Era can be defined as a console generation, a decade, one specific year, whatever you want. I’d encourage you to give a list of your favourite games from the generation of choice and why it was the best to you. Nostalgia is a totally viable reason too.
I’ll go first. For me, the 360 era is my GOAT. As someone in their 20s, I grew up with the 360 so nostalgia is definitely a big factor. But on top of that, I still feel like the games during that time were some of the best we’ve had. 2011 alone was a fantastic year, with Dark Souls, Skyrim, Portal 2 and many more great games. I was going to list out my favourite games from 2005-2013 but I love so many it would be far too long of a post.
I’d love to hear some of you talk about your favourite time period of games too, whether it’s agreeing with my choice or giving different opinions


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Xbox 360 was a fun time. Gears of War is still striking today. Also, the best designed controller ever made
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I loved my 3DS. I mostly played Pokémon on it but played other games on it too. I never took advantage of street pass but agree it was a great concept
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I think the handheld era is my favorite, it basically ended with the 3DS, but it is the DS which I really can’t put down, I am playing for the first time Chrono Trigger on it, and it is my Jump Ultimate Stars machine (Wimmfi), also have some other bangers as well, but I’ll bore you if I citate them all.
But hey, don’t get me wrong, the current handheld era is good too, we have the Switch, The Steam Deck and a plethora of good quality Chinese handhelds.
The Greatest Era of gaming was when I was between 12 and 22. And this is true for everyone no matter what their age is now. Between 12 and 22 I had enough time and energy to game all night and still go to school and none of life’s problems were stopping me
You know what, that’s a great answer. I think you probably hit the nail on the head
this has gotta be the correct answer
Late 90s PC, because anything was possible. 2D? Yeah, go wild, it’ll be fast. 3D? Software rendering is the wild west! Voxels, polygons, texturing, raycasting, every game looks unique because they’re all making it up as they go. Even consoles were on PC because emulation was faster and better than owning a PSX or N64.
These were not the best games of all time. Most sucked. You can get a taste of that in PC Gamer demo discs, or like half of Civvie11’s videos. But it was an era where nothing was easy, so people reached for the fucking stars.
for me there was a peak in the late 90s. Ocarina of Time and Half Life in 1998 alone.
I’ll break from the mould and say early 80s to early 90s, where we got:
That era really defined what video games are, and built the framework for how we talk about games today.
I miss the Amiga 500 in that list. ;)
1980s 2D had the same “every machine sucks uniquely” vibe as 1990s 3D. If the same game on two platforms looked remotely similar then someone busted their hump getting it right. By default, you were getting a game that looked and sounded as good as this system could manage, rather than being a smoothed-over downgrade of some canonical example.
Ironically it wasn’t always a great era for pick-up-and-play-ability. Late-70s games were so limited that arcade sensibilities were nearly the only thing possible, and even text-centric computer games lacked the memory to bore you with backstory. By the late 80s they could push the early inklings of an unskippable cutscene and a tutorial level. Dunno if that’s better than ZX Spectrum games getting mercilessly sink-or-swim.
Coincidentally that arcade vibe also matches the late 90s: it’s how most Dreamcast games feel.
One of the things I really miss from that era was the game manual. Since they couldn’t put all of the backstory and tutorial stuff into the game itself, you’d get a companion booklet to read (e.g. this one for The Legend of Zelda). Some games took that too far and you essentially had to buy a separate guide. A lot of people think games from the era were obtuse, but they’re really just missing the documentation.
I honestly really liked that experience and would read the guides when I wasn’t able to play.
Arcades obviously didn’t have that luxury, so they had to be games you could quickly pick up without any introduction. So you got a natural divide between games for home and games for arcades (with some overlap of course).
And yeah, the gaming experience varied quite a bit by platform for the same game because things like audio and graphics drivers needed to be built into the game itself, and that varied by system. But that’s also part of the charm. There wasn’t really an expectation that a game would look the same on two platforms, so they were often judged separately (i.e. arguments about which version is better).
I think most eras were decent. I’m especially keen on everything post 8-bit, but pre-“everything is a monetized DLC; fuck you pay me” era.
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It’s an overlap between the back end of the fourth gen (aka 16-bit) era for consoles and then a full pivot to PC gaming in the years after. I really didn’t like the move to early 3D on consoles with their abysmal framerates and load times. I felt then (and still think today) it was a generation too early.
