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Cary's Top PlayStation Games!


On 02/26/2015 at 05:44 AM by Cary Woodham

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Sorry I didn’t participate in BaD this year.  With game reviews to write over at GamerDad.com, plus my regular job, one extra blog here a week is all I have time for.  But as we wrap up the BaD month, I wanted to go out with a bang with this blog.  So I hope you read and enjoy it!  It’s the 20th Anniversary of the original PlayStation!  Well, technically 2014 was, since it was released in Japan in 1994.  BUT, I’m counting the US release, which was 20 year ago.  So in honor of that, here is a list of my favorite original PlayStation games!  Keep in mind that list this isn’t in any particular order, though.  All right, let’s begin!

Well, before we begin, a little bit of background info.  While the PlayStation had many milestones, which you can read about elsewhere on the Internet, it was a milestone console for me personally as well.  It was the first non-Nintendo console I owned in ten years.  My first gaming consoles were an Apple][+ PC and an Atari 5200.  But after I got the NES, I was a Nintendo only console household up until the N64.  The N64 was great, but it had a serious lack of games at first.  I was reviewing games for The Dallas Morning News at the time, and wanted to review as many games as I could (because I was actually getting paid for it back then).  And the N64 just wasn’t cutting it.  The year that Diddy Kong Racing was Nintendo’s ‘big’ holiday release (don’t get me wrong, it was a great game), that was the same year I got a PSX.  That was a couple of years after the console’s release, though.  When the PSX first came out, I was still happy playing games like Chrono Trigger and Yoshi’s Island on my SNES.  When I bought a PSX, I was in college and really couldn’t afford it, but it was one of the best gaming purchases I ever made.  After I bought one, I was reviewing games left and right for that thing. 

Even though the PlayStation isn’t my favorite game console (that would be the SNES), I would say it’s probably in my top five.  While the PS2 was more refined and had more polished games and could play DVDs, there was just something charming about the original PlayStation’s simplicity.  That’s why it was more memorable to me for some reason.  Also, at this time it seemed that with the new CD-ROM medium, the possibilities were endless and game developers had a whole world to explore waiting for them.  That was the same kind of attitude I had in college (which quickly crashed and burned once I got out in the real world).  But since I got my PSX in college, it was a good pairing.  And finally, back then it seemed like game developers were making games on that console with their heart, not their wallets.  You can tell that in many of the games on my list.  Remember that as you read onward. 

Namco Museum vol. 1 to 5

The five Namco Museums on the PSX are probably my favorite games on that console, as well as one of my top five favorite game series of all time.  Namco Museum vol. 2 was the first game I got for my PlayStation, and I was excited to be able to play Super Pac-Man again.  The opening cutscene just blew me away back then.  Plus, you all know I like classic Namco arcade games anyway.  But what was cool about this game was that you could walk through a virtual 3-D museum, with facts on each game and a special themed room where you played the arcade cabinet.  This was back when the Internet wasn’t so big and you couldn’t get all sorts of info on old arcade games.  And ‘multimedia’ was still a buzz word.  But what was really cool about this was that when I was little, I imagined a theme park where you could play arcade games in themed rooms.  Like a Pac-Man room.  And the Namco Museums were almost exactly what I imagined, so that was really cool.  Of course my park had rides, too, like a Centipede roller coaster.  But because of all those things, that’s why I really like the Namco Museums on PSX.  Arcade collections started getting lots of games during the PS2 era, but I still played a lot in college on the PlayStation.  Aside from the Namco Museums, my brothers and I enjoyed playing the Konami Arcade Classics and Bubble Bobble collections mostly.  But on the Namco Museums, Jeff loved Ordyne.  He would ask to play it and call it “The Flying Game.”  Anyway, I could write whole blogs about the PSX Namco Museums, which I have, but I’ll stop right now.

Ridge Racer Type 4

Ridge Racer is kind of synonymous with the PlayStation for many reasons, but the arcade game was a launch title for the system.  I didn’t get into it then, but my dad sure loved playing it in the arcade.  Back then, Namco’s slogan was “Powered by Namco” but they should’ve called it “PlayStation Powered by Namco” because they helped carry the system and many of the best games on it were from Namco.  Anyway, when Ridge Racer Type 4 came out, I didn’t get it right away because I was still a poor college student.  But I wish I would’ve gotten it so I could’ve gotten the JogCon controller that went with it.  I did find Type 4 really cheap later on after college at a flea market, still new, so that’s when I got into Ridge Racer games.  Type 4 had a good amount of tracks, tons of cars to unlock, and excellent graphics at the time.  I also thought the Ridge Racer race queen Reiko Nagase was cool for some reason, even though she didn’t do anything in the game.  Many people on the Internet say she was modeled after a guy, but that doesn’t surprise me because many animated characters are designed by whoever made them, and even will look in the mirror to base facial expressions off of them.  If anything, I feel sorry for the guy she was designed after because he must’ve been a really feminine looking guy!  Anyway, Ridge Racer Type 4 was really fun and it’s what got me into the series from them on.

