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Hmm... can't send a PM to Spassky, presumably due to their low rep. If people would help uprep this post, it would be much appreciated: http://www.gog.com/forum/general/games_that_blew_your_mind_1/post54
Post edited July 15, 2014 by Mrstarker
Russian Roulette
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mrcoolman: Russian Roulette
https://explosm.net/comics/3490/
high rated
Bioshock Infinite

...

Oh wait, this is a giveaway thread? :D I was writing a long paragraph trying to get involved into the discussion before realize it, silly me :)) Congrats to the winner btw haha
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pokemaztre: Oh wait, this is a giveaway thread? :D I was writing a long paragraph trying to get involved into the discussion before realize it, silly me :)) Congrats to the winner btw haha
Nope, just a regular discussion thread with a sneaky giveaway on the side.
I've been gaming for over 30 years and I've played a lot of amazing and stunning games, but in all that time only one truly blew my mind..

Elite
Probably Sonic 1+2+3 on megadrive, Castle/World of Illusion, Aladdin + Cool Spot on Megadrive and many more :-), Shenmue 1+2 (Dreamcast/Xbox), Resident Evil: Code Veronica (Dreamcast), Myst/Riven, Atlantis 1+2 (PC)
Post edited July 15, 2014 by Xscape2041
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mrcoolman: Russian Roulette
HA! That's great.
I think the first game to really amaze me was Wing Commander: Privateer. I picked it up cheap, in a classics deal box after my parents got our first computer - a Gateway computer with a Pentium processor and Windows 95. Until that point I had played many NES games, but none seemed to match the freedom of that game.

The next couple games were Playstation games. Metal Gear Solid was the first game I played in which the environment was such an important (and destructible) portion of the game. Final Fantasy VIII was my first time playing an RPG.

Neverwinter Nights (Platinum Edition) provided me an amazing couple years of playtime. By the time I got the game there were an abundance of great mods. The fact that they had created a game and a toolkit was simply amazing.

Since joining GOG in 2008 I've played many older games that likely would have amazed me when they were new. Not that I didn't still find them amazing, but I have in many cases played other newer games that borrowed heavily from the classics.
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Spassky: I'm a taffer.
Hey, you likely have PMs disabled in the settings, so, y'know, enable them.
Post edited July 16, 2014 by Mrstarker
There were lots of great games I remember and lots of interesting moments, but as time passes by it's harder and harder for anything to actually "blow one's mind".
That's why I think what happened to me two years ago is even more mind blowing.
I had been playing single-player stuff (plus some MP arena shooters) for years (I started in C64 era, then moved through PlayStation to finally own a PC). So starting an MMORPG was something new to me, but I would never expect it to have such a profound impact on me.
The game was amazing, especially in three regards: mind blowing graphics, perfect animations and skill-based combat like no other game ever had. That's what initially drew me to it and that was mind-blowing enough, but now I don't think it was the most important thing, because the real "I had no idea games could do that!" experience came a bit later.
Healing and tanking in a beautiful game like this are like no other experience one can have in any video game.
Taking care for other players (or rather: their avatars), for their well being, was something absolutely new to me and gave a satisfaction and feeling that I never experienced before. Taking a boss or a challanging dungeon in a party was also something new, so this adds up to the experience. And in MMO this is not all there is, gameplay and skill are not enough. There's a human interaction, people have their ambitions, motivations and their dramas. Organizing a 10 or 20-person raid is nothing like leading your own 4-character party in classic computer RPGs.
I did a lot of that, especially when I started to play as a tanker. It really is mind blowing how many layers of depth such an experience consists of. Protecting other people, leading a group to a combat with a fierce bosses or into a new unknown dungeon, balancing things out in a guild, sharing loot with others in a fair way, etc.
And tanking is unlike anything else I've ever done in video games or a "real" life. Going first into the danger, taking attention of the monsters upon myself so others can stay in safety. I had to knew all the moves, all the animations of them by heart, often requiring to react in a twitch. If the monster tries to go for someone else, my avatar shouts or magically pulls the monster back. I have to keep an eye on it all the time and on every other character in the party (or at least the key players). It requires lots of knowledge on game mechanics and GREAT awareness on what's going on on the battlefield. Imagine leading 20 people in a battle against other 20 players, making decisions, sending text messages and fighting at the same time yourself. I can't think of anything that engaging, requiring that degree of alertness.
MMOs are different than other games, but taking a role of a tanker or a healer is unlike anything I've ever seen in offline games. Actually protecting or healing others... if one feels what it means. This is the most amazing "I had no idea games could do that!"-like experience I've ever had.
The game was TERA. As they say... The Game of My Life :)
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pokemaztre: Bioshock Infinite

...

Oh wait, this is a giveaway thread? :D I was writing a long paragraph trying to get involved into the discussion before realize it, silly me :)) Congrats to the winner btw haha
Hehe, I didn't realize it either. Just noticed the title and decided to add my two cents.
I'm chuffed to have won this. Thanks a lot. I have enabled PM. It was disabled for some reason.