eShopperReviews 2023 Game Awards Day 1: Specialty Awards

The Specialty Awards, for lack of a better term for it, are awards for games that excel in a particular way that has nothing to do with their genre or any technical part of the game, but that I still feel deserves to be singled out for doing something above and beyond what most games offer, whether that is a particularly good port or collection, the best game for kids, best multiplayer, or simply the game that made me laugh the most. These are games that put in an extra special effort in places that deserve to be recognized for it.

As mentioned previously, today’s nominees include any games released in 2023, even those released on other platforms before 2021. Also, awards like the 2022 Second Chance Awards and Most played Games of 2023 awards are not restricted to games released this year at all, because of what these categories represent. Anyway, on to the awards!

Note: You can listen to a podcast where Jenn and I discuss these awards! Check it out here!

  1. 2022 Second Chance Awards
  2. The Top 10 Games I Wish I Could Have Played Before Writing This, But Didn’t Get Around to Doing In Time
  3. Best Port / Remake
  4. Best Compilation / Collection
  5. Best Sequel
  6. Best Game for Kids and Casual Players
  7. Best Multiplayer
  8. Best New Free-To-Play Game
  9. Best Value
  10. Funniest Game
  11. Most Underrated
  12. Most Overlooked
  13. Most Original
  14. Most Efficient Use of File Storage Space
  15. The “Wow, this game was way better than I expected!” Award
  16. Best Third-Party Publisher
  17. Top 10 Games That Would Win a Lot More Awards This Week if They Weren’t Disqualified Due to How Old Their Original Release is
  18. My Top 10 Most-Played Games of 2023
  19. My Top 10 Most-Anticipated Games of 2024
  20. Did Last Year’s Top 10 Most-Anticipated Games Meet Expectations?
  21. Additional Commentary!

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2022 Second Chance Awards

What follows are games that came out in 2022, but I didn’t get around to playing them until 2023, after doing my 2022 Game Awards. As such, these games did not win any awards from me, but after coming back to them I felt they still deserved recognition. These are the top 10 games that would have been most likely to have been nominated (or even win!) awards in 2022 if I had actually played them that year:

10. Yars: Recharged

9. Let’s Build a Zoo

8. Lost in Play

7. Tunic

6. Melatonin

5. Lil Gator Game

4. Inscryption

3. LEGO Star Wars: The Skywalker Saga

2. The Stanley Parable: Ultra Deluxe

1. Chained Echoes

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The Top 10 Games I Wish I Could Have Played Before Writing This, But Didn’t Get Around to Doing In Time

I’m never going to be able to play every game that comes out in a given year, and some of the games I tend to miss tend to be some of the bigger releases, sadly. However, just to show that I’m well aware of the stuff I’m missing, here is my list of the top ten games I wish I could have played in time for this article, but haven’t been able to get around to:

10. Tin Hearts

9. Rune Factory 3 Special

8. Brok the InvestiGator

7. Cassette Beasts

6. Chants of Sennaar

5. Bomb Rush Cyberfunk

4. The Case of the Golden Idol

3. Born of Bread

2. Final Fantasy I-VI Pixel Remaster Collection

1. Super Mario RPG

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Best Port / Remake

Metroid Prime Remastered – Metroid Prime remains, in my opinion, one of the greatest games of all-time, and Nintendo could have easily gotten away with just re-releasing the original GameCube game without changing anything and it still would have been warmly welcomed. However, instead of taking this easy path, they reworked the game’s visuals to the point this was arguably a remake rather than a remaster, they included multiple control schemes to cover just about every possibility, and also threw in a gallery of extras. Multiple games in 2023 gave a classic a wonderful port or remake on Nintendo Switch, but Metroid Prime is a cut above the rest because Nintendo took an absolute masterpiece and somehow made it even better.

