Outer Wilds changed my life then Tunic changed it again
Edit: Game Recommendations by the people in the comments:
- Disco Elysium - @[email protected]
- Kingdom Come Deliverance - @[email protected]
- Fez - @[email protected], @[email protected], @[email protected]
- I Was a Teenage Exocolonist - @[email protected]
- Noita - @[email protected], @[email protected], @Crow_[email protected]
- The Witness - @[email protected]
- Lingo - @dexa_[email protected]
- Bad End Theater - @[email protected]
- Celeste - @[email protected]
- Fear & Hunger - @RIP_[email protected]
- minit - @[email protected]
- The Forgotten City - @[email protected], @[email protected], @[email protected]
- Deathloop - @[email protected]
- The Soulsborne games - @[email protected]
- Void Stranger - @[email protected]
- Baba Is You - @[email protected]
- Roguelikes as a genre - @[email protected]
- The Long Dark - @[email protected]
- Who's Lila? - @Crow_[email protected]
- Cultist Simulator - @[email protected]
- Sorcery! - @[email protected]
And some game recommendations by me to add on to the post:
- Taiji
- A 2D puzzle game where you slowly unravel how to solve each different element of the puzzles, eventually culminating in a massive puzzle gauntlet. Basically identical in concept and execution to The Witness, but still very much its own unique and fun game.
- The Golden Idol
- A puzzle game where each level you must examine a scene to figure out exactly what happened, eventually piecing together the full story over several levels. Don't let the art style put you off, it's an incredibly well done game. Most similar to Return of the Obra Dinn in concept.
- Stories: The Path of Destinies
- an action RPG with a branching choice-driven storyline, but not every story has a happy ending... You'll piece together the true story over multiple playthroughs and eventually find the one true path. It wasn't a particularly life-changing game but it was still a lot of fun and worth checking out if it sounds interesting!
I love Celeste for this exact reason!
That's not really what this meme is talking about.
Almost all games are about mastery in some way, in which you use knowledge to progress, or to make progression easier, but the games listed have knowledge as progression itself, which is different. Imagine if simply knowing how to perform the right jump let you skip straight from the first chapter to the final climb up the mountain, and furthermore that the game expects you to do precisely that, and that's the kind of thing this meme is about.
Hm, if so, then does Hypnospace Outlaw also count? That game has a lot of secrets and special programs that let you find hidden/unique stuff, and it's used to find crucial things in the final chapter, but most of them are already available right from the beginning if you know where to look, and the game is designed in a way where finding those early on is intentional for second-time players (either because it helps skip some chapters, or gives you useful upgrades sooner than you'd normally find them).
I have never played Hypnospace Outlaw, but it sounds like a solid maybe.