It seems that you're using an outdated browser. Some things may not work as they should (or don't work at all).
We suggest you upgrade newer and better browser like: Chrome, Firefox, Internet Explorer or Opera

×
Did your favorites make the cut?

There was a time when everybody was looking at adventure games to introduce crazy technical innovations, explore unconventional stories, or just give us a strong argument against our dismissive parents who considered all games juvenile and insubstantial. Since the golden years of the graphic adventures, we've seen certain trends come and go, foreign genes spliced into the genre's DNA, and adventure games evolving into a variety of experiences that sometimes have little in common with their early predecessors.

Richard Cobbett, a longtime fan of adventure games and their close offspring, has recently compiled <span class="bold">a comprehensive list of 29+ titles</span> that all fans of the genre should check out. Newcomers and veterans are treated to an introduction to the history of adventure games, some advice on how to get started, and a list of the standouts, broken down into sub-categories for convenience: The Classics, Story-driven, Puzzles & Exploration.

Take your pick: there are all-around legends like The Secret of Monkey Island or Beneath a Steel Sky, masterpieces of storytelling like Grim Fandango or The Walking Dead, brain wreckers like Myst or Zork: Grand Inquisitor, and deliberately paced experiences like Gone Home.

Plenty of developers continue to be fascinated by the narrative possibilities of adventure games, even if they don't feel like adhering to their original formula. These 29 games (and the additional honorable mentions) are both celebrated classics and the product of experimentation with innovative ideas and are all more than worth your time.

So, how many of these have you already played and what others would you add to <span class="bold">IGN's list</span>, fellow adventurers?
Post edited May 22, 2017 by maladr0Id
Off the top of my head, I would definitely add to the list: Day of the Tentacle, Sanitarium, Discworld: Noir, Edna & Harvey The Breakout, Technobabylon, and possibly Dracula 3: Path of the Dragon or Faust: Seven Games of the Soul. Blade Runner was also pretty great.
Post edited May 23, 2017 by maladr0Id
Ok, I don't know exactly what happened there but I seem to have messed stuff up while trying to quote people, post replies and handle other stuff at the same time.
So I accidentally deleted HunchBluntley's original suggestion that Richard Cobbett's article on IGN was sponsored by GOG and then his quote in my reply was falsely attributed to some other poster and now it's all just a big giant mess.

Apologies, this was most definitely NOT on purpose. I'm trying to sort this out as we speak :/

EDIT: So this was the part I was trying to reply to and ended up deleting the whole post:

HunchBluntley wrote:
"It's pretty clearly a GOG-sponsored article (all 29 of the primary recommendations, and all but 7 of the secondary ones, are available here in some form). I can just about guarantee they had some influence, as well."

I'm really sorry, HunchBluntley. Hopefully, we'll manage to restore post #28 soon. Until then, it shall live on in our quotes, and our hearts :(

EDIT2: So HunchBluntley's post #28 has sort of been restored. Sadly, it only contains the part I remembered (and tried to quote). So, HunchBluntely, if you can recall the rest of the contents, please feel free to edit post #28 and add them in there. Again, apologies for this mess :/
Post edited May 23, 2017 by maladr0Id
avatar
WildHobgoblin: Thanks for the (subsequently also deleted) info about the Faust game! I shall keep an eye on it - seems a bugger to get working on modern systems, but maybe something can be done. There's a wishlist entry for it, for anyone reading this who's interested. Might not help, but probably won't hurt either.
Yeah, I decided to remove the Faust stuff because it would clutter the post and obscure the message. But glad you caught it. It's a very interesting game - not perfect but quite unique.
avatar
maladr0Id: Off the top of my head, I would definitely add to the list: Day of the Tentacle, Sanitarium, Discworld: Noir, Edna & Harvey The Breakout, Technobabylon, and possibly Dracula 3: Path of the Dragon or Faust: Seven Games of the Soul. Blade Runner was also pretty great.
avatar
vicklemos: And... no Primordia?!
I mean... I'm serious! :P
Hey, Primordia is a very neat game but not Best Of material for me. I guess it was partly because I played it with a 4-month interim that took away from the momentum :/

Now LOOM, that one I'm sorry to have missed from my list. Quite the compact masterpiece.
avatar
Green_Shade: I'm not a random poster! I responded to that comment too. That was actually most of his comment, you're just missing the quoted part of my first comment (#25).
Oh sweet, so now the puzzle is almost complete!

Btw,I know you were part of the conversation I was trying to quote, but that doesn't change the fact that I put words in your mouth and out of HunchBluntley's :/
avatar
HunchBluntley: I think the only thing missing from my "restored" post was the quote of the relevant portion of Green_Shade's post that I was replying to. I'm not sure how you managed to delete my post while trying to reply to it, though.
avatar
Starmaker: Blues have a mod button next to the reply button.
^This.