Pac-Man World

Pac-Man World isn’t really that great of a platformer, but I have special memories associated with it anyway.  It was the first game I got to follow from start to finish in development as a game reviewer for the newspaper, and I got to know several of the members of the team who made it.  I enjoyed seeing them and their progress every year at E3, and they were really nice, too.  In fact, when Pac-Man World 2 came out, that was about the time that I was let go from the newspaper, and I emailed them and told them not to send me a review copy after all since I wouldn’t be able to review it.  Well they sent me a copy of the game anyway and they all signed the box!  I thought that was really cool, and I’ll never forget that.

Point Blank 1-3

I loved played Point Blank in the arcade.  It was a silly light gun arcade shooting gallery.  I had all three home versions on the PSX and even got two GunCon controllers so I could play it with my brothers.  I’m surprised Namco never made a Point Blank game on the Wii.  Seems like the perfect system for it.  They did release a weird DS Point Blank game where you used the touch screen to shoot, though.

Mr. Driller

I first played Mr. Driller in an arcade and loved it, and sat there for two straight hours playing it the first time I saw it.  It was a simple 2-D action puzzler that could’ve come out ten years before, but Namco had the balls to release it when they did.  When I got the home version, I discovered it had awesome music, too, and the game’s composer, Go Shiina, became my favorite video game music composer after that.  I wish we could’ve gotten Mr. Driller Drill Land in the US when it came out on the GameCube in Japan.

Klonoa: Door to Phantomile

Klonoa is an amazing 2-D platformer.  It impacted me so much I still use the name Klonoa for console nicknames when going online (like on the 360 and Wii U).  Klonoa had memorable characters, settings and music.  The play control was tight and the simple gameplay mechanics were used in so many creative ways.  And for such a cutesy game, it had a surprisingly sad ending.  The original game is hard to find now, but luckily you can play it on PSN (as well as the Namco Museums), and there was a pretty slick Wii remake a few years ago.

Final Fantasy 9

Back when I was in high school and college, I was a huge Square fanboy.  But you really can’t blame me, as that was when they were doing classics on the SNES like FF4, FF6, Secret of Mana, and Chrono Trigger.  All on Nintendo systems.  So it was kind of a shock when they jumped ship and started making games for the PlayStation.  That’s one of the reasons why I got a PSX.  I had just finished enjoyed Final Fantasy 6, which ended up being one of my top five favorite games of all time, so I HAD to play FF7.  Unfortunately, while I did appreciate Square trying to be different with FF7, ultimately after beating it, I decided I didn’t like it very much, and I never even bothered with FF8.  Some of Square’s other 32-bit offerings, like the depressing Xenogears, was the cause for me starting to get out of RPGs at this time (college and life commitments helped, too, so it’s not all their fault).  But then a glimmer of hope came with Final Fantasy 9.  FF9 paid homage to classic FF games on the NES and SNES, and it’s really what FF7 and 8 should’ve been.  It’s almost as if Square was saying, “Hey FF fans, thanks for sticking with us. We’ll be taking the FF franchise to bold and new directions in the future, so here’s one last game for you old school fans who fear change.  Go nuts.”  I wish Square still made games like that.  Sure you might get a FF Dimensions on iPad or Bravely Default on 3DS, but it’s not the same.

Brave Fencer Musashi

Another reason why I kind of got out of Square games in the 32-bit era was because they were all becoming all dark and angsty and depressing (and long and meandering).  But just when I was about to lose all hope, they released Brave Fencer Musashi.  It was an action adventure game like Zelda, but very silly and light hearted.  Later on, they made another action game on the PSX I liked called Threads of Fate, but it wasn’t as good as Brave Fencer Musashi.  They made a sequel on the PS2 called Samurai Legend Musashi, but it wasn’t very good at all. 

