1985-
Gradius- Ok this one was tough, because, Mario Bros., but when I really think about it, I probably played way more hours of Gradius than a lot of other things.
1986-
Bubble Bobble- Who knew two stupid dinosaurs that could spit bubbles could be so much fun?
1987-
The Legend of Zelda- The game that started it all deserves a place on this list
1988-
Mega Man 2- My introduction to the mega man series and still one of the best. Who can't remember Metal Man's theme?
1989-
Gradius III- I played this one even more than the first one. E. Laser for the win.
1990-
Super Mario Bros 3- Boy was this game great. This probably cemented my love for Mario games.
1991-
Secret Weapons of the Luftwaffe- Alright, yeah, so this year is full of awesome games, but if I'm honest, this game is what got me my interest in WWII, and especially WWII aviation. This game had everything. You could fly the U.S. or German forces, including the B-17 (including manning the guns), the P-51, P-47, P-38 (Plus variants), among others, along with your familiar German aircraft, including experimental ones like the Go-220, Me-262 and Me-163. You could create custom missions, use a flight recorder to rewatch your missions, bomb ball bearing factories, attack airfields with defense emplacements, drop bombs (ground and aerial attack bombs), fire rockets, choose ammunition types, bomb sizes, fuel tanks, have realistic battle damage, command wingmen, and so forth. This game had EVERYTHING. Also it was made by
LucasArts in its heyday, so I'm not surprised.
1992-
Super Mario Kart- The first game my brother and I worked together to save up money for--mostly in quarters. I still remember the evening where my mom took my brother to the bank to exchange sixty dollars of quarters for cash, and then go and buy the game. Start of a great series.
1993-
Secret of Mana- Oh man, this one was hard. Between this, Doom, and Star Wars: X-wing, this was a hard pick. However, Secret of Mana is where I started to get into RPGs, and as a surprising bonus, I could play with my brother (my sister was still too young to be playing games at this point). This is a game that I could probably see myself playing through again. An absolute classic with a good story and excellent soundtrack.
1994-
TIE Fighter- I really liked X-Wing, but I
loved TIE Fighter. One of the best stories and portrayals of the Empire in any Star Wars story full stop. Also Grand Admiral Thrawn. Seriously probably the best Star Wars game ever created.
1995-
Command and Conquer- I was going to put Warcraft, but in reality, in '95 Warcraft wasn't even on my radar. However, along with the first
Rebel Assault, C&C was my first foray into CD gaming and RTS gaming in general.
1996 -
Super Mario 64- This was a tough one between this and
Super Mario RPG (also a great game), but I remember my little kid mind being literally blown away by seeing Mario running around in 3D at my local Blockbuster video store. One of the greatest launch titles to ship with any console and one of the few times where I felt like I reached a new level of gaming. But seriously Peach, a cake?
1997-
Goldeneye 007- I can almost hear
@GasBandit now. For me, this was a gaming masterpiece. I remember when we rented it the first time and tried multiplayer. Everyone loved it. Hell, my dad ended renting it several times just so we could play MP until he eventually bought it. We got serious too. We recorded our games, and even divided the TV screen with a news paper to prevent screen-watching. I also got paid a few times to help people get cheats for their games ( a lot of people had problems with the invisibility and invincibility cheat requirements). The game also got me into James Bond as a franchise.
1998-
Half Life- I thought I might go with something else, but after thinking about it, what the hell can compare to Half Life?
1999-
Asheron's Call- My intro to MMORPGs and probably the best I've ever played.
