IGN’s Top 25 PC Games of All Time

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There are a few things that I tend to wax nostalgic about.  Any victory of the Redskins over the Cowboys would qualify, as would any Billy Joel record my dad played for me as I was growing up.  But another thing I that I have countless warm memories of is computer games.  As far back as I can remember, these interactive adventures were my greatest pastime and the focus of my free time.

I’ve sinced moved on to bigger and better things, like “console gaming” and “having a life” (just kidding), but I will always browse any Greatest Computer Games list to see if any of my all time favorites have been included.  Recently, I stumbled across a particularly professionally-done one on IGN.  Here are the final results of the countdown:

  1. X-COM: UFO Defense (1994)
  2. Civilization IV (2005)
  3. Star Wars TIE Fighter (1994)
  4. Rome Total War (2004)
  5. Fallout (1997)
  6. Starcraft (1998)
  7. Baldur’s Gate II: Shadows of Amn (2000)
  8. SimCity 2000 (1993)
  9. Half-Life 2 (2004)
  10. Age of Empires 2: Age of Kings (1999)
  11. Sid Meier’s Pirates (1987)
  12. Battlefield 1942 (2002)
  13. System Shock 2 (1999)
  14. Company of Heroes (2006)
  15. Grim Fandango (1998)
  16. Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion (2006)
  17. World of Warcraft (2004)
  18. Call of Duty (2003)
  19. Warcraft 2: Tides of Darkness (1995)
  20. Deus Ex (2000)
  21. MechWarrior 2: 31st Century Combat (1995)
  22. The Sims (2000)
  23. Unreal Tournament 2004 (2004)
  24. Tom Clancy’s Rainbow Six (1998)
  25. IL-2 Sturmovik (2001)

The list straddles between picking influential games, games that were great at their time, and games that are most fun today.  For example, The Sims 2 is a more complete, fulfilling experience than the original, but The Sims blew everyone’s mind by looking good and playing better.  In fact, its addictive life-management gameplay wowed people so much that it outsold any game in history.

I was a bit surprised to see the pick at number one, but I can’t call it a bad pick by any stretch.  I played the shareware version to death back in the day.  It was one of those games I begged my parents to buy the full version for me, but they never budged.  I’ll have to go hunting online and see if I can find a torrent legal download of it somewhere.

But for any lifelong computer game fan, the real satisfaction from this sort of list comes from seeing your favorite games receiving props.  And here is where the list excel.  Warcraft 2 was my obsession for months on end.  Modern RTS games may improve gameplay and graphics, but none will ever steal my heart like Tides of Darkness did.  It was dramatic, exciting, engrossing, beautiful, and hilarious — everything my young mind wanted out of a game.  The map editor alone got double-to-triple hours worth of play from me, and blowing up critters remains my favorite Easter egg in any game.  Even Warcraft 2’s transcendent follow-up, Starcraft, didn’t engross me the way the humans’ and orcs’ epic struggles did.

But the only game to give Warcraft 2 a run for its money was Age of Empires 2.  Epic in scope and brilliant in execution, Age of Kings revived my love of RTS gameplay to a level it hadn’t been since the peak of my Warcraft 2 obsession.  It made up for having only one unique unit-set by having thirteen distinct, balanced civilizations to tinker with.

I’m also glad TIE Fighter is getting props, though #3 might be a stretch.  There was just something so satisfying about flying around TIEs and taking out X-Wings, completing secret objectives for the Emporer and taking orders from Vader.

There are of course a few oddball picks (IL-2 Sturmovik?), and Starcraft as low as #6 will pass as travesty in some circles, but overall this list hits all the right nerves and includes plenty of deserving classics.  Of the twenty-five, I’ve played fourteen of the games (or their similar predecessors or follow-ups), and I now have a hankering to find down some of the picks I missed (Deus Ex, Fallout) to see if they’re worth their reputation.

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2 Comments so far

  1. Jerry Lester on November 12th, 2008

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  2. Rachel B. on December 11th, 2008

    What a profound comment by Jerry.

    This is an interesting list. I’m sad that Duke Nukem 3D is not on that list! Talk about a totally groundbreaking game that took FPS games to a whole new level back in the nineties. I think I started playing that game when I was 11 years old.

    My high school favorite was Unreal Tournament (Game of the Year Edition). I got hooked on the online game-play, mastered the shock rifle, and even joined clans. At least 2k4 made the list (even though they ruined some of the weapons ;)) Never played it much, though, because of my graphics card limitations.

    I did play Baldur’s Gate I and Icewind Dale I & II. All three games I’d highly recommend.

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