Chocobo Racing

The N64 did have better kart racers than the PSX, that’s for sure.  It took a few years before Sony would be able to compete with the likes of Mario Kart 64 and Diddy Kong Racing.  But once they finally released Crash Team Racing, Sony had a good kart racer to compete with Nintendo.  But for me, I really liked Chocobo Racing better.  It probably mostly has to do with the fact that I like Final Fantasy better than Crash Bandicoot.  A lot of reviewers bashed Chocobo Racing, but I didn’t think it was THAT bad.  It had some awesome FF themed race tracks and music, and lots of secrets.  You could even customize your own kart specs and unlock super-secret racers like the guy from 3-D WorldRunner!  I even liked the ending song.  It kind of symbolizes how I kind of got out of the Square loop and said ‘goodbye’ as a fan.  Go to YouTube and search for “Diamonds in my Heart” if you’d like to hear it.

Mega Man 8

Aside from Namco and Square, Capcom had a lot of games on the PlayStation I really enjoyed.  Around the time of Mega Man’s 10th Anniversary, they made a bunch of Mega Man games that year, and most were really good.  Sure, Mega Man 8 has bad voice acting (which I think makes it more memorable) and there was that ‘jump, jump, slide, slide’ thing, but otherwise I really liked Mega Man 8 and I thought it was a very polished game.  I loved the cartoony graphics and while I liked the idea of future Mega Man games being 8-bit looking, I wish they would’ve made more modern cartoony Mega Man games as well.

Mega Man X4

I never was a big fan of the more ‘serious’ X series, but I will say that the first Mega Man X is exactly what the series needed at the time.  Most of the sequels were more of the same (aren’t they all), but Mega Man X4 felt significantly improved for some reason.  Plus you got to play as Zero.  X5 was at least playable, and was really the end of the series, but Capcom got too greedy and X6 was one of the worst Mega Man games ever made.  It went downhill from there, unfortunately.

Mega Man Legends 1 and 2

Remember when I said at the beginning of my blog that game makers back in this time were making games more with their heart instead of their wallets?  This is the perfect example of what I’m talking about.  The characters in these games were so likable and charming that Capcom still uses them in titles like Marvel vs. Capcom 3 and Dead Rising.  I will say these games haven’t aged well.  I think if they would’ve waited until the PS2, the games would’ve benefitted from better controls with dual joysticks, and cel shaded graphics (they seemed to want to make the game look like a cartoon anyway).  I’m REALLY sad that Capcom cancelled Mega Man Legends 3 on the 3DS.  They just aren’t the same company anymore.

The Misadventures of Tron Bonne

Yup, the bad guys in the Mega Man Legends games were so popular, they got their own game!  I love, love, love this game, and it won my Game of the Year when it came out.  It even beat better games like Banjo-Tooie and Majora’s Mask (yes I am insane).  This was a unique mix of action, puzzles, RPG, and simulation.  I’m also really proud that I have this game still, because it’s REALLY rare!  Forget Mega Man Legends 3, I want Capcom to make a sequel to this!

Super Puzzle Fighter 2 Turbo

When I saw this game really cheap, I snatched it up right away.  It’s one of my top favorite puzzle games alongside plain ol’ Tetris and Puzzle Bubble/Bust-A-Move.  Back in the day, I got REALLY good at it, too.  I bet I could’ve beaten all of you at it.  Luckily you can still download this game on many different consoles.  But I won’t challenge you anymore, I haven’t played it in a while and I’m probably out of practice!

Tail Concerto

Atlus used to make games I like, but not anymore.  This was published by Atlus and I loved it.  It’s kind of a cross between Mega Man Legends and Ape Escape.  You’re a police dog named Waffle and ride around in a mech and must catch little naughty kittens around town.  The game has a charming Miyazaki-like storyline with lots of animated cutscenes and voices.  The interesting thing is that more than ten years later, this game finally got a sequel on the DS called Solatorobo.  It was still fun, but not as charming as Tail Concerto.  This is another rare game I’m proud of.

Tomba 1 and 2

These were 2-D platformers that played like Monster World or Metroid games.  You played as a pink-haired cave boy and defeated evil pigs.  The first game used sprites with 3-D backgrounds, but the sequel was all 3-D but was still on a 2-D plane.  Both of these games are pretty rare now, but you can download and play them on PSN.  Just stay away from Tomba 2 on PSN, as it’s the Japanese version.  Goals were pretty unclear to begin with in English!  I still really liked these games, though.

Ape Escape

One thing that N64 had over the PSX was 3-D platformers.  The N64 had stuff like Mario 64, Banjo-Kazooie and its sequel, DK 64, and much more.  Sony’s platformers were not so good most of the time.  I never liked Crash Bandicoot, and the less said about Captain Blasto the better (although he was voiced by Phil Hartman, R.I.P.).  Even Sony’s better platformers, like Spyro and Medievil, were not as good as the ones on N64.  But late in the life of the PlayStation, when they released the Dual Shock controller, they also came out with Ape Escape.  You used gadgets controlled by the dual analog stick to catch monkeys.  The game was very cute and colorful and loads of fun.  They continued making sequels on the PS2 and I enjoyed those as well.  I wish Sony would still make Ape Escape games.  I might have a PS4 by now if they did.  Anyway, Ape Escape was really neat and they made sneaking up on monkeys really fun, and normally I don’t like stealth in games.

