Although every year sees the release of tons of games, none of them were made in a vacuum, the one thing nature truly abhors. As we are given new vistas and new exciting cinematic trailers for top-shelf games and creative revamps of classics, it’s not a bad idea to take a look at the classics themselves.

With that in mind we’ve assembled a list of a few classic PC games from the 90s and (very) early 2000s which are still playable, still fun, still worth checking out, because they don’t make them like they used to anymore. The graphics may have gotten old, and the interfaces might be unwieldy, but there is greatness which inspired many successors.

GameReleaseGenreDeveloperTrailerSale
The Longest Journey 2000-11-17 RPG Funcom -60%
System Shock 2 1999-08-11 RPG Irrational Games -87%
STAR WARS: Knights of the Old Republic 2003-11-19 RPG BioWare -78%
Warcraft 3 Reign of Chaos 2002-07-03 Strategy Blizzard Entertainment -
Star Wars Jedi Knight II: Jedi Outcast 2003-09-16 Adventure Raven Software -75%
The Elder Scrolls III: Morrowind GOTY 2002-04-29 RPG Bethesda Game Studios -67%
Fallout Classic Collection 1997-11-01 Adventure Interplay Inc. -61%
Worms Armageddon 1999-05-31 Action & Shooter Team17 Digital Ltd -89%
Max Payne 3 2012-05-31 Adventure Rockstar Studios -8%
RollerCoaster Tycoon 2: Triple Thrill Pack 2002-10-15 Strategy Chris Sawyer Productions -39%
Grand Theft Auto III 2002-05-21 Adventure Rockstar Games -
Theme Hospital 1997-03-28 Simulation Bullfrog -47%
Planescape: Torment: Enhanced Edition 2017-04-11 Strategy Beamdog -84%
The Secret of Monkey Island: Special Edition 2009-07-15 Adventure LucasArts -73%
Arcanum: Of Steamworks and Magick Obscura 2001-08-22 RPG Troika Games -
Grim Fandango Remastered 2015-01-26 Adventure Double Fine Productions -70%
Day of the Tentacle Remastered 2016-03-21 Adventure Double Fine Productions -82%
Baldur's Gate: Enhanced Edition 2013-01-16 RPG Beamdog -83%
CHRONO TRIGGER 1995-03-11 RPG Square -
Deus Ex: GOTY 2000-06-22 RPG Ion Storm -74%
Diablo 2: Lord of Destruction 2001-06-27 RPG Blizzard Entertainment -56%
Disciples II: Gallean's Return 2006-07-06 Strategy Strategy First -73%
Fallout 2 1998-12-01 Adventure Black Isle Studios -64%
Quake III Arena 1999-12-05 Fighting id Software -69%
StarCraft: Remastered 2017-08-14 RTS Blizzard Entertainment -66%
Thief 2014-02-27 Action Feral Interactive (Mac) -89%
Thief Collection 1998-2014 Adventure Feral Interactive (Mac) -91%
X-COM: UFO Defense 1993-12-31 Strategy MicroProse Software, Inc -73%
XCOM: Enemy Unknown 2012-10-11 Strategy Feral Interactive (Linux) -87%
Heroes of Might & Magic 3: Complete 1999-03-03 Strategy New World Computing -42%
System Shock 2 1999-08-11 RPG Irrational Games -87%
Stronghold Crusader HD 2002-07-31 Simulation FireFly Studios -73%
Doom Classic Complete 1995-04-30 Action & Shooter id Software -
Return to Castle Wolfenstein 2001-11-20 Horror Gray Matter Studios -49%
Turok 2: Seeds of Evil 1998-12-10 Action & Shooter Iguana Entertainment -76%
RollerCoaster Tycoon: Deluxe 1999-03-31 Economy Chris Sawyer Productions -29%
Commandos Pack 2002-08-30 Strategy Pyro Studios -77%
QUAKE II 1997-11-11 Action & Shooter id Software -10%
STAR WARS Galactic Battlegrounds 2001-11-09 Strategy Ensemble Studios -66%

The Longest Journey

Release year:2000-11-17
Genre:RPG
Developer:Funcom

The Longest Journey is a story-driven point-and-click adventure game released in 1999. It puts you in the shoes of one April Ryan, a young woman from a heavily industrialized world of Stark. One fateful night she learned, in a rather dramatic fashion, that she can travel between her native reality and a magical world called Arcadia, an ability crucial to save the balance between them.

