For me it was definitely DOOM 2! Miles ahead of anything else I had played before.
Morrowind, by far. I still remember the sense of freedom and exploration I got
Also Morrowind. The systems of that game blew my young mind, and I was far too dumb to notice most of the jank.
I was too young for Morrowind and started at Oblivion, but yeah, it’s the Elder Scrolls games 100%. At the time, to me (age ~9), gaming was jumping and gunning around blocky worlds full of fake doors and imagining how cool it would be if GTA felt like an actual world instead of a blocked-out setpiece full of people whose only thoughts were to walk around, drive, or fight each other.
I started Oblivion and it was insane. I could go in nearly every house, I could have conversations with everyone, I could walk around picking up whatever objects and stealing stuff, then break out of jail when I got caught, I could get inducted into an assassination cult (even if I was really bad at lockpicking and struggled to get in the front door), etc. It was mindblowing and those sorts of features are why I prefer Bethesda titles even to these major titles everyone loves like Witcher 3.
This is 100% my experience too. My mind was blown when I saw what you could do in oblivion.
Same. One of my friend’s dad played all the old school DnD games and what not. I remember going over one day and seeing him play that, and when I asked him he was showing me a bunch of things with the open world and the characters. As soon as I was able to get it, I did, and I put in so much time into that game.
Duke Nukem 3D.
One of my most nostalgic games! I replay it yearly - the ambient sound effects and drone and atmosphere is incredible - the space levels have a creepy feeling despite the comedic tone it often goes for.
Yeah, Wolfenstein 3d and DOOM were great but Duke 3D was some next level shit. Being able to take a leak at the urinal was so cool.
Shake it baby. Wanna dance?
definitely!
I remember getting my first 2 computers connected over 10base2 LAN with T connectors and terminators and all that stuff just so me and my brother could play duke nukem 3d. It was awesome. I also remember one of the computers could barely run it and then only if shrinking the screen down. If more than 3 laser trip bombs went off at once… instant slideshow.
Hell, Duke Nukem 2 was pretty amazing even.
For me, the original browser demo of Minecraft was really exciting. I grew up with LEGO, and the Minecraft demo really brought back the joy of just making things for no other reason than to make them. I’ll always have a soft spot for it
There is definitely a sort-of wonder I felt in the early days of Minecraft that I’ve been striving to find in a game since, and have been left wanting.
MechWarrior 2,
It was the first real experience I ever had playing a game that was 3D. I was pretty young and didn’t know what I was doing. But I thought it was so cool.
My first? Probably roller-coaster tycoon. I was amazed how big and intricate the would could be, and all these coasters and everything were running at once. Led to other things like Sim city and such to find more world building games.
Prince of Persia. I remember being blown away by how realistic the movement was
Yeah they used rotoscoping to do the animations. It turned out amazing and captured such realistic movement in just basic pixels.
Half Life
This is the right answer. Half-Life 2 literally blew my mind when I first played it. It still holds up to a lot of similar games nearly 20 years later
Recently just played through most of it again with the HL2VR mod and it was amazing
Has to be portal
Wolfenstein 3D. I’d played ‘3D’ games like The Bard’s Tale before, but the ability to turn around and look in 360’ just blew my mind.
Myst has always stuck with me as looking amazing at the time. I totally sucked at the game but its graphics have a fond place in my mind for some reason!
really dating myself here, but I could not get enough of the OG Sims game. I used to play until I fell asleep at my keyboard. It felt so innovative at the time.
I got back into the sims 2 recently and it’s kind of remarkable how the game hold up. First of all it’s complex as hell there are just so many variables, and things to do, and ways for sims to interact and live and die and grow and build. In a lot of ways sims 2 is more complex than its sequels in terms of personality traits.
Second is how pleasant the game looks. Its stylized and cartoony and not high res but its a sharp looking game. Textures are clear and detailed, there are reflections in mirrors, and items and sets are well modeled and detailed. Its not something I thought of when it came out because of course a new game would look good, but with more than a decade and a half of hindsight behind me it’s actually kinda surprising how well it holds up.
Black & White, Alpha Centauri, and Dwarf Fortress.
Alpha Centauri was incredible.
Probably Return to Castle Wolfenstein was one of the first games i ever played
Someone correct me if I’m wrong, but wasn’t this game also the engine upon which Enemy Territory was built? I logged soooo many hours in that multiplayer mode…
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iweK-Z99MwQ
I believe it was one of the early games to implement classes/roles in a team-based shooter
Arguably the best free game ever released. “I’m a medic!”
Even with the view window reduced so it would run decently on my 12mhz 80286, I was amazed.
Hello fellow old person! You’re thinking of Wolfenstein 3D, which I also played on a 286. Return to Castle Wolfenstein was from around the year 2000, I believe.
oops, that’s right. It’s been some years. :)
I didn’t own it, but my dad’s friend had it on a computer in the back of his shop. I spent hours back there when he was visiting his friend.
This is what did it for me.
For me GTA 3.
GTA Vice City for me. The soundtrack was just awesome
At its time I can’t think of anything like it that I had access to. Really was a game changer for open world style games.
Final Fantasy 4 (2 in the USA)
That game made me feel things in a way that no other game had made me feel before that. The deep emotional story telling in that game was leagues beyond anything I had played before it. I played it once a year for a while.
Porom and Palom hit me hard as a kid. FF4 was definitely a gateway into a life long enjoyment of deep RPG stories.
You spoony bard!