Marking the starting point is easy: 1994. An insane year for the SNES, Donkey Kong Country, Final Fantasy VI, Mega Man X, and Super Metroid all came out in North America that year. That run continued on the SNES until Yoshi’s Island in 1996. I did pick up a PlayStation but I wasn’t thrilled with it. There are some personal favorites from this time, too, but they still had the sprite art I was desperately missing: games like Final Fantasy Tactics, Suikoden, Symphony of the Night, Xenogears.
I’d been a PC gamer for a while, but I started moving more towards the platform with Blizzard’s ascendancy with Warcraft II in 1995 and Diablo in 1996. I’d finally get a dedicated GPU in 1998, and what a year for it: Half-Life, Thief: The Dark Project, Unreal, Tribes, Freespace. The less-demanding games of the year were no slouches either: Starcraft, Baldur’s Gate, Fallout 2. With a similarly impressive console lineup, it’s no surprise many consider 1998 the best year ever for video games.
The endpoint is harder to pin down. Maybe the death of the space sim genre with Freespace 2 in late 1999, or Blizzard’s last landmark game before the MMO era, Diablo II in mid-2000. At the very latest, a new era for me definitely began with the release of the Game Boy Advance in 2001, where I shifted mostly to PC + handheld platforms, where I’m still at today.
That was a great read. As someone born within that timeframe I didn’t really live through it much, so I don’t have much experience with it, but I like to get a glimpse at what it was like through comments like yours!
Early-mid 90s.
The latter years of the NES, the entirety of the 16-bit console era (SNES/Megadrive [“Genesis”]), the golden age of PC adventure games & the dawn of multimedia (CD-ROM based games & talkies).
Just before the release of Doom, where FPS took over; and the PSX/N64, where (bad) 3D was teh hotness; is where it’s at for me – likely why I love my MiSTer FPGA so much.
The era of SCUMM. Point and click adventures were awesome. Day of the Tentacle, Full Throttle, Leisure Suit Larry, Quest for Glory series, Indiana Jones and the fate of Atlantis.
How is Monkey Island missing from the list? Those games were the peak of SCUMM.
I know, I did try playing them with dosbox years later but I didn’t know anyone that had them to borrow the discs so I hadn’t played them back in the day like all the ones I named.
Scummvm is much better than the old native interpreter. And the Amiga versions are obviously better than dos though any one should work.
The Scumm Bar®
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Hell yea, Indy Atlantis is absolute peak… then again so is most of lucasarts point&click adventure games.
Man I wish the teased sequel for atlantis was actually made :/
LAN parties. I remember the first time I could connect two PC together. It was Doom, with a serial-to-serial cable. We were two players on the same fucking map. It was awesome!
Then coax cable networks with friends. We used to have two or three different networks during a LAN party since you could not disconnect the coax cable to add a player without stopping the current games. The players arrived later would plug a new network just for them, and launch a game waiting the first players to finish theirs.
Oh man that must’ve been a great time. Very jealous you got to experience that being brand new!
Yep, we made LAN between three 5 floor houses and we have eventually 10 people in it. That was AWESOME! We are have played: Warcraft 3, cs1.6, quake 3 arena, C&C Generals/Red Alert, Diablo 2, Titan Quest, Disciples II, Heroes of might and Magic III, and freaking World of Warcraft on our private server!
The present. I can use emulation to play all my old favorites, often for free, and there’s never been such a rich plethora of indie and studio games available.
Very logical answer. What are some of your old favourites you like to emulate?
Adding a separate comment to add, if you’ve never played it, Super Mario X was a very fun, apparently not-entirely-legal fangame made my Redigit (who went on to create Terraria). He took it down at Nintendo’s demand, but you can still find a copy.
I’ll look into it, thanks for the info
NES: River City Ransom, Crystalis, Zelda ][
SNES: Super Mario World, Chrono Trigger, Link to the Past
GB: Final Fantasy Tactics Advance, Minish Cap, Tetris
DOS: The Quest for Glory series, ZZT
Great choices! Some classics there for sure
If you haven’t played Terranigma, you should do that. It’s on the level of Chrono Trigger in how good it is.
It was never released in North America, so get the PAL ROM along with the NTSC (60Hz) patch from RHDN
I did play that on emulator a decade or so ago. It’s part of the same series as Illusion of Gaia, right? I don’t really remember Terranigma that well, maybe it’s time for a replay.
Yeah, but the stories aren’t really connected; they’re all standalone games.
I’ve been working my way through Atari 2600 games right now, they have over 500 to choose from!
There’s some great games for that. My friend’s dad had one we used to play on as kids, and always had a great time. Got any favourite games?