| Cover Cover artwork by Thor Thorvaldson To Purchase: Paperbacks US Amazon: Color - $34.99 US Amazon: B&W - $12.99 UK Amazon: Color - £23.00 US Amazon: B&W - $12.99 Also available on all other Amazon Europe sites for retail price of 31 euros. Digital US Amazon: Kindle - $9.99 UK Amazon: Kindle - £7.00 PDF - $7.99 Everyone who contributes $5 or more to the site's Patreon will receive free PDF and Kindle MOBI files of the 200 Best Games book, as well as digital copies of all other HG101 books. Make sure to check out this post for the download links. Every website or magazine has their own "Best Video Games of All Times" list - here is ours! From early arcade classics to 3D action games, from text adventures to interactive cinema, this book includes 200 of the best video games ever released, covering over three decades of gaming history, created by developers all over the world. Each entry highlights why our picks are the best examples of their genre, and includes additional recommendations for similar games. Both rookie and veteran gamers will definitely discover some new and interesting games to check out after finishing this book. Nowadays "top X" articles on the internet tend to be seen as clickbait, hastily assembled list determined by some quick democratic polling of staff. Plus, the lists tend to be rather insular, usually based on whatever publication or forum assembled them. Rock Paper Shotgun, for example, has top 25/50 lists for many genres, but focuses only on games released on the PC. So reading about "best horror" games seems really strange when you're omitting huge swathes of them, especially Japanese developed games. Similarly, computer RPGs and Japanese RPGs have such different fanbases that they're almost entirely different genres, so there's rarely any crossover on "best RPG" lists. IGN and other mainstream sites tend to focus on newer releases at the expense of gaming's history. The goal with our book is to give a broad overview of many different types of games across the medium's history. So even if you may not specifically be into, for example, 4X strategy games, you might be interested in reading about a few of them, and maybe giving them a shot. From a writing standpoint, we wanted to features pieces that would be longer than a hastily written blurb like many other lists. So, each piece for each game is about 450 words. (It also helped enforce the quality of our choices - if we couldn't devote 450 words of praise to it, then it probably wasn't worth including.) These are not comprehensive reviews, so they're written differently than the style you'd normally see on HG101, focusing primarily on what it does and why it excels. There are 216 pages altogether. Additionally, since we wanted to include a broad selection of titles, we didn't want to list too many similar games. So, to accompany each selection, there's a "see also" sidebar of another game that's related in some way - either being part of the same series, from the same developer, or sharing some thematic link - that's also worth checking out. However, sometimes we still feature multiple games in the same series in the Top 200 list if there's enough different to talk about them. For example, it seemed redundant to feature both Super Mario Bros. 3 and Super Mario World, since they're both fairly similar, but we gave a separate spot to Yoshi's Island, since there's enough that stands out to make it worth that distinction. But this "see also" spot is also used to highlight why we picked one entry over another, while still relating that both are excellent. Building the list was not particularly democratic. Basically, a bunch of us staff members started by listing our own personal favorite games and used that as a starting point. Then, we mapped out which genres we wanted to cover and how many entries to allocate to each. Additionally, each entry was chosen specifically to represent something. For late 90s/early 00s first person shooters, we chose Jedi Knight and No One Lives Forever, since those were the best representative of that era. Other lists select games based on historical importance, or its quality at the time of release, but we wanted this to be a list of games that were still worth playing today. The list we initially assembled had some gaps - for example, none of us had selected any real time strategy games - so we reached out to many of our other contributors to round out the list, as well. Obviously there's some level of bias when it came to determining how many slots we gave to each genre - we definitely prefer 2D fighters/platformers over 3D fighters/platformers, for example - but there's still a wide variety of topics featured. The only type of game that's not represented at all are multiplayer-only games, like first person shooters, MMORPGs or MOBAs. The main reason is that I personally don't play any of these games and can't write about them with any authority, nor do I know enough about them to make educated selections. Plus, it's hard to write about the multiplayer aspects of older games, especially if they no longer have an active online community. The list has an emphasis on cult classic versus mainstream hits, and a slight focus more on