The Longest Journey

The plot of The Longest Journey is complex, engaging, and steeped in magic realism, as April interacts with both the mundane and the fantastical. Before you see the ending to this story, you’ll have to solve many increasingly complicated puzzles, and you’ll get to hold many conversations with people in both worlds, some crucial to the game, some providing some amazing flavor.

Key features
  • Amazing setting, or two settings, actually: industrial Stark and magical Arcadia
  • A classical point-and-click
  • Engaging plot throwing a young art student into a mystic mess
  • Two sequels under the Dreamfall label

System Shock 2

Release year:1999-08-11
Genre:RPG
Developer:Irrational Games

Although the original System Shock remains a classic (and has recently received a remake), System Shock 2 is one of the most influential games of all time, one of the original immersive sims. As a soldier awakened on a spaceship infested by psychic parasites which turned much of the crew into dangerous mutants, you’ll have to form an uneasy alliance with a scheming AI to survive.

System Shock 2

System Shock 2 is a first-person perspective mix of a survival horror, shooter, and action role-playing, which sounds clumsy, but work extremely well. Your character starts with a preset skills depending on chosen class, but you’re free to ignore that and develop in any direction you see fit. You also get to install cybernetic augmentations, which drastically expand your toolset.

Key features
  • The spiritual ancestor of Deus Ex, Bioshock, and 2018’s Prey
  • Flexible character progression
  • Great cyberpunk plot and a survival horror gameplay
  • Immersive setting

Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic

Release year:2003-11-19
Genre:RPG
Developer:BioWare

Although Jedi Survivor is still fresh and going strong, let’s go twenty years back, to a game by many still held as the best SW game of all time. Knights of the Old Republic was developed by BioWare, at the time already established as excellent cRPG developers, and rather than throwing us at the Trilogies or whatever happened after Episode 6, it took us 4000 years back.

Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic

With a customizable character powered by an adaptation of the D20 TTRPG system, we’ll take on the Sith, recover our memories, and decide the fate of the Old Republic. Along the way we’ll meet amazing companions, do tons of quests, and explore several planets in search of plot-fueling artifacts. In other words: do all the things great cRPGs have been doing for decades, but with lightsabers.

Key features
  • Three military classes and three Jedi classes
  • A fascinating trip to the distant past of the Galaxy Far Away
  • One of the finest RPGs of the era, and it still holds up amazingly well
  • A great sequel with a much darker tone

Warcraft III: Reign of Chaos

Release year:2002-07-03
Genre:Strategy
Developer:Blizzard Entertainment

The first two Warcraft games were great in their own right, but it’s Warcraft III that made the biggest splash. The epic-scale, dramatic plot, the distinctive aesthetic, the multiplayer and moddability which led to the creation of a completely new game genre. There’s a lot going on for WC3 on its own without even talking about World of Warcraft, its never-ending sequel.

Warcraft III: Reign of Chaos

But epic stories and vibrant characters aside, Warcraft III is first and foremost an excellent real-time strategy with distinct factions, satisfying progression, and awesome maps to fight over against foes put before you by the plot or matchmaking. If you want to get the original experience, look for Warcraft 3 Gold, but there’s also a somewhat contentious remake, named Reforged.

Key features
  • One of the finest fantasy RTS games in history
  • Vibrant, evocative aesthetic
  • Epic-scale plot told from the perspective of several distinct factions
  • Amazing multiplayer

Star Wars jedi Knight II: Jedi Outcast

Release year:2003-09-16
Genre:Adventure
Developer:Raven Software

Coming back to the Galaxy Far Away, let’s talk about the time when Raven Software made one of the best FPP/TPP Star Wars games ever. Jedi Knight: Jedi Outcast II is set eight years after the defeat of the Empire, and stars a mercenary with complicated past, Kyle Katarn who discovers remnants of the Empire while investigating a remote outpost. Things quickly start getting complicated.

Star Wars jedi Knight II: Jedi Outcast

It doesn’t take long before the excellent shooter turns into an excellent hack and slash, because Kyle isn’t just a mercenary: he’s also a former Jedi, and the game quickly gives him back the access to Force powers and a lightsaber, and Raven-made gameplay makes the world’s famous flashlight feel incredible and lethal. The sequel, Jedi Academy was great, but Jedi Outcast II is a real gem.