G-Darius

And finally, Darius is one of my favorite shooter series.  You shoot robot fish, yup.  The neat thing about this game is that you can capture enemies and they’ll be on your side.  You can use their weapons, make them be a shield, or even power up your super laser with them.  There was another shooter called Einhander from Square that was pretty good, too.  But I liked G-Darius a little more.

Conclusions

And that’s all for now!  In the comments section, let me know what you think of my picks, and tell me your favorite PlayStation games.  Later!  --Cary


 

Comments

jgusw

02/26/2015 at 10:20 AM

One day I'll get to Final Fantasy 9.  Many folks say it's a good game.  

Matt Snee Staff Writer

02/26/2015 at 07:13 PM

it's one of my favorite games of all time.  Top 3 at least.  

Cary Woodham

02/26/2015 at 07:23 PM

Even better than FF6?

Matt Snee Staff Writer

02/26/2015 at 08:55 PM

I like 6 but 9 is definitely my favorite FF game.  

Cary Woodham

02/27/2015 at 05:49 AM

Which is interesting since FF9 is an FF game about other FF games. :)

Cary Woodham

02/26/2015 at 07:23 PM

You should.  It's the last great FF game, in my opinion.

Super Step Contributing Writer

02/26/2015 at 11:07 AM

I've always heard Ape Escape was fun. And yeah, Mega Man is basically the same game with a few improvements every time. That whole "release the same game every year and slap a number on it" thing started a long time before people are willing to admit, though I do always enjoy Mega Man games and some of their minor changes can really improve the game. But people can say that about Madden etc. too. Who am I to judge?

Cary Woodham

02/26/2015 at 07:24 PM

Nothing wrong with games being the same as long as they are still fun.

avidacridjam

02/26/2015 at 01:29 PM

I should probably get those Namco collections from PSN someday. They're not that expensive. 

Cary Woodham

02/26/2015 at 07:24 PM

No they're pretty cheap.  They may not have as many games per disc, but I still really like them.

SanAndreas

02/28/2015 at 06:07 PM

You can buy all 5 volumes off of the PlayStation Store for PS3 now. I believe Namco even offers them bundled. Before that, 1 and 3 were cheap, 2 a little more pricey, while 4 and 5 were actually pretty expensive. 1 and 3 had all of Namco's biggest arcade games, while 2 had Namco's underappreciated if flawed third entry in the Galaxian/Galaga series, Gaplus. And Mappy.  4 and 5 were obscure as hell. I also wondered why I never saw Junior Pac-Man or Baby Pac-Man on these collections until I found out that those games were unauthorized games made by Bally/Midway back when they were Namco's US licensee. Given that Namco tends to treat Ms. Pac-Man (also originally an unauthorized product) like a profitable red-headed stepchild, not surprising that they disowned Junior completely.

Cary Woodham

02/28/2015 at 08:51 PM

Yeah Namco likes to push Ms. Pac-Man under the rug.  But they can't completely get rid of her because she makes money for them.  I hate it that Namco shuns the other 'unauthorized' games because did they do that when those games were in arcades making money for them?  Nope.

NintendoFanJon

02/26/2015 at 03:59 PM

Some great games there. Klonoa, FF9, Mega Man Legends....Now I want go plug my PS1 back in and play them!

Cary Woodham

02/26/2015 at 07:25 PM

I wish I could freeze time and play all those games again, too.

Matt Snee Staff Writer

02/26/2015 at 07:13 PM

Brave Fencer Musashi!  If only they would release that on PSN.  Grrr.  

Cary Woodham

02/26/2015 at 07:25 PM

That would be awesome.  It was such a great game.  Only problem was the character graphics looked like crap.

Aboboisdaman

02/27/2015 at 12:02 AM

I played that Brave Fencer game on PS2 for maybe 5 minutes before throwing it in the trash lol. It was horrible. Absolutely horrible. There's only a few on your list I'm familar with. Parasite Eve is probably my favorite PS1 game.

Cary Woodham

02/27/2015 at 05:50 AM

The PS2 sequel, Samurai Legend Musashi, is definitely not as good as the first one.

