With gaming often bringing me into a really depressive headspace sometimes with how the markets are developing, whats a game you can always go to and just be lost in, or just be happy with?
Personally i would go for advance wars 1 and 2 on the gba (there is no remake and never will be)
the artstyle, the music, the game-play is just simple, yet effective, a sublime experience of very fun times.
Whats yours?
I haven’t seen anyone mentioning this gem:
Vampire Survivors
Minecraft. It’s just a nice game to get lost in.
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Bloons TD 6. Just so incredibly addicting, and there’s depth to the different monkeys and how they interact, especially when you think about all the upgrades.
It is still Guild Wars 2 for me.
It is very chill to play and only explore and it also has more challenging content if i feel like it. Best MMO out there. At least for me personally.
If anyone can show me the way to a guild wars 2 community here i would be grateful btw.
Star Wars: Racer - I know every track by heart at this point, have it on my Switch and still play quite a bit. Amazing flow state game.
Rollercoaster Tycoon 2 - absolute classic and the nostalgia I get from playing is unmatched
Age of Empires 2 - the music is just muah
KotoR - Best Star Wars game ever made next to Dark Forces 2 and Jedi Outcast
OpenTTD is my happy space. It’s relaxing to just hop in and start building some railroads.
I’ve got OpenTTD downloaded, but always end up going down the rabbit hole of looking at mods, and then sort of giving up on the idea :p
Is it worth it vanilla or do you have any other tips at all for trying to get into it?
Vanilla is pretty good. I think the only mod I really used was the one to add trams to the game.
Cool:) I’ll definitely give it a try when I next get the chance^^
Oh, I remember checking this out! It’s a very cool project, although I’m not very good with these types of games
I love the look and stuff but just could never get into it, any tips for a newcomer?
The wiki is pretty good at introducing the concepts and basic gameplay strategy. Overall I’d say just learn by doing. Half the fun is building crazy train networks and seeing if they actually work.
My usual strategy is to just build out bus routes at first to generate a steady income stream, and then from there start to go wild with the trains.
Thanks for the tip
Oh wow, I love openTTD, I never thought I’d see another person who played it in the wild.
Try not to have an overly rosy retrospection about this. There were plenty of crappy, cash-grabby games in decades past. We just don’t remember them because they were crappy, cash-grabby, and not worth remembering. They hadn’t invented microtransactions yet, but that’s just one more flavor of crappiness.
You are very much correct, however, ID argue due to stuff like you mentioned, they are more predatory than ever before and thus, in a way, can.be considered worse no?
Perhaps, but the solution is still the same as it’s always been: don’t play crappy games. I’ve been having a blast playing MechWarrior 5 and it doesn’t have any microtransactions or other such rubbish.
Im getting better at just stopping crap but autistic fixations can still be a bitch
And Iam at the same time such a picky player sometimes I can get into a spiral you know?
Remember the shelf on stores where they put all the weird budget priced shovelware? I remember once buying some kind of weird Rainbow Six knock off that was totally uncooked.
[Edit: The game was SAS: Secure Tomorrow. Lmao what trash.]
Even really great games from back in the day often had bugs, and unlock modern times it was much harder to just push out some patches on Steam or whatever. Perhaps the ease of patching online has made companies factor it in a little more, but games even good games, totally got shipped with bugs back then.
Not to mention all the good companies these days who push out cool updates. I have Wasteland 2, and when that game got a totally overhauled Director’s Cut, the new version got automatically added to my steam account. Say nothing of non-predatory live games like Deep Rock Galactic who just keep throwing updates at players.
Stardew Valley is amazing for this. Minecraft was it for years and years, but Stardew is just like a nice hug. I adore it.
Hogwarts Legacy has also fallen into this category for me now.
Anyone of my simulation/management games. Whether it’s running a hospital, creating an auto manufacturing assembly line or helping some brave adventurers find oxygen I’m always more at peace with a single player goal driven experience.
Stardew Valley is my go-to. I found Firewatch really easy to get lost in too.
Portal. I’ve played through it enough times that I can complete it in a little under 20 minutes. I’m not very good at games but there are a lot of fun and easy tricks to run through it quickly. Playing it a bunch of times is relaxing and fun for me.
Im gonna be “that guy” and say dark souls 1. Subsequent playthroughs of the game are surprisingly relaxing, when you know where everything is and you’re just putting together a build and steamrolling bosses.
No Man’s Sky is a good mix of nice scenery, low stress, and engaging without requiring a lot of mental capacity that can be comforting.
Stardew Valley comes to mind right away, but I think it applies to all titles after you get the hang of it, with the exception of heavily RNG-based games like Risk of Rain 2, Hades, Dead Cells where you have to be alert almost all the time. Currently I’m enjoying playing Red Dead Redemption 2. Definitely a comfort game just riding your horse around.