Key features
  • Kyle Katarn is a fantastic protagonist for a post-RotJ Star Wars game
  • Amazing lightsaber implementation
  • Mixed shooter/slasher gameplay
  • Solid sequel: Jedi Academy, starring a new character in the leading role

The Elder Scrolls III: Morrowind

Release year:2002-04-29
Genre:RPG
Developer:Bethesda Game Studios

The Elder Scrolls III Morrowind is one of the most fondly remembered games if its time, and it remains very playable today, especially if you slap some mods onto it. One of the best features of the game is the freedom is gives to the player. You’re not bound to any class, and while you can follow the main quest and seek your destiny, you can absolutely say no to that and brew potions instead.

The Elder Scrolls III: Morrowind

Or you could become a vampire, join a fighters’ guild, and try to invent a spell that makes Cliff Racers avoid you. Once you get used to unconventional dialogue system you’ll also bite deep into the story, which is as weird as The Elder Scrolls get, but also fascinating, complex and featuring multiple endings. There’s also a hefty, wintry expansion Bloodmoon, which allows you to become a werewolf.

Key features
  • Your skills improve as you use them
  • The entire island is your playground
  • Interesting story
  • Rich lore

Theme Hospital

Release year:1997-03-28
Genre:Simulation
Developer:Bullfrog Productions

Theme Hospital was a great idea back in 1997 it remains a great idea now. So much so that it lived to get a spiritual successor, Two Point Hospital. The premise is simple: you’re put in charge of running a hospital fixing people silly problems. And it’s not being derogatory, some of the “illnesses” you deal with in Theme Hospital are being transformed into alien. But it’s still a competent management sim, too!

Theme Hospital

You have full control of the place. Before every mission you can build the place from the ground up, creating rooms from blueprints and assigning personel. There are both general practitioners and specialists, which can perform certain difficult procedures. The game even models the medical equipment wearing out, forcing you to employ maintenance staff, or your patients will start dying.

Key features
  • The spiritual ancestor of Two Point Hospital
  • Competent business sim despite its comedic nature
  • You face competition from AI opponents
  • Split into missions, each coming with its own winning requirements

Pharaoh

Release year:Oct 31, 1999
Genre:City-building
Developer:Impressions Games, BreakAway Games

A successor to the Caesar trilogy, Pharaoh takes your city-building endeavors from ancient Rome to an even more ancient Egypt. While it might now have the graphical pizzaz of modern city-builders, it is a very satisfying, and often rather challenging simulation of running an ancient Egyptian settlement, expanding it from a few rickety huts to a sprawling metropolis with gleaming monuments.

You’ll be in control of pretty much every high-level aspect of the city. You’ll trace streets, lay out foundations for houses, build farms, set trade policies, and have a few soldiers on stand-by to fend off aggressive hippos. The Nile, true to form, tends to flood, creating extra-fertile fields. You’ll also have to deal with fires, diseases, and other factors affecting the happiness of your citizens.

Key features
  • Build a prosperous ancient Egyptian city
  • Lovely 2D graphics
  • There’s always some fire to put out, metaphorical, or otherwise
  • Watching a monument being built is a very satisfying affair

Planescape: Torment

Release year:1999-12-12 / 2017-04-11 (enhanced)
Genre:RPG, Fantasy
Developer:Beamdog

Planescape: Torment is often brought up on lists of the best role-playing games of all time, and it’s not hard to see why. Where Baldur’s Gate balances storytelling with dungeons and combat, P:T goes all in on storytelling, pushing combat almost completely off to the side. You’re playing as a seemingly immortal man who woke up in a mortuary, surrounded by servitor zombies.

Planescape: Torment

What follows is a fascinating journey through a weird universe where belief and conviction have power easily comparable to any spell and blade. There are hundreds of pages of conversations and narrative text. Some of the most poignant moments are presented through text. If you dislike reading a lot, it might not be a game for you, otherwise: get the Enhanced Edition and jump in.

Key features
  • One of the most famous RPGs of all time
  • Your companions are a unique collection of weirdos
  • Fascinating setting
  • The Enhanced Edition makes it easier to launch on modern machines

The Monkey Island series

Release year:1990-10 (first) / 2010-07-10 (last)
Genre:Adventure
Developer:LucasArts

If you aren’t opposed to comedy, cartoonish style, and combining things that probably should be combines, the Monkey Island series can be right up your alley. Created originally between 1990 and 2000 these are the absolute classics of the adventure genre. Not action-adventure. Just adventure. You know, walking around, clicking on things, solving puzzles, and enjoying jokes both clever and silly.