Massive open world. No I mean, seriously, HUGE and without zones to load into. Thousands of places to explore, creatures to kill, and brutal to boot. Your level was more of an estimation of your strength, rather than an absolute measure of strength like in other games. Skill level played a more important role here, as well as individual skill. I played on Darktide (The PVP server). Anyone can kill anyone, and you drop your stuff on death which people can loot off your corpse. An
excellent Patron/Vassal system that made being part of a guild actually mean something. Books could be written about the "storylines" that were made by the very people who populated the server. The giant "evil" Player-killer guild
Blood who's rule that everyone was an enemy. Hell, they had a rule that even if you were a member of Blood, if you were under level 20, you were still fair game. Anti-Player killer guilds that wafted between fighting against people in Blood or infighting with each other. Guild raids on towns "owned" by other guilds, griefing people out of dungeons, and a development team that I felt was second to none. Constant updates, constant story additions, and a philosophy that kept the game world alive. The only MMO that got even close to giving me similar (but not quite as good) magic was
Dark Age of Camelot
2000-
Baldur's Gate II: Shadows of Amn- This was tough. I was highly tempted to put the first
Deus Ex, but its hard to compete with one of the greatest RPGs of all time. I played through this and the Throne of Baal a couple years ago and it still held up. Anyone who hasn't played through this is seriously missing out.
2001-
Dark Age of Camelot - Another tough choice, but credit where credit is due,
DAoC kicked all sorts of ass. It was my first traditional MMORPG (I never played EQ) and it was quite the adventure. I really enjoyed the realm system, which each of the 3 factions having their own entire world to explore (Albion / Hibernia / Midgard) and then duke it out at high level in the PVP zones. Eventually PVP servers opened up, and you can imagine where I started playing. Too many hours to count were sunk into this game.
2002-
Warcraft III: Reign of Chaos - Going to be honest, I never played Warcraft I and barely played any of Warcraft II. WC III made me regret that choice. This was a tough year, but the game that got me into Warcraft, and allowed me to continue to indulge in my love for all things
Ork Orc deserves a spot.
2003-
Jedi Knight: Jedi Academy - Ill admit, I remember nothing about the single-player aspect of this game, but that fact that I still play this with friends in MP on occasion speaks volumes. A close second for this year would be
Freelancer.
2004-
Dawn of War- Haha wow, this year. Still, nothing cemented my love for the 40K universe like this gem of a game. In the grim darkness of the future, there is only
WAAAAGGGGHHHHH
2005-
Jade Empire- An excellent RPG set in mythical China. Man, if you thought playing as a Sith could give you evil choices... Please Bioware, bring this franchise back
2006-
Neverwinter Nights 2 - This game hit my RPG itch right when I needed it. Some of the expansions were pretty good too (Mask of the Betrayer, anyone?).
2007-
Ace Attorney: Trials and Tribulations- The third game in the original trilogy and my personal favorite. The AA series is one of my all time favorite series and this game doesn't disappoint. Hopefully no
Objections! to this one.
2008-
Dead Space- This game scared the hell out of me when I played it. None of the sequels ever got back to this level of horror.
2009-
Dragon Age Origins- An excellent RPG. I played through this one several times, and there were so many different little outcomes you could affect. Close second is LF4D 2, for uh, obvious reasons.
2010-
Star Craft II: Wings of Liberty- I liked the main story well enough, but this was the first time I got serious in competitive Starcraft. Tears of joy were shed when I finally got my 1,000 win Zerg icon.
2011-
The Witcher 2: Assassins of Kings - Look, I loved Skyrim like everyone else, but no one crafts a good story like CD Projekt Red.
2012-
FTL: Faster Than Light- What a great little game. I didn't think I'd like it initially, but I ended up pouring tons of hours into it. Fun gameplay and great soundtrack. Highly recommended.
2013-
Fire Emblem Awakening- First introduction to Fire Emblem and boy did it hook me.
2014:
The Last of Us: Remastered: Finally got a PS4 and it was the first game I bought. Incredible game.
2015-
The Witcher 3: The Wild Hunt - I didn't even have to look this up. Hell, even my father plays this now. One of the best games I've ever played and one of the biggest reasons I don't enjoy a lot of sandbox RPGs. The amount of depth, interaction, story, and though that goes into each quest is unparalleled.
2016-
Overwatch- He who controls the salt, controls the universe. Justice rains from the sky, Bitches.
2017-
The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild- I wasn't sure that this game was going to be worth the price of the Nintendo Switch, but my fears were overblown. It
is worth the price of admission and one of the best video games I've ever played. This game does almost everything an open-world game should do right. Give me more like this, Nintendo.