Runners-Up:

Quake II

Kirby’s Return to Dream Land Deluxe

Star Ocean: The Second Story R

Advance Wars 1 + 2 Re-Boot Camp

Trombone Champ

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Best Compilation / Collection

Advance Wars 1 + 2 Re-Boot Camp – It’s wonderful to finally see the Advance Wars series get a new game after so many years of waiting, and in this collection we received two absolute classic games in a full new remake that does these great Strategy games justice. other bundles in 2023 gave gamers a good deal, or brought back beloved classics. Advance Wars 1 + 2 Re-Boot Camp did both of those things while also ensuring that these are the best versions of the included games.

Runners-Up:

Bit.Trip Collection

Quake + Quake II Enhanced Bundle

Mega Man Battle Network Legacy Collection

Draknek & Friends Puzzle Bundle (6 Games)

Persona 3 Portable + Persona 4 Golden Bundle

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Best Sequel

The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom – When Nintendo announced they were working on a direct sequel to The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild, everyone wondered, just how do you follow up one of the greatest games of all-time? What’s more, how do you keep it fresh and interesting while asking players to explore what is essentially the same world? To make a worthy successor, it seemed like Nintendo would have to do the impossible… and they did. Whether it’s crafting your own crazy vehicles, rocketing up to the highest sky islands, or plunging down into The Depths, The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom recontextualized Breath of the Wild in ways that made the entire experience new and refreshing all over again. How could I not give this award to such an impossible feat?

Runners-Up:

Blasphemous 2

Super Mario Bros. Wonder

Pikmin 4

Theatrhythm Final Bar Line

30XX

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Best Game for Kids and Casual Players

Super Mario Bros. Wonder – Fewer games are easy to plop a younger or less-experienced gamer in front of than a 2D Mario game, and this year Nintendo took that highly-accessible experience and infused it with enough variety and creativity to ensure that the game kept things interesting throughout its length, and older players playing the game with their kid could even help out in multiplayer without getting in the way. This is a Wonder that pretty much anyone can enjoy.

Runners-Up:

WarioWare: Move It!

Trombone Champ

Samba De Amigo: Party Central

Kirby’s Return to Dream Land Deluxe

Alekon

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Best Multiplayer

Trombone Champ – Trombone Champ is a game that’s pretty silly in single-player, but it really shines in multiplayer, where the absolute cacophony of toots that only loosely resembles the song in question makes for a truly delightful Party Game that’s sure to get your group giggling. If you played this game with friends, you almost certainly had a good time doing it.

Runners-Up:

WarioWare: Move It!

Fae Farm

Super Crazy Rhythm Castle

F-Zero 99

Rubber Bandits

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Best New Free-To-Play Game

Palia – While it’s a bit lacking as a port, Palia nevertheless provides players with a huge world to explore and tons of things to do. What’s more, this is the first MMO on Nintendo Switch that I feel actually fulfils at least some of the potential of that genre. And being free to play certainly makes it easier to jump right into it!

Runners-Up:

Pinball M

Disney Speedstorm

Tray Racers!

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Best Value

Vampire Survivors ($5) – A genre-defining game, one that many have pointed to as being Game of the Year caliber, and one that countless other games have been scrambling to try to copy (rarely with any success)… and it’s only five bucks? Sometimes I have to weigh options for this award, but not this year – Vampire Survivors is an easy pick for best value on Nintendo Switch in 2023.

Runners-Up:

Quake + Quake II Enhanced Bundle ($15)

This Way Madness Lies ($10)

Sanabi ($15)

Alekon ($16)

Minit Fun Racer ($3)

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Funniest Game

WarioWare: Move It! – I think people take it for granted how funny the WarioWare games are because that’s just what we’ve come to expect from the series. Yet here we are in 2023 with a game that has players making a curtsy to greet a lady, unclogging toilets, searching a grocery store object for a bar code, wiggling like a piece of seaweed to hide from a shark, leaning around to get a princess to poop out a poison apple… and just for old times’ sakes, using your tiny fists to clog up a giant nose. WarioWare is just as ridiculous as ever, and I wouldn’t have it any other way.