The Monkey Island series

There are four classic entries created by LucasArts, and two of them, The Secret of Monkey Island, and Monkey Island 2 were remade in 2010 to lower the barrier of entry, both visual and technological. That said, the originals still look great, if you can get past low resolution. Either way, if you’d like to immerse yourself in a world of silly pirates where wit is mightier than a sword, check this series out.

Key features
  • True legends of the adventure genre
  • Great sense of humor
  • The first two games received refreshed graphics
  • There’s also a 2009 spin-off by Telltale Games, if you’d prefer something a bit more modern

Arcanum: Of Steamworks and Magick Obscura

Release year:2001-08-22
Genre:RPG
Developer:Troika Games

Although it’s been a bit forgotten in the flurry of Baldur’s Gate’s spiritual successors, Arcanum: Of Steamworks and Magick obscura remains a fascinating, excellent role-playing game which celebrated its 20th birthday in August of 2021. While it can be a bit tricky to make it run on modern systems, if you do you’ll be thrown into a steampunk worlds where magic and technology are in conflict.

Arcanum: Of Steamworks and Magick Obscura

Quite literally, too. If you decide to specialise towards one, the other’s effects will be diminished. If you stay neutral…you’ll miss out on advanced stuff. Of course, the quests allow you to solve them both through combat (turn-based or real-time, your choice), or peacefully, through conversation skills and making clever choices. It’s a really underappreciated, unsung RPG worth giving a shot.

Key features
  • Several playable fantasy species
  • The technology vs magic conflict is well-realised in the mechanics
  • You can switch between real-time and turn-based combat on the fly
  • Handles role-playing elements really well

Grim Fandango

Release year:1998-10-30 / 2015-01-26 (Remastered)
Genre:Adventure
Developer:Double Fine Productions

Grim Fandango, another of LucasArts’ classic adventure games, is a noir story taking place in the Land of the Dead. As a grim reaper travel agent Manny Calavera you’ll uncover a nefarious plot robbing souls of the afterlife they deserve. The game is heavily, and very obviously inspired by the Mexican culture, especially the calaca figurines which serve as the base for the characters’ appearances.

Grim Fandango

It’s not hard to see why Grim Fandango is one of the legends: a game with an interesting premise, an easily identifiable aesthetic, and a stylish, interesting story. As a result, like the Monkey Island, Grim Fandango enjoys a remastered version released in 2015 for several platforms. Old school adventure games don’t get much better than this and if they do, they likely came from LucasArts as well.

Key features
  • Heavily inspired by the Mexican Day of the Dead
  • Looks great
  • Remastered in 2015
  • Great story

Half-Life

Release year:1998-11-19 / 2015-05-05 (Black Mesa remake)
Genre:Action & Shooter
Developer:Michael Pelletier

These days it’s in the shadow of its successor, Half-Life 2, but there’s no denying that Half-Life made an impact on the industry, and while very old-school by shooter standards, it remains a great science-fiction adventure in the shoes of Gordon Freeman, a physicist who happened to witness an alien invasion and had to deal with the aftermath, usually with a gun and a crowbar.

Half-Life

With a great level design and a story more interesting than you’d see in most shooters from 1998, Half-Life is still a worthy pick for any fan of older games. And if you’re somehow determined not to play a 1998 shooter, you still can enjoy the story and the level design: there’s a way out. You could check out Black Mesa, a fan remake which received the blessing of Valve and launched in 2019.

Key features
  • Features the original appearances of Gordon Freeman and G-Man
  • Spawned several excellent projects, including Counter Strike
  • A great fan remake looking much more modern
  • Pretty cool science fiction story

Day of the Tentacle

Release year:1993-06-25 / 2016-03-21 (Remastered)
Genre:Adventure
Developer:Double Fine Productions

Another classic LucasArts adventure game on the list. It turns out they’ve made plenty of classics of the genre. Day of thew Tentacle tells the story of Bernard Bernoulli and friends how are trying to thwart the evil plans of Purple Tentacle, who is exactly what the name suggests. What follows is a time travelling adventure and a lot of silly sense of humor.

