Some people might disagree with me, but Celeste.
Games
Welcome to the largest gaming community on Lemmy! Discussion for all kinds of games. Video games, tabletop games, card games etc.
Weekly Threads:
Rules:
-
Submissions have to be related to games
-
No bigotry or harassment, be civil
-
No excessive self-promotion
-
Stay on-topic; no memes, funny videos, giveaways, reposts, or low-effort posts
-
Mark Spoilers and NSFW
-
No linking to piracy
More information about the community rules can be found here.
Deathloop's story basically means that you're replaying the game because you failed your previous attempt at escaping. You can play it more than once, the game encourages you to, and I kinda want to, but I never did because I already won. In a lot of games replays are basically just "fresh starts" and here, they are part of the story, and ironically, that's what's stopping me.
OneShot is very much based on its story and immersion. Contrary to the title’s implication, there’s not so much potential for risk during play, even if it’s themed that way, but it does feel like any efforts to repeat the game would ruin some of the immersive thoughts present.
Penumbra Overture, never finished it but was fun exploring and figuring out stuff.
13 sentinels: aegis rim
Scanner Sombre
Interesting main mechanic, good storytelling, but once you finish it, that's pretty much it.
Maaaaaaybe replaying the first room you start in with all the upgrades, since you can see more clearly, but that's it.
Escape Simulator definitely fits the bill.
It's great, but all about the discovery.
Midnight Suns was like that for me. The tactical combat was interesting and could have had replay value, but all the chores and conversations you have to do to progress the story made this a "no way" for a second playthrough. Absolutely worth it to go through once though, if you are into turn based combat games and marvel characters.
The vanishing of Ethan carter
I'm surprised no one has said Outer Wilds. Amazing story about space exploration.
the desolate hope. its a very unique robot themed game, but you only really need to play it once.
I absolutely loved Recursive Ruin and I'm still waiting to forget the solutions.
Danganronpa, honestly any of them. Once you know the story, who the killers are, and the twists, it quickly loses it's charm. The only way afterwards is to watch other people play it for the first time.
I would say Stillness of the Wind definitely falls into this category. A beautiful game about life and loss.
Breathedge - SciFi game where you are stranded in a small shuttle after your main ship exploded, you'll need to fly around in a space suit with limited air supply, gather stuff, examine objects to identify possible devices you can cobble together from random space trash, and eventually build and upgrade your equipment to the point that you can progress to another area, and so on.
Once you know how specific items are built, the solution is near identical, just some components might be drifting in another part of the screen.