Let’s hear about some games you maybe were told were not worth your time, or had bad reviews but you managed to love regardless.

I’ll go first. I’m not embarrased to admit that I played the shit out of Elder Scrolls Blades (the easily forgettable Skyrim-esque mobile game). I had to wait for it to release on Switch which had the benifit of the shitty timers being gone by then.

Once I started to think of it as a kind of advanced ‘Swords and Sandles’ type game I was hooked.

  • JTR@lemmings.basic-domain.com
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    2 years ago

    No man’s sky, plenty of people who told me it was a bad choice (and at the time it truly was) I love how the game is today though

  • Windshear
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    2 years ago

    Hellblade: Senua’s Sacrifice. It was a short game that was more story than game so I was hesitant that I wouldn’t like it. I played through it in vr and it became my favourite game to date.

    To anyone who wants to play it, whether it’s flatscreen or vr, you must have a good pair of headphones to fully appreciate it.

  • Witch@beehaw.org
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    2 years ago

    Genshin Impact.

    Listen. I understand that the entire thing was hyped up upon release. It was, after all, a gamechanger for mobile gacha games. We went from turn-based games to things like Honkai Star Rail and Tower of Fantasy and of course, Genshin Impact. Honkai Impact 3rd existed, but it wasn’t quite the same as these ones.

    However. Despite the hype, there was a problem that made me reluctant to play it.

    I really suck at gacha games. Every gacha game before then I would drop within what, 6 days? I love the characters, love the story, hate the game.

    So imagine my surprise when I logged into my settings the other day and found out that oh, It’s now been over 500 days logged, lmao. I’ve taken breaks from it once in a while, but I haven’t quit it yet. What have I become?

    • Pixel@beehaw.org
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      2 years ago

      Honestly I super agree, I got into Genshin so I could have something to play during the texas freeze and I’m glad it sucked me in during that time because it’s SUPER fun – the story isn’t remarkable all the time, but it’s cool getting a serialized narrative through the form of a game like that. I’m really glad I got into it, even if hoyoverse doesn’t seem interested in adding more endgame content at all

    • OnoreDikeido@lemmy.world
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      2 years ago

      I feel you… especially that last part, heh. I originally started playing it on its release to keep my friend company - he’s really into the anime aesthetic, I am not. I have never even played a gacha game in my life.

      Something about Genshin is just so strangely charming, though. I cannot stress enough how much I love the music and the latest region especially has been such a wonderful audio-visual experience, which is probably what makes me stick around. There are few characters I genuinely enjoy from a writing/design perspective that not having to chase the gacha is a bonus, but it certainly makes the ones I pick all the more special to me. :)

      Something I also appreciate is that Mihoyo/Hoyoverse is constantly making updates on a 6 week basis. 6 weeks! One could argue that quality of life and new features suffer for it, but I think it’s impressive that they manage to keep a game stable and mostly problem-free on such a tight schedule. And the orchestras they make happen are wonderful. For all its shortcomings, I am… positively surprised.

  • TheiaTheMoonMaker@beehaw.org
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    2 years ago

    Elex had some really rough reviews, and didn’t exactly have me chomping at the bit to try it. A while back I noticed it was included in my PS+ subscription, so I gave it a shot out of curiosity.

    It’s actually pretty great. The beginning of the game is really hard (tip - get a companion ASAP, as they are substantially better than you at first), which is kind of refreshing to be honest to have a game where you’re told ‘you have lost your power and are weak’ and you actually are. But as you level up and get used to the systems, you gradually become an absolute monster on the battlefield. There’s nothing more satisfying in a game than returning to a monster that once killed you if it even looked at you, and being able to beat the crap out of it now.

    I also felt it did “post apocalyptic world’ very well. Where most games of the type take the approach of making a world that looks like the world was destroyed a month before you set off on your adventure, Elex takes a different approach of showing a mixed world of areas that are well on their way to recovery, and areas where the land itself is so damaged it’s unlikely to ever recover, and a few places in between. It works, at least it did for me.

    The game is not perfect by any means, there is a level of jank that can be both charming and annoying, but it’s a very solid adventure that at least dares to try to be different than the top games in its genre. Definitely worth a try for fans of RPGs, open world games, or adventure games.