Day of the Tentacle

It’s very obviously an old-school point-and-click adventure game with a list of verb commands as well as the inventory you’ll be trying to apply to the environment in various interesting and/or funny ways. Since the game focuses so heavily on time travel, you can also expect some changes to the past affecting the future, which plays into many puzzles. It also got remastered in 2016, by the way.

Key features
  • A sequel to Maniac Mansion
  • Lots of time travel hijinks
  • A very cartoonish art style and silly humor
  • A remaster by Double Fine productions launched in 2016

Grand Theft Auto: Vice City

Release year:2002-10-29
Genre:Adventure
Developer:Rockstar Games

Coming up right after grand Theft Auto 3, Vice City was a trip to the mid-1980s. Taking place in the titular city, heavily inspired by Miami, GTA:VC has disco, rock, colorful shirts, crime families, and tributes to classics like Scarface and Miami Vice. Although after twenty years the luster is a bit faded, the game still oozes personality and the style popularly associate with the period in question.

Grand Theft Auto: Vice City

The story’s protagonist is Tommy Vercetti, an ex-con who screwed up a major deal by little fault of his own and has a debt to work off. The story is engaging, dramatic, and a great excuse to explore the city’s every nook and cranny. Even outside of the story you can spend time on various side activities, which include driving people around in a taxi and delivering pizza for an extra buck.

Key features
  • Several well-known actors in the cast, including Ray Liotta in the leading role
  • A large (for the time) city inspired by Miami of the 1980s
  • Several side jobs to do for fun and profit
  • Cinematic storyline

Giants: Citizen Kabuto

Release year:2000-07-12
Genre:Adventure
Developer:Planet Moon Studios

Giants: Citizen Kabuto was a game with ambitions and a lot of silly humor, which seems to be a running theme in this update. Although it’s a first/third-person shooter for most of its playtime, there’s also a racing minigame, as well a robust and often utilized base-building system. There are also three playable characters with substantially different playstyles. Quite a big variety for a 2000 game.

Giants: Citizen Kabuto

A good chunk of the game you’ll spend playing as Baz, a space soldier who eventually gather a party of his friends, to whom you can give orders. Then you’ll be playing by a witch-princess using a powerful bow, a sword, and an array of devastating spells. Finally, there’s a kaiju-sized beast which can quickly wreck most buildings, eat enemies, and cause earthquakes if it grows big enough.

Key features
  • Three playable characters
  • Interesting third-person base-building
  • Varied gameplay
  • You can freely switch between first- and third-person perspective

Baldur’s Gate II

Release year:2000-10-21 / 2013-11-15 (Enhanced Edition)
Genre:RPG
Developer:Beamdog

The Baldur’s Gate series, particularly BG2: Shadows of Amn is one of the all-time classics, a series which defined the course of video game RPGs for years to come. Both of BioWare Baldur’s Gate games use an isometric camera giving players a good view of detailed, pre-generated maps on which your party of intrepid adventurers move and confront their enemies. And then there’s the story itself!

Baldur’s Gate II

The games tell the story of a character known as Gorion’s Ward, whose unpleasant heritage plays a key role in the story of both BG games. In BGII it also draws the attention of powerful Jon Irenicus, who has his own plans and ambitions. It’s a great D&D adventure full of fantastical creatures, epic battles, and a few appearances from characters from deeper Dungeons & Dragons lore.

Key features
  • Many classes and species to pick for you character, with lots of customisation
  • Sweeping, epic story rooted in the history of D&D’s Forgotten Realms
  • Enhanced Editions from Beamdog ensuring these 90s PC RPGs run well on modern systems
  • One of the most famous RPGs in video gaming history

CHRONO TRIGGER

Release year:2018-02-27
Genre:RPG
Developer:Square, Tose

Chrono Trigger is one of the jRPG classics, with some world-famous talent behind it, such as Akira Toriyama, the creator of Dragon Ball, or Hironobu Sakaguchi, the creator of Final Fantasy. The result is a game which remains playable in the cool future we live in despite being made back in the ancient past of 1995. It has complex mechanics, many endings, and a score co-written by Nobuo Uematsu.

CHRONO TRIGGER

Chrono trigger’s story relies heavily on time travel, which will take you on a journey through different eras of the game’s world, including even the prehistory. All of that is supported by animated cutscenes from Toei animation. And the Steam version even comes with a slew of upgrades to graphics, and even new bits of content, to make the already playable classic even more enticing.

