From lost adventures to forgotten puzzlers, here are the classic titles that games history has cruelly overlooked.
Alter Ego is a unique experience that wants players to explore and discover themselves by walking down a path of uncertainty.
Hardcore Gamer: It’s a surprisingly compelling game despite being over 30 years old at this point thanks to the great writing and multitude of choices. Alter Ego is now available on Steam so a new generation may discover it.
Rhythm games tend to be rather lighthearted affairs. If they have a star or stars, they're effervescent individuals. The Hatsune Miku series star a group of vibrant Vocaloids. The Dance Dance Revolution series offers a group of rather wholesome characters devoted to their craft. The Parappa the Rapper-line of games offer anthropomorphic and positive animals. The Bust a Groove series gives us a contract killer who moonlights as a fortune-teller and stripper, attempted murderer and daughter of an international diplomat.
Bust a Groove 3 or a remaster of the first 2 (the sequel never came to Europe :( ) should have been at PSX :)
This was one of those very few games that my big sisters (who you'd be hard pressed to call gamers) loved as much as I did. They actually "beat" the game (Robo-Z) before I was able to (what with being older and more coordinated, I guess lol).
Oni?...Oni is not a classic, unless you want to consider it as a classic unfinished game. A cool idea at that time, but very forgettable.
Bust a Groove 2 was a really good game.
Freedom Fighters was great
Time forgot them because they weren't that great !!
Bust a Groove! The EZ mouse hasn't been forgotten!
We loved that game in high school, mainly because break dancing was getting big in certain social circles. Game was amazing.