    • JC Denton@beehaw.org
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      2 years ago

      Another great game. Didn’t expect it to be that entertaining but there I was spending considerable amounts of time deciding which faction to pick because they are all fun.

      Will buy Elex II at some point.

      • TheiaTheMoonMaker@beehaw.org
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        2 years ago

        I liked how the choice of what faction to join was a legitimately tough choice. Too many games are like “Do you want to join the Puppy Huggers or the Puppy Punchers?”. In Elex they’re all much more grey than black and white.

  • scribblemacher@beehaw.org
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    2 years ago

    SaGa (the series in general). Always heard it was the obtuse bastard child in the RPG family. The series has tried a lot of interesting things and while most games in the series are flawed, they are all really interesting in spite of themselves.

    • hamburglar26@wilbo.tech
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      2 years ago

      I wish I could have played SaGa Frontier when I was a teenager and had tons of free time. I have been playing through it recently and love a lot about it but without a guide it is easy to get lost.

      • scribblemacher@beehaw.org
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        2 years ago

        SF is personally my least favourite. I want to like it but I was constantly getting lost and not knowing what one specific thing the game wanted me to do to advance. Don’t let it turn you off from the series though! SaGa II and Scarlet Grace are so good. Romancing is good too, but I haven’t finished those yet.

  • thirdorbital@sh.itjust.works
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    2 years ago

    Spec Ops: The Line looked like yet another generic first person shooter, but it is full of surprises and gets deep in a way I never expected. Highly recommend it, and go in as spoiler-free as possible.

  • Son_of_dad@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    It’s not a remarkable game, but watch dog legions was nowhere near as bad as the original reaction made it out to be. Better than 2 I think, I didn’t like The protagonist in 2

    • BaconInMyJeans@sh.itjust.works
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      2 years ago

      I got that game for free with my gpu and had a lot of fun playing a demented hacker grandma causing mischief.

      couldn’t tell you what the story was about though

  • ThatGuy@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    Mystery Dungeon: Explorers of Sky had poor reviews on IGN so I decided to give it a shot and it became one of my favorite games of all time.

  • Exaggeration207@beehaw.org
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    2 years ago

    I thought “Turnip Boy Commits Tax Evasion” was a game trying a little too hard to be quirky, with an attention-grabbing title and little depth beyond one or two jokes.

    That game… went places. Places I did not expect.

  • boot@sh.itjust.works
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    2 years ago

    EDF 4 was one of my big ones. Bought it after seeing the strangely high steam reviews. Turns out it pretty much captures the feeling of that fun game that you played on your friend’s PS2 after school on Friday. Something about chucking increasingly large explosives at piles of giant ants really just does it for me.

  • treebeard@beehaw.org
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    2 years ago

    Blasphemous. I was told by some that it was a very shallow game with boring lore, and that it only succeeded cause it was marketed at a basically Platformer Dark Souls.

    Not true. There is a lot of lore I find really interesting, the map is much larger than I originally thought, there are tons of secrets and hidden passages, and it’s pulled all the best parts from Metroid, Castlevania and Dark Souls and combined them into a very well polished game.

    Currently going for a 100% completion run before 2 comes out.

  • alienbot@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    The game “Power Shovel ni Nourou” for playstation looks like a typical construction simulator budget title on the surface, but the gameplay is absolutely absurd. You use an excavator bucket to scoop curry and move turtles out of a swimming pool, etc video

  • PenguinTD
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    2 years ago

    The first Knack on PS4. It has okay to low review, tons of meme but I bought and played it. To my surprise it’s actually pretty deep in terms of fighting mob mechanism at higher difficulties. Example, some of the AI can work together and bait your action, then another will follow up to hit you. Those behavior won’t show up in easier difficulty cause you just delete them so quickly with your power/punches/slams. With higher difficulty the order of how you approach multiple enemies in an area becomes it’s own action-puzzle game. It can still have some extra polish but still exceeded my expectation.(no I haven’t played knack 2 yet.)

    lol, I should’ve copied over my knack review etc from reddit.

    • RobertJCross@lemmy.one
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      2 years ago

      My buddy worked at Sony and I got one of the first PS4s, he gave me Knack and Killzone for it. I played Knack way more than Killzone. What a great game. I wanted to play Knack 2 but I also haven’t.