Parasite Eve had an interesting concept, but it was too gross for me.  One weird thing is that at the time, I had a kinda-sorta girlfriend who looked just like the main character in that game.

C.S.3590SquadLeader

02/27/2015 at 11:36 AM

Didn't play many PlayStation games, but my favorite was Rival Schools. My brothers and I spent hours with it, switching controllers whenever one of us lost a match.

Cary Woodham

02/27/2015 at 06:45 PM

My friends who were into fighting games back then were always talking about Rival Schools.  For some reaosn, I always associate that series with the Dreamcast.  Was it on that console, too?

C.S.3590SquadLeader

02/28/2015 at 12:50 PM

The original wasn't but the sequel, Project Justice, was. Only played the Arcace version of that one, I think.

Cary Woodham

02/28/2015 at 08:52 PM

Yeah like I said, my friends used to talk about that game all the time.  I don't remember much about it now.  Go ahead and pick out a favorite character for me!

KnightDriver

02/28/2015 at 03:51 AM

So many games I still need to get to on PS1. All of the ones you mentioned for one. 

The first favorite PS1 game that comes to mind is Hogs of War. It was a very late release. It was basically like a 3D Worms game with pigs in a WWI setting with comedian Rik Mayall voicework. Single or multiplayer, it was a lot of fun.

Cary Woodham

02/28/2015 at 06:58 AM

I never did get into the Worms games.  Which is odd since many of the old ones resemble Lemmings, and I loved those.

KnightDriver

03/02/2015 at 02:18 AM

Neither have I, and I've tried them all. Hogs of War though, does things in a way I like especially since there is a campaign mode where you follow a little bit of a story as you play different maps. I think it's the controls. The pigs move around freely very well, whereas in the 3D Worms games I've played, the movement is very clumsy.

Cary Woodham

03/02/2015 at 05:55 AM

Also, if the game involves strategy at all, I wouldn't be interested in it because I don't care much for those kinds of games.

KnightDriver

03/04/2015 at 12:45 AM

Not too much. Really you just run around within a limiting meter that ticks down the more you move and shoot your weapon, sometimes without much to help you aim, and hope for the best. Then you hear Rik Mayall's funny one-liners. 

Cary Woodham

03/04/2015 at 06:00 AM

Who published it?

KnightDriver

03/05/2015 at 01:36 AM

Infogrames

Cary Woodham

03/05/2015 at 07:38 AM

They're out of business now.  At one point, they owned my favorite children's software company: Humongous.

KnightDriver

03/05/2015 at 10:49 PM

They merged with Atari according to wiki.

Cary Woodham

03/06/2015 at 06:00 AM

And they filed for bankruptcy. Humongous titles are now owned by Tommo.

KnightDriver

03/06/2015 at 04:48 PM

I have a soft spot for Inforgrams just because of Hogs of War.

SanAndreas

02/28/2015 at 05:59 PM

My PS1 was pretty much a RPG machine, and how. Its RPG library was probably bigger than the RPG offerings on every console that came before it put together. Because I didn't have a lot of RPGs on any other computer or console I had at the time, I sort of went buck-wild on it.  FFVII got me to jump ship from the N64, and Square's other RPGs as well as games like Lunar 1 and 2, Breath of Fire III, and Tales of Destiny and Destiny II (Eternia) were icing on the cake.

Resident Evil 2 was probably my favorite non-RPG game on PS1, but as a genre, fighting games were the other genre I went for on PS1. From Tekken to Rival Schools to Bushido Blade to Ehrgeiz, I had plenty of fighters on PS1.

Cary Woodham

02/28/2015 at 08:53 PM

There were lots of RPGs on the PlayStation, and I played a lot of them.  It's kind of strage that it was the 32-bit era when I started to get out of RPGs.

Casey Curran Staff Writer

02/28/2015 at 10:56 PM

My favorite PS1 game is and always will be Crash Bandicoot Warped. It's one of my all time favorite games and over half my PS1 playtime has been dedicated to that series. I'll keep chipping away at Klonoa just because you keep telling me it's good. Well that and it is pretty good, just not my favorite platformer.

There's a lot I wish would be on PS1 Classics here as well, especially Ape Escape and Mega Man Legends. I know AE is on PSP, but it's not the same without the second stick. FFIX I tried to like and should like, but kind of lost interest after they arrived at Dagger's kingdom. Don't think the old school FF games are for me.

Cary Woodham

03/01/2015 at 05:14 AM

Yeah keep playing Klonoa!  it's not that long of a game.  And I can't imagine why anyone would want Ape Escape on PSP.  The whole point of that game was to show off the new dual analog controller.

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