Runners-Up:

Trombone Champ

Alekon

Shadows Over Loathing

This Way Madness Lies

Talk to Strangers

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Most Underrated

This is the award for the game I feel was most wronged by its Metacritic score.

Fae Farm (77) – While 77 isn’t a terrible score, I felt that Fae Farm deserved far better, being one of the best “Farming RPG”-style games I have ever played, and truly delivering on the genre’s great, “cozy” gameplay while offering tons of variety. This is a game I felt needed to be celebrated, and 77 hardly seems a fitting celebration to me.

Runners-Up:

Disney Speedstorm (65)

Samba De Amigo: Party Central (71)

WarioWare: Move It! (75)

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Most Overlooked

This year, I am looking at both Metacritic and OpenCritic to determine which games were most overlooked by critics. Specifically, this award is for truly great games that haven’t gotten Metacritic scores on Nintendo Switch (or at all) and/or an OpenCritic score, because not enough reviewers actually played the thing.

Alekon (No Metacritic score for any platform, no OpenCritic score) – Perhaps it’s this game’s unusual name, but even so I’m shocked that so few have been singing its praises. There’s really no excuse for it, either – this game came out on PC in 2021! That’s more than enough time for everyone to try out one of the best takes on the Pokemon Snap formula I’ve ever seen.

Runners-Up:

Sixtar Gate: Startrail (No Metacritic score for any platform, no OpenCritic score)

Fishing Vacation (No Metacritic score for any platform, no OpenCritic score)

Minit Fun Racer (No Metacritic score for any platform, no OpenCritic score)

Sanabi (No Metacritic score for Nintendo Switch)

Backpack Hero (No Metacritic score for Nintendo Switch)

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Most Original

Backpack Hero – There were quite a few games this year that explored new ideas or recontextualized old ones, but Backpack Hero did something truly brave and took an old game mechanic that many players despise, inventory management, and made it the centerpiece if its gameplay, expanding on it and making it something truly remarkable. This willingness to rethink even the worst parts of videogames to think of ways those maligned gameplay elements could be transformed into something wonderful is truly commendable, and I feel we should be encouraging it every chance we get.

Runners-Up:

Trombone Champ

PowerWash Simulator

Squad 51 Vs. The Flying Saucers

Patrick’s Parabox

The Cosmic Wheel Sisterhood

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Most Efficient Use of File Storage Space

Nuclear Blaze (155 MB) – When I was writing this game’s review and looked up its file size, I think I did a double-take. This game looks way too good to be so small. While pixel art visuals and no spoken dialogue surely contribute to the small size, the real wonder here is the way the game depicts fire, the way it moves and spreads. That such a visual treat has been squeezed into such a small package is a true feat of engineering.

Runners-Up:

Tents and Trees (151MB)

Patrick’s Parabox (218MB)

Alekon (1.4GB)

Dredge (1.3GB)

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The “Wow, this game was way better than I expected!” Award

Alekon – Prior to playing this game, I had heard nothing about it. To me, it looked like something whimsical and kid-friendly involving taking photographs, not bad, but I certainly wasn’t expecting anything impressive. Imagine my surprise when I discovered this to be a highly-polished, imaginative, creative take on the Pokemon Snap formula that in many ways manages to outdo Nintendo’s own franchise. In a year with plenty of delightful surprises, Alekon is the one that most exceeded my expectations.

Runners-Up:

Fishing Vacation

The Cosmic Wheel Sisterhood

PowerWash Simulator

Sanabi

Fae Farm

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Best Third-Party Publisher

Just a note – this award is not about the way these companies conduct themselves behind the scenes. Rather, this award only pertains to which companies most consistently brought out great games on the Nintendo Switch in 2022.