retro games than modern ones, though it's not like we intentionally ignored big names, as there are still many picks that show up on many other similar lists. In some ways it does feel like a small waste of space to highlight Super Mario Bros. 3 when everyone on the planet \is in agreement in how excellent it is, but at the same time we hope the written piece is interesting enough that makes reading it worthwhile. In addition to the main Top 200 list and each "see also" entry, we also added 50 runners-up, each with brief blurbs. These were entries that were originally part of the Top 200 but got knocked off for whatever reason, or titles that the staff enjoyed on a personal level but were difficult to broadly recommend.Altogether that makes over 450 games covered within this book. Additionally, unlike other lists, the titles in this book are not ranked, outside of the "see also" and "runner up" entries. It just doesn't make any sense - is Final Fantasy VI better than Half-Life 2? It's totally arbitrary, and is like comparing apples to baseballs. Featuring: Joust Mappy Bubble Bobble Geometry Wars 3 Pac Man Champion Edition DX TxK Super Mario Bros. 3 Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island Donkey Kong Country Returns Tropical Freeze Sonic CD Klonoa: Door to Phantomile Super Meat Boy Shinobi (ARC) Strider (ARC) Ninja Gaiden (NES) Bionic Commando Rearmed Gimmick! Castlevania Dracula X (PCE) Demon's Crest Mega Man X Volgarr the Viking Shovel Knight Prince of Persia Another World Wonder Boy III: The Dragon's Trap Super Metroid Castlevania: Symphony of the Night Cave Story Rogue Legacy Dust: An Elysian Tail Legacy of the Wizard The Guardian Legend Zelda II: The Adventure of Link The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening Terranigma Seiken Densetsu 3 The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask Ys: The Oath in Felghana Mega Man Legends Legacy of Kain: Soul Reaver Okami Shadow of the Collosus Nier Bloodborne Shenmue II Yakuza 4 Red Dead Redemption Contra: Shattered Soldier Turrican II Gunstar Heroes Shock Troopers Metal Slug 3 Hotline Miami Fantasy Zone IIDX Gradius Gaiden Sexy Parodius MUSHA R-Type Delta Batsugun Battle Garegga Ikaruga Mushihime-sama Futari Space Harrier Sin & Punishment: Star Successor Vampire Savior Street Fighter Alpha 3 Street Fighter III: Third Strike The Last Blade II Garou: Mark of the Wolves The King of Fighters 2002 Ultimate Match Guilty Gear XX Accent Core Plus R Super Smash Bros. Melee SoulCalibur II Virtua Fighter 5 Streets of Rage 2 Violent Storm Alien vs. Predator (ARC) Double Dragon Advance Guardian Heroes Nights...into Dreams Crash Bandicoot 3 Psychonauts Super Mario Galaxy 2 Ninja Gaiden Black Otogi 2: Immortal Warriors God Hand Metal Gear Rising: Revengeance Bayonetta 2 A Mind Forever Voyaging Monkey Island II: LeChuck's Revenge Maniac Mansion: Day of the Tentacle Grim Fandango Space Quest IV: Roger Wilco and the Time Rippers Quest for Glory IV Gabriel Knight: Sins of the Fathers Broken Sword: The Shadow of the Templars The Last Express Dreamfall: The Longest Journey Cosmology of Kyoto Snatcher Ghost Trick Steins;Gate Nine Persons Nine Hours Nine Doors Danganronpa 2 Silent Hill Amnesia: The Dark Descent Ultima VII: The Black Gate Wizardry VII: Crusaders of the Dark Savant Realms of Arkania 2: Star Trail Diablo II Fallout 2 Planescape Torment Arcanum Baldur's Gate II Star Wars: Knight of the Old Republic 2 The Witcher III: Wild Hunt Legend of Grimrock II Star Control 2 X-COM: UFO Defense Jagged Alliance 2 Final Fantasy V Final Fantasy VI Dragon Quest V: Hand of the Heavenly Bride Chrono Trigger Earthbound Suikoden II Phantasy Star IV: End of the Millenium Panzer Dragoon Saga Shin Megami Tensei Nocturne Persona 4 Golden Breath of Fire Dragon Quarter The World Ends With You Xenoblade Chronicles Etrian Odyssey III Barkley Shut Up and Jam Gaiden Final Fantasy Tactics Fire Emblem: Path of Radiance Advance Wars: Days of Ruin Front Mission 5 Valkyria Chronicles Dragon Force Command and Conquer: Red Alert 2 Starcraft Total Annihilation Homeworld Company of Heroes Age of Empires II Total War: Rome Heroes of Might & Magic III Crusader Kings 2 Civilization IV Alpha Centauri Pirates! SimCity 4 Doom Blood Star Wars Dark Forces II: Jedi Knight No One Lives Forever Perfect Dark Half-Life 2 FEAR SWAT 4 Crysis Bulletstorm System Shock 2 Deus Ex Thief 2 Metroid Prime The Elder Scrolls: Morrowind Vampire: The Masquerade: Bloodlines STALKER: Shadow of Chernobyl Max Payne 2 Resident Evil 4 Killer7 Freedom Fighters The Last of Us Mirror's Edge Portal 2 TIE Fighter Descent: Freespace 2 Metal Gear Solid 3 Splinter Cell: Chaos Theory Hitman: Blood Money Burnout 3: Takedown OutRun 2006 Sonic & All Stars Racing Transformed F-Zero X Punch-Out!! SSX3 Jet Set Radio Saturn Bomberman Worms Armageddon Puyo Puyo 2 Twinkle Star Sprites Windjammers Lemmings Elite Beat Agents Space Channel 5 Part 2 Devil's Crush Typing of the Dead
Interior Preview 




To Purchase: Paperbacks US Amazon: Color - $34.99 US Amazon: B&W - $12.99 UK Amazon: Color - £17.00 Also available on all other Amazon Europe sites for retail price of 31 euros. Digital US Amazon Kindle - $9.99 UK Amazon: Kindle - £7.00 PDF - $7.99 |