Key features
  • Visuals designed by Dragon Ball’s creator Akira Toriyama
  • Time-hopping story
  • It was developed by the Dream Team
  • Characters can combo their abilities in battle for enhanced effects
  • Classical jrpg game available on steam

Deus Ex

Release year:2000-06-22
Genre:RPG
Developer:Ion Storm

Deus Ex is one of the all-time great games. It’s set in a cyberpunk dystopian world, ruled by corporations and hiding numerous grand conspiracies such as the Majestic 12. You’re playing as J.C. Denton, an operative of an agency called UNATCO, whose nanotechnological augmentations give him abilities beyond those of regular humans. He’s going to need every upgrade he can find to survive.

Deus Ex

Deus Ex left a lof of freedom to the players in the way they can approach any given problem. Stealth was just as valid and going in guns blazing, or using technology to dispose of obstacles. There are skills, unlocked with dynamically assigned experience, and augmentations found in the world, to help with any playstyle. Despite the years gone by, it’s still an immersive and interesting game to try out.

Key features
  • You get to see cyberpunk Hong Kong and Paris.
  • You can play as stealthily or as aggressively as you want to
  • Story full of conspiracies
  • Multiple solutions to any given mission

Diablo 2 & Lord of Destruction (DLC)

Release year:2000-06-29 / 2021-09-23 (Resurrected remake)
Genre:RPG & Hack and slash
Developer:Blizzard

Diablo II, more than the first game in the series, became a codifieir of what a good hack’n’slash should be like. There are five character classes in the base game and two more which arrived with the Lord of Destruction expansion, and each not only plays in a unique manner, but can also be customised within their skillsets thanks to ability trees and bonuses from loot you discover.

Diablo 2 & Lord of Destruction (DLC)

There’s still a lot to enjoy about Diablo II. It has dark, crisp aesthetic, and the locations provide a great backdrop for all the monster-slaying you’re going to be doing. The game is also great in multiplayer, capable of handling up to eight players online of over LAN, which makes for a powerful adventuring party and paves the way for more challenging encounters as the game adjusts.

Key features
  • The hack’n’slash game which defined the genre
  • Diabolically good fun for up to eight players
  • Many ways you can built your character
  • Dark, brutal world

Disciples 2: Gallean's Return

Release year:2006-07-06
Genre:Strategy
Developer:Strategy First

Disciples 2 didn’t reach the fame of Heroes of Might and Magic, but it should have, because it’s a great turn-based strategy game with RPG elements. The campaign, no matter which faction you pick, is a series of scenarios in which you usually need to expand from your single city by claiming resources and capturing castles from opposing factions through turn-based battles.

Disciples 2: Gallean's Return

Each faction is very different, such as the Legions of the Damned and their massive units, or the resilient Mountain Clans and their powerful support spells. Battles are static in style, waged between two teams, each with six slots worth of units (large units take two spots), taking turns to act based on their initiative. There’s also map editor, individual scenarios, and multilayer!

Key features
  • Several factions with very different playstyles and themes
  • A dark fantasy setting with interesting history
  • There are individual and custom scenarios in addition to each faction’s story campaign
  • Great art style

Fallout 2

Release year:1998-12-01
Genre:Adventure
Developer:Black Isle Studios

Fallout 2 is a very successful sequel to Fallout 1, itself a spiritual successor to Wasteland. Fallout 2 expanded on the original in every manner, adding more settlements, more stories, more freedom. Taking place eighty years after FO1 it follows a Chosen One, picked to find the Garden of Eden Creation Kit in order to save their village from drought. But the journey goes to weirder places…

Fallout 2

Once your character leaves their village, technically there is nothing to stop them from going almost anywhere, and do whatever they want, like becoming a boxing star who cheats by using plated gloves. The clock to deliver G.E.C.K. is ticking, however, and if you stall to much, your village WILL die. It’s just one of the arcs you can pursue, however, and doesn’t mean a game over at all.

