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A not so remembered game that means a lot to you.

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Saying you played one of the top rated or top selling games on a given system as a kid is nothing too interesting; they tended to be top rated and selling for a reason. What we are here today to discuss is those games that you played because it was, say, the only thing you had, the only thing when visiting grandparents or just something you really latched onto. On a related note then in programming it is noted everybody programs well in their first language and usually spends all their time trying to make a new one behave like that, something similar is noted in games where mechanics of their earliest titles or those they spent time with inform how they feel about things going forward (why else do you think every indie platformer a few years back was a homage to NES Super Mario Brothers? Do you not imagine almost everything will be influenced by Minecraft before long when the 12 year olds of 2010 are now getting their first jobs in the game industry?).

My fondness for Talespin on the NES has been noted a few times before on the site, however as that is a Disney property made by Capcom (who also did most Disney things on the NES and most in turn are held up as outright classics) that does not play here. On the other hand

Stealth ATF for the NES

Not my first "3d" flight sim, Elite arguably being that one, but as the NES was my first console I could exclusively monopolise (the Commodore 64 actually came after for me) and this was one of the handful of games I had for it then it has informed a lot of how I approach flight sims, also now what I recognise as an early case of GPS syndrome as I would often follow the radar more than the screen itself (though real fighter pilots do that I am told).

Turbo Racing for the NES (Al Unser Jr.'s Turbo Racing in the US is something I just learned)

What would today be considered a by the numbers racer made by those paragons of quality, that being Data East, on the NES was equally one of the few NES titles I had. Light stats upgrades (today would be dubbed RPG elements), a little balance the turbo vs straight racing mechanic, some hills in the level, memories of a sore thumb from holding A for so long on the NES pad... barring the NES bit then if you said that I would think you were describing Road Rash, which was a far more influential series for me, but Turbo Racing never the less holds a place in my gaming makeup.

Despite it being several years since playing both of those, maybe decades since I played them an awful lot, I apparently could whistle the theme tunes/in mission tunes too. Can I do that for the last few games I reviewed? No.


What then are one or two of your fondly (or perhaps not so fondly) remembered games that, even on a site like this, you would be lucky to get more than a few people say "oh I remember that"? Why did you end up with them and did they cause you to either expect things in later games or avoid such things in the future?
We are accepting stupidly rare in your region; if basketball was your thing in Europe and you owned one of the 5 imported versions of a game that today litters the shelves of second hand game shops up and down the US then we will allow it. It need not be NES or older; if you only started gaming 5 years ago with a hand me down DS then feel free to share that too.
 

vincentx77

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@vincentx77 , is that an avatar of Dogi from Ys? damn fine series (going through ys origin on the switch). I was introduced to that series as a kid when my grandfather bought a turbo grafx 16, then later a cd attachment. I have the system at this very moment and have had since his death in the 90s. we never beat it (ys book 1 and 2) together, but I later beat it as a teenager.

Why yes, yes it is. Technically this is one of the avatars that came with Lacrimosa of Dana on PS4. I imagine this is what Dogi would wear to audition for a boy band. His costume in this game always made me laugh a little, so it had to be my avatar. Ys is another series that's near and dear to my heart. It's just that everyone and their grandma's played it now. For what it's worth, I've played through Ys 1 on so many different systems I've actually lost track. We're talking mid-2000s feature phones here. Hell, I even bought that awful Ys Strategy game (didn't play much of it, though).
 
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GoldenBullet

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Everyone remembers the n64 version but I grew up with the wii version and playing splitscreen multiplayer with this game was so much fun with my brothers. Fps games on the wii are honestly underrated, even the CoD games are fun to play with the wii remote.
 

linuxares

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I would say Stella Glow.
Such a hidden gem on the 3DS. The company was shade as fuck that made it and shut down. So we will never get a HD remake of it :/

 

godreborn

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oh, yeah, I recently learned of the ys strategy game. I have ys 8 on the switch (been through it twice). quite a good game and long too. my second playthrough was like 60 hours.

here's another game worth playing (arc rise fantasia):

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I put the save on my wii u after beating the game on the wii. I beat all 50-60 bonus bosses. the voice acting for the American version is some of the worst ever, but the game definitely beats the hell out of the crap they call final fantasy nowadays.

if you want what final fantasy should've evolved into, play shadow hearts. the koudelka game is part 1, but I've never really played. shadow hearts 2 and 3 are awesome. iirc, part 3 has you break Capone out of prison.
 
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Panzerfaust

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- Sonic 1 (Master System)
Enjoyed it way more than the Megadrive / Genesis version

- Ys Book 1&2, 3 and 4 (PC Engine CD)
Better than any FF that I played so far
 
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KnightHart

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Verytex on sega mega drive.

Despite being an average shoot em up this game have great soundtrack which made great atmosphere. This was my favourite game back then which I got on a pirate cart and I still have this cart.
 
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kumikochan

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Mine is Infinite undiscovery, one of the games Microsoft made to push for JRpg's. One of the darkest JRpg's I ever played and one of the games that made my cry so hard like with no other. One of the best JRpg's made and sadly almost no one played
 

sion_zaphod

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Burn Cycle on the Philips CDi. The game was a basic puzzle solver but the atmosphere was something else. For the time it was like being in the movie blade runner (DADOES)
 
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DinohScene

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I've got several games that I'm quite fond of that aren't AAA titles but if I have to pick the most influential game..
I think I'll pick GTA2.

The entire GTA franchise from the very start has had a tremendous impact on me life.
 
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shaunj66

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When I was a wee lad I would often go to a friends house who had an Amiga and I was captivated by a game he would play called Bubble and Squeak. It's a mostly forgotten puzzle platformer game that features characters who strikingly resemble Calvin and Hobbes.

As I only owned a Mega Drive I would often go to his place just to play it. Something about the game stuck with me, maybe it was the charming visuals or music, or perhaps because I was a big C&H fan at the time.

Then one day when in a games shop I see a copy of the game inside a Mega Drive case. Wha-? Could it be? This is the day before the internet was a common place thing, I had no idea it had been ported to the Mega Drive. I begged my parents for a copy, who eventually caved in bought it for me and I spent many happy hours playing it :)



The soundtrack on the Mega Drive version was even better than the Amiga.
 
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