Sega – (Two Point Hospital and Two Point Campus Double Pack, Persona 3 Portable, Persona 4 Golden, Persona 3 Portable & Persona 4 Golden Bundle, Persona Collection, Etrian Odyssey Origins Collection, Etrian Odyssey HD, Etrian Odyssey II HD, Etrian Odyssey III HD, Samba De Amigo: Party Central, Sonic Superstars) – Fun fact: Sega has consistently made the list of runners-up all four prior years of eShopperReviews Game Awards, but this is the first time they won. No one game really put it over the top this year, either – it was just a continual onslaught of great game after great game. We finally have a complete set of all modern mainline Persona games on Nintendo Switch, some decent (if a bit disappointing) remakes of the original Etrian Odyssey trilogy, one of the best Music-Rhythm games of the year, and a Sonic game that, while I felt it was overrated, was still good. Nintendo’s former rival has become one of its greatest allies, and it definitely deserves recognition for this.

Runners-Up:

Square Enix – Octopath Traveler II, Theatrhythm Final Bar Line, PowerWash Simulator, Star Ocean: The Second Story R

Annapurna Interactive – Cocoon, Outer Wilds

Team 17 – Dredge, Blasphemous 2, Blasphemous + Blasphemous 2 Bundle

Devolver Digital – The Cosmic Wheel Sisterhood, Minit Fun Racer

Chucklefish – Wildfrost, Wargroove 2, Wargroove + Wargroove 2 Bundle

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Top 10 Games That Would Win a Lot More Awards This Week if They Weren’t Disqualified Due to How Old Their Original Release is

10. Talk to Strangers

9. Quake II

8. We Love Katamari Reroll + Royal Reverie

7. Advance Wars 1 + 2 Re-Boot Camp

6. Kirby’s Return to Dream Land Deluxe

5. Star Ocean: The Second Story R

4. Outer Wilds

3. Tents and Trees

2. Persona 4 Golden

1. Metroid Prime Remastered

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My Top 10 Most-Played Games of 2023

This is according to Nintendo’s own Year in Review page, which only includes stats through November 30. Here are my top 10:

10. Theatrhythm Final Bar Line (13 Hours)

9. Kirby’s Return to Dream Land Deluxe (13 Hours)

8. Vampire Survivors (13 Hours)

7. Sea of Stars (15 Hours)

6. Let’s Build a Zoo (17 Hours)

5. Crush Crush (17 Hours)

4. Atari Flashback Classics (18 Hours)

3. Slay the Spire (42 Hours)

2. Chained Echoes (72 Hours)

1. The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom (223 Hours)

Mostly, I’m not surprised by this list, although I definitely do not remember playing that much Slay the Spire (though it’s easy to melt hours away with that game). I also don’t remember putting 13 hours into Kirby’s Return to Dream Land Deluxe.

However, 223 hours on Zelda? That sounds about right – I found all the shrines and lightroots, got a decent number of koroks, and spent quite a lot of time making death machines.

72 hours on Chained Echoes? Definitely. This game sucked me in far more than I ever expected, truly channeling 16- and 32-bit RPGs in the absolute best ways.

17 Hours on Crush Crush? As with last year, being an “idle game” meant I would frequently pop this game up through the first half of the year… but not the second. I would wager this is the last year you’ll see Crush Crush on this list. While it was an amusing way to pass the time, progress slowed to a crawl to the point where I was no longer entertained by the prospect of “number go up”.

18 hours on Atari Flashback classics? Ugh, yeah. I really did play every single one of this collection’s 150 games, the majority of which were absolutely awful. That’s how much I love you guys…

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My Top 10 Most-Anticipated Games of 2024

10. Bandle Tale: A League of Legends Story

9. Apollo Justice: Ace Attorney Trilogy

8. Braid: Anniversary Edition

7. Princess Peach: Showtime!

6. Shantae Advance: Risky Revolution

5. The Gecko Gods

4. Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door

3. Blade Chimera

2. Hades II

1. Metroid Prime 4

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Did Last Year’s Top 10 Most-Anticipated Games Meet Expectations?

