However, I still do enjoy the occasional gaming session and got the processing power to run even the latest games, so every once in a while you'll find me looking for some new interesting games to play.
Thing is, a great many games may be okay, but not really worth the time.
Like S.T.A.L.K.E.R. - Shadow of Chernobyl - nice ideas, nice atmosphere, but very buggy scripting and the so called 'freedom of gameplay' only boils down to enemies always respawning and returning to the camps which you've just cleared. Also, enforce your freedom of taking a bad aim and accidentally shooting a friend and see how you can salvage that, apart from hitting the Quickload shortcut.
Or The Elder Scrolls IV - Oblivion - awesome graphics, interesting world, but horrible levelling system, leading to much frustration without the right mods (and sometimes also with those mods).
So which games turned out to be a thoroughly good experience for you?
Personally, I've had a lot of fun with smashing things up in Overlord. Great graphics and atmosphere, with an arcade-like gameplay that triggers the good ol' levelling-instincts, making it actually fun to maybe spend a little more time in a certain place and wreak some havoc.
Half-Life and Half-Life 2 also amount to the games that I actually don't regret spending money for.
As for the old-timer games, I revisit Dynatech very often - there are almost no graphics, only pictures for the different screens, but that's okay, because I'd probably enter an epileptic shock in this high-speed economic simulation which focuses on creating a healthy economy together with around 20 other computer-controlled companies, instead of trying to just drive them into bankruptcy.
This post has been edited by Gobbler: 31 October 2008 - 08:00 AM