#80 - Kid Chameleon (Sega Genesis)
Platformer in the vein of SMB, but with a ton of unique powerups. The game sports a ton of levels, that depending on how you exit them, will play out in a different order, creating opportunity for a lot of replay value.
#79 - Stronghold (Windows)
Half Castle construction and half traditional RTS in which you must manage a complex castle system including food and weapons production while building huge siege defences. A really charming and memorable game (for me at least).
#78 - Clock Tower (Super Nintendo Entertainment System)
Point and Click horror adventure game were you play the little girl running from a killer in a mansion. Far scarier than it sound. Has a great random event engine, which provides for unexpected scares (the killer's positions change every time you start a new game), and unlike most survival horror games you can't fight back - only run and hide, which adds to the tension even more.
#77 - Super Ghouls 'n' Ghosts (Super Nintendo Entertainment System)
Super Ghouls 'n' Ghosts is one of the most challenging games I've ever completed. With levels that include a sinking ghost ship, a bouncy raft ride over waves, rotating towers, avalanches, and even rooms that turn upside down, Super Ghouls 'n' Ghosts always keeps you busy. The bosses are huge, and some are really tough to beat.
#76 - Sid Meier's Alpha Centauri (Windows)
Made by the same folks who made the Civilization games. Essentially Civilization 2 in space. A single player campaign follows the initial colonization up to different endings depending on what victory you go for. You can play as one of a variety of factions (12 humans and 2 aliens, with 5 humans and the aliens coming in the expansion). Sessions can be played for quite some time depending on map size since it has a very expansive tech tree. The quotes that you see after unlocking something on the tech tree are amazing.
#75 - Mega Turrican (Sega Genesis)
Take Contra's style of weapons, add Metroid's atmosphere, give the player an aimable Bionic Commando wire, now top it all off with great gameplay from Factor 5 and an incredible soundtrack from the legendary Chris Hulsbeck, and you have Mega Turrican.
#74 - Klonoa: Door to Phantomile (PlayStation 1)
Bright and colorful Japanese platformer in 2.5D where the main mechanic consists of using enemies as inflatable stepping stones to surpass obstacles. Fair length and difficulty, with a couple post-game extras.
#73 - Game & Watch Gallery 4 (Game Boy Advance)
A collection of old Game and Watch games with upgraded colour graphics and sound. Even has some games from previous G&W Gallery games.
#72 - LSD: Dream Emulator (PlayStation 1)
First-person game based on the designer's dreams where you explore a surreal world. Sessions last for up to ten minutes and touching anything in the gameworld warps you to a different location. The number of days you play are recorded and the world's textures change with time while the acid techno soundtrack adapts to changes in your "dream."
#71 - Sonic Generations (Windows)
This game mixes the speedy modern gameplay from Sonic Unleashed and Sonic Colors up with the classic platforming of the Genesis era. Sonic goes back in time to meet his younger and chubbier self and runs through nine zones from the entire series history, split up into a classic and a modern version each. Sonic Generations would have made it higher on the list, only if it wasn't so short.
Platformer in the vein of SMB, but with a ton of unique powerups. The game sports a ton of levels, that depending on how you exit them, will play out in a different order, creating opportunity for a lot of replay value.
#79 - Stronghold (Windows)
Half Castle construction and half traditional RTS in which you must manage a complex castle system including food and weapons production while building huge siege defences. A really charming and memorable game (for me at least).
#78 - Clock Tower (Super Nintendo Entertainment System)
Point and Click horror adventure game were you play the little girl running from a killer in a mansion. Far scarier than it sound. Has a great random event engine, which provides for unexpected scares (the killer's positions change every time you start a new game), and unlike most survival horror games you can't fight back - only run and hide, which adds to the tension even more.
#77 - Super Ghouls 'n' Ghosts (Super Nintendo Entertainment System)
Super Ghouls 'n' Ghosts is one of the most challenging games I've ever completed. With levels that include a sinking ghost ship, a bouncy raft ride over waves, rotating towers, avalanches, and even rooms that turn upside down, Super Ghouls 'n' Ghosts always keeps you busy. The bosses are huge, and some are really tough to beat.
#76 - Sid Meier's Alpha Centauri (Windows)
Made by the same folks who made the Civilization games. Essentially Civilization 2 in space. A single player campaign follows the initial colonization up to different endings depending on what victory you go for. You can play as one of a variety of factions (12 humans and 2 aliens, with 5 humans and the aliens coming in the expansion). Sessions can be played for quite some time depending on map size since it has a very expansive tech tree. The quotes that you see after unlocking something on the tech tree are amazing.
#75 - Mega Turrican (Sega Genesis)
Take Contra's style of weapons, add Metroid's atmosphere, give the player an aimable Bionic Commando wire, now top it all off with great gameplay from Factor 5 and an incredible soundtrack from the legendary Chris Hulsbeck, and you have Mega Turrican.
#74 - Klonoa: Door to Phantomile (PlayStation 1)
Bright and colorful Japanese platformer in 2.5D where the main mechanic consists of using enemies as inflatable stepping stones to surpass obstacles. Fair length and difficulty, with a couple post-game extras.
#73 - Game & Watch Gallery 4 (Game Boy Advance)
A collection of old Game and Watch games with upgraded colour graphics and sound. Even has some games from previous G&W Gallery games.
#72 - LSD: Dream Emulator (PlayStation 1)
First-person game based on the designer's dreams where you explore a surreal world. Sessions last for up to ten minutes and touching anything in the gameworld warps you to a different location. The number of days you play are recorded and the world's textures change with time while the acid techno soundtrack adapts to changes in your "dream."
#71 - Sonic Generations (Windows)
This game mixes the speedy modern gameplay from Sonic Unleashed and Sonic Colors up with the classic platforming of the Genesis era. Sonic goes back in time to meet his younger and chubbier self and runs through nine zones from the entire series history, split up into a classic and a modern version each. Sonic Generations would have made it higher on the list, only if it wasn't so short.




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