Steeve,

Definitely not the first, but I took acid and turned on Mass Effect for the first time back when it came out and it (probably literally) blew my mind. I think I played for 8 hours straight and I think most of it was walking around talking to every single NPC I could lol.

ray,

GTA3 for me. I didn't even care about the missions, I was just blown away by the open world. I remember spending a whole summer just exploring Liberty City.

pandora_parrot,

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.

AK_Zephyr,
AK_Zephyr avatar

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!

DarkGamer,
DarkGamer avatar

I remember when DOOM came out. There was a little crowd of maybe 8-12 people at the computer huddled around a 486 demo running the shareware version of the game, I think it was at Fry's Electronics, everyone was entirely stunned by how good the graphics were.

Melancholia,
Melancholia avatar

Seeing DOOM for the first time was amazing. I'd seen Wolfenstein 3D, but I couldn't stand the graphics and it made me nauseous. DOOM looked much better and the music was cool too. I would watch my dad play for hours but I didn't play it myself until my dad gave me the cheat codes (As an 8 year old girl, I was too scared to play without invincibility lol, I'd panic and quit as soon as I was taking any damage). I loved exploring the levels and trying to find the secret areas.

frozengriever,

Ultima Underworld for me. Coming from simple 2D NES games, a 3D world populated by NPCs you could hold conversations with and items that respond to rudimentary physics was mind-blowing.

FrostBolt,
FrostBolt avatar

This is a good question; thank you for posting. For me it was probably the original Unreal and having a dedicated 3D graphics card for the first time to play it on. I of course had played its historical predecessors in Wolfenstein 3D and Doom and such, which also amazed me at the time. But Unreal felt like a magical leap forward.

Whiskeyomega,
Whiskeyomega avatar

Turrican 2 on the Amiga 500. What A Game! Yes I'm old lol

Digestive_Biscuit,
@Digestive_Biscuit@feddit.uk avatar

I just posted about turrican 2 somewhere else. It was non-stop action. Totally amazing. I need to play it again, it's been over 20 years.

Kaesaltic,

The first game that blew my mind was a pirated copy of Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare in my older brother's computer. Back then I was intimidated by big and "complex" games like that. I was only playing mainstream online multiplayer games, particularly shooters, that are trending in my country (Crossfire, CS 1.6, etc.). I was bored that time, don't know what to play and decided to try this game. It blew my mind that games could be like this, and it's not complex than I thought. That was the first time I've played a "modern" game and made me fell in love with gaming.

Bipta,

Earthsiege 2. It had branching mission structures based on previous successes or failures, great resource management mechanics, and a fun plot. I'd love to see a remake.

John_Coomsumer,

Hmmm I would say Battlefield 3, because not only was it a technical marvel at the time, but it was the first game I launched on the first computer I had that wasn't ancient.

StJudasAhmed,

Age of Mythology for me after my first ever game of Age of Empires 2 AOK

derek,

Dungeon keeper 1. Real time strategy and first person shooter at the same time. Its like playing strategy game with a view from the top and then you can switch to Minecraft mode, dig the walls, build things, fight enemies.

sdcSpade,

Deus Ex. I was 14, didn't really play or like first person shooters and only played it because it was in the pile of old games someone essentially dropped off on me. But I understood rather quickly that this game was something special, especially with the player's choices actually making a difference. I remember a moment when I was playing around with cheats and at one point spawned a Paul Denton next to his dead body in the lab under UNATCO just to be funny and when he started talking to me as if he hadn't died, a quick online search revealed that I didn't even know how deep your influence truly went.

I still don't really like or play first person shooters, but that's now mostly because Deus Ex has set my standards very, very high!

speck,

Î was going to mention this one. Just the flexibility of approaches it permitted was revelatory to me.

On a more dubious note, it also unlocked sides of me that I wasn't aware of before.

Honorable mention to the first civ which was, for me, what the Risk boardgame had prophecied.

bstix,

Deus Ex touched on a lot political issues. Another game from that era with a similar feeling of having to fight against the government is Nomad Soul. It's not as good as Deus Ex, but it features David Bowie which is a plus.

derivator,

I was so pissed when I found out he dies if you leave through the window, even if you kill all the enemies first.

DoucheAsaurus,
DoucheAsaurus avatar

Wolfenstein back in '93 or so. My buddy down the street was the only one in the neighborhood with a PC that was able to run it and we spent weeks straight playing that thing. I must have pushed on every damn wall in that game looking for secret areas.

Next would be Homeworld in '99, the story and the music are still amazing. Just listen to this choral version of adagio for strings and tell me it's not fucking epic.

https://youtu.be/XyyL_TICbrU

FathersAndCrows,
FathersAndCrows avatar

I remember my first time playing Half-Life was pretty incredible. What really wowed me was the intro being so slow, and you just starting in a normal world, with no combat for like 45 minutes. I'd never seen anything like it before, and I loved the feeling so much. I used to hang out in the intro area for as long as I could, just enjoying how immersive and calm it felt. To this day I really dislike games that have little to no down time to them - I love just hanging out in a world. My favourite genre wound up being JRPGs since they handle that balance so well.

julianh,

I played half life way later (2014-ish) and it's hard to imagine how crazy it must have seemed back then. Even now, delaying the combat for that long is pretty rare. Back then I can't imagine how groundbreaking it must have been.

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