Key features
  • One of the best role-playing games in history
  • Turn-based tactical battle on a hexagonal grid
  • Low intelligence characters get unique dialogue options
  • Immersive world

Quake III Arena

Release year:1999-12-05
Genre:Fighting
Developer:id Software

Quake III Arena stands in the annals of FPS history alongside games like Tribe and Unreal Tournament as a legendary multiplayer first-person shooter. Q3A multilayer is all shades of PvP playing out in the stone corridors and rooms of a space-age Gothic castles, with a gallery of weird individuals serving as player avatars. The flipside is that there’s no singleplayer story campaign, it’s all multiplayer.

Even if you play by yourself, the only singleplayer content is fighting on MP maps with bots. In either case, you’ll find deadly, often explosive, weapons, power-ups, and various ways to outmanoeuvre your enemies and get a good shot in. The multiplayer can handle up to 16 players in deathmatch, which result in a fantastic chaos of weirdos, bullets and rockets going every which way. It’s glorious.

Key features
  • Memorable, evocative player avatars
  • Quake III Arena’s Deathmatch still is extremely fun
  • Great maps and hundreds of mods
  • Even the singleplayer prepares you for the multiplayer

Starcraft

Release year:1998-03-31 / 2017-08-14 (Remastered)
Genre:RTS
Developer:Blizzard

StarCraft hardly needs introducing. It effectively became a new definition of how a real-time strategy should work when it launched, and it’s overwhelming popularity among Korean gamers is now stuff of legends. There’s no denying that the science fiction counterpart to Warcraft is an important game. And, especially thanks to the 2017 Remastered version, it remains very much playable even today.

Starcraft

The game depicts a conflict between Terrans (humans) with their technological focus, insectoid Zerg working as a hivemind, and psionically gifted Protoss. True to the best RTS ideas, each faction plays differently, and the storyline of their conflict is quite interesting, and later expanded very well in StarCraft 2 and it’s several expansions. The original SC is still a fantastic, crunchy must play RTS.

Key features
  • Cool science fiction-themed counterpart to Warcraft
  • Evocative, very different factions
  • The origin of “Zerg rush”
  • Great sequel

Thief series

Release year:1998-12-01/ 2014-02-27
Genre:Adventure
Developer:Feral Interactive (Mac)

The Thief series, originated by the Looking Glass Studios, are some of the best stealth games in history, set in an interesting, dark steampunk world. You play as Garret, a master thief, who finds himself involved in intrigues which threaten to upend the status quo in The City, the games’ setting. The story is engaging, but it’s the gameplay that made Thief, especially Thief 2, a legendary retro game.

Thief series

The maps are intricate and filled with details and bits and pieces you can steal to fence it after the mission. You get a variety of arrows, which can, for example douse tourches, or spread a moss layer making your step quieter. The more items you fence, the more useful gear you can buy for the next mission. Thief is a great series, and well worth checking out. It’s shares some DNA with Deus Ex.

Key features
  • The games released between 1998 and 2004 are still quite playable
  • Classics of the stealth genre
  • Great setting
  • At a certain point you get a very cool gadget

X-COM: UFO Defense/UFO: Enemy Unknown

Release year:1993-12-31 - 2020-04-20 (Chimera Squad)
Genre:Strategy
Developer:MicroProse Software, Inc

The original X-COM, an ancestor of Firaxis’ 2012 reboot, and the oldest game on the list. X-COM Enemy Unknown puts you in control of a paramilitary organisation devoted to defending Earth from invading aliens. The game, like its spiritual successors operates on two levels: the strategic view of the world, and the tactical, turn-based missions taking place in discrete locations.

X-COM: UFO Defense/UFO: Enemy Unknown

Between mission you will assign research goals, buy and distribute equipment, manage military and civilian staff. You will also have to decide where to send your forces, and where to establish bases. During mission you’ll be managing your soldiers as they go about eliminating the alien threat. It’s quite a complex game, and running a perfect mission is very satisfying.

Key features
  • Permadeath for all soldiers who perished during a mission
  • Complex tactical and strategic gameplay
  • If you want to you can give your soldiers the names of people you know
  • Phoenix Point, launched in 2019, shares X-COM/UFO’s creator and many ideas

Old, but gold

That’s just twenty PC games worth playing, but there are scores of them out there from many genres. Classic first-person shooters that new FPSs want to emulate, even older dungeon crawling RPGs which inspired Legend of Grimrock, and real-time strategies which acted on ideas of Dune II.SOme of them you might be nostalgic for, having played them on your first computer, others might have flown under your radar. Either way, you can make up for the lost time now.