to try something different, even if they end up mediocre or bad - these ain’t GOTY material.

        With that out of the way, here’s a short list of titles I really enjoyed:

        • Croc: Legend of the Gobbos (PC, PSX, Sega Saturn) - 3D platformer with relatively slow and clunky gameplay (kind of similar to classic Tomb Raider games). Colorful, cute and simple.
        • Kao the Kangaroo (Dreamcast, PC) - series very similar to Croc though might feel a bit less polished at times. Don’t really care about the sequel even though it’s not a bad game.
        • Parasite Eve (PSX) - JRPG set in 1990’s New York. Interesting combat system focused on guns and positioning, great art and fun story.
        • Gothic I & II (PC) - German RPGs with a unique atmosphere and world. Surprisingly open-ended with some of its quests. Has an unusual keyboard-centric control scheme.
        • Sheep (Mac OS, PC) - game about herding sheep through various wacky levels. Lots of humor.
        • Metal Wolf Chaos (Xbox) - crazy story about an American president fighting FOR DEMOCRACY in a mech suit, created by From Soft. Has modern ports for PC, PS4 and Xbox One.
        • Oni (Mac OS, PC, PS2) - the best Ghost in the Shell game without actually being one*. Third person action with a great melee combat, big empty levels and rough difficulty spikes. Has a community made “Anniversary Edition” with fixes and access to mods.

        * I haven’t played all of the GitS games to back that up.

        • cod@lemmy.worldOPM
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          2 months ago

          Metal Wolf Chaos sounds hilarious in concept. Will definitely have to check it out. I also own Gothic I & II and want to play them sometime. How do they hold up? I’m not too picky on graphics, but overly janky can be unfun sometimes for the modern gamer

          • Essence_of_Meh@lemmy.world
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            2 months ago

            Yeah, Metal Wolf is a cheesy action movie filtered through Japanese lens. It’s crazy, stupid and unintentionally hilarious.

            As for Gothics, I think they hold up really well as long as you can overcome a few things:

            • get used to the controls - they really aren’t bad but they were created when standards weren’t as established as they are now.
            • treat them as worlds you are a part of rather than games - it helps figure out alternative solutions to quests and avoid some unpleasant surprises (in universe, not bugs).
            • game world does not revolve around you - early on even basic wildlife will be a challenge, treat enemies with respect.
            • there’s no level scaling - some areas will be unavailable to you until you’re strong (or crafty) enough.
            • don’t play Gothic II with Night of the Raven expansion installed from the start - it adds a bunch of difficult enemies available from the get go and will make the game way harder if you don’t know how to avoid them.

            I think some of those points might sound more serious than they really are but should make for a good primer anyway. There’s a lot to like about those games (even compared to another titan of that time, Morrowind) so I hope you have fun!

            • cod@lemmy.worldOPM
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              2 months ago

              I appreciate the help. When I decide to check them out I’ll be coming back to this comment. Thanks!

  • Sphks@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    2 months ago

    LAN parties. I remember the first time I could connect two PC together. It was Doom, with a serial-to-serial cable. We were two players on the same fucking map. It was awesome!

    Then coax cable networks with friends. We used to have two or three different networks during a LAN party since you could not disconnect the coax cable to add a player without stopping the current games. The players arrived later would plug a new network just for them, and launch a game waiting the first players to finish theirs.

    • cod@lemmy.worldOPM
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      2 months ago

      Oh man that must’ve been a great time. Very jealous you got to experience that being brand new!

    • the_ramzay@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Yep, we made LAN between three 5 floor houses and we have eventually 10 people in it. That was AWESOME! We are have played: Warcraft 3, cs1.6, quake 3 arena, C&C Generals/Red Alert, Diablo 2, Titan Quest, Disciples II, Heroes of might and Magic III, and freaking World of Warcraft on our private server!

  • Quazatron@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    My first machine was a ZX Spectrum.

    I love the 8 bit games I grew up with but I’m not stuck in that timeframe. I appreciate that I can still play all my old games and the new ones.

    I just wish I had more time to enjoy them.

    Excluding the 8 bit games, the games where I spent more time are: Doom, Half-life, Portal, Bioshock Infinite, Skyrim.

    If I had to choose one, it would be Doom. Such a simple game, so much brainless fun, so many great mods.

    • cod@lemmy.worldOPM
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      2 months ago

      I still regularly play the original Doom on my PC. A couple years ago a friend and I found an RTX mod for it that we played a ton. I still play that all the time

      • Quazatron@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        Try the Brutal Doom mod if you haven’t already for an added dose of violence and gore. Combine it with mods like Eviternity for huge new maps and enemies. Enjoy!

  • kratoz29@lemm.ee
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    2 months ago

    I think the handheld era is my favorite, it basically ended with the 3DS, but it is the DS which I really can’t put down, I am playing for the first time Chrono Trigger on it, and it is my Jump Ultimate Stars machine (Wimmfi), also have some other bangers as well, but I’ll bore you if I citate them all.

    But hey, don’t get me wrong, the current handheld era is good too, we have the Switch, The Steam Deck and a plethora of good quality Chinese handhelds.

  • PP_GIRL_@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    2004-2014. That captures the great tail end of the sixth generation of consoles and the golden days of the seventh

  • Nostalgia@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    The Commodore Amiga in its prime was one of the coolest times to be a teenaged gamer. Though NES was a hell of a thing at its time too.

  • mister_newbie@sh.itjust.works
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    2 months ago

    Early-mid 90s.

    The latter years of the NES, the entirety of the 16-bit console era (SNES/Megadrive [“Genesis”]), the golden age of PC adventure games & the dawn of multimedia (CD-ROM based games & talkies).

    Just before the release of Doom, where FPS took over; and the PSX/N64, where (bad) 3D was teh hotness; is where it’s at for me – likely why I love my MiSTer FPGA so much.