10. Pikmin 4 – Mostly it did, though I’m a tad disappointed in the multiplayer.

9. Persona 3 Portable & Persona 4 Golden BundlePersona 4 did! Persona 3 mostly did.

8. Bayonetta Origins: Cereza and the Lost Demon – I’m not sure I had much in the way of expectations for this one, but I liked it.

7. Mega Man Battle Network Legacy Collection – This was a pretty good collection! But I forgot how samey all the games in this series are.

6. Atelier Ryza 3: Alchemist of the End & the Secret Key – Yes and no. It was a solid final entry in the trilogy, but it didn’t impress me in the way the earlier Ryza games did.

5. Theatrhythm Final Bar Line – I think it did, though I do wish it had touchscreen support.

4. Sea of Stars – I think it did, yes.

3. Octopath Traveler II – Mostly, yes, though I still wish its main characters interacted with each other more.

2. Hades 2 – Not released yet. it’s number 2 on this year’s list too!

1. The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom – I think it’s fair to say it met expectations, and possibly exceeded them!

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Additional Commentary!

Just going to comment on the categories I feel like I have more to add.

2022 Second Chance Awards

I cannot express how much I enjoyed Chained Echoes. In fact, if it were released this year, it would absolutely blow away Sea of Stars, which I still thoroughly enjoyed, but nowhere near as much as I enjoyed Chained Echoes.

Also, I should note that I made a choice not to include Splatoon 3 on this list even though I gave it a higher grade than many of the games on this list. That is because I felt that most of what that game did well were things that Splatoon 2 already did, and including it here would feel like awarding the same game twice, even though Splatoon 3 did indeed have multiple improvements that made it superior.

You may notice this same attitude at play later in the week, as well…

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Top 10 Games I Wish I Could Have Played Before Writing This, But Didn’t Get Around to Doing In Time

This list looked completely different before all the games I reviewed in December. I should note that the Batman Arkham Collection, Metal Gear Solid Collection, and Red Dead Redemption are all not on this list either because I heard the port was flawed, or in Red Dead’s case because the price tag was just way too high. And I know I love the Batman Arkham and Metal Gear Solid games anyway, so it’s not like playing it on Nintendo Switch will change my mind on those games.

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Best Port/Remake

There were a lot of really good contenders in this category this year. Quake II was so very close to winning this award – the amount of extra content, options, and the quality of that port made it an absolute shining example for others to follow when porting older games. However, Quake II may be a classic game, but Metroid Prime is an absolute legend. If it wasn’t a port from an older platform, Metroid Prime could have been a Game of the Year contender this year. However, the age of its original release means it’s disqualified for that award, so it will have to settle for this one instead.

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Best Multiplayer

I briefly considered giving this award to WarioWare: Move It!. Honestly, WarioWare and Trombone Champ are both neck and neck for both this award and Funniest Game award in my opinion.

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Best Free-to-Play Game

If anyone’s wondering why Palia won this award over Pinball M, it’s because even though Pinball M does a decent job to set itself apart from earlier Zen Studios Pinball games, it does still feel like it’s using the same formula. Palia, meanwhile, is entirely new, and even if it stumbles a bit in its Nintendo Switch release, I feel it holds much more promise in the long-term.

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Most Underrated

I wanted to make special note of Disney Speedstorm, a game that was sabotaged by its publisher’s greed and stupidity. While this game is certainly far from perfect (the rubber-banding here is horrible), it’s still overall a well-crafted and enjoyable Racing game that was overloaded with gross monetization… and then released at a premium price. Reviewers were displeased, and with good reason – this game was a rip-off. But after a few months went by, the game went free-to-play, and while the monetization was still gross, this was nevertheless a lot more reasonable. But by that point, the damage was done. The reviews were in, and this game was already forgotten by the general public. So in a way, this game deserves its terrible score for trying to scam consumers, but the game as it exists now is better than this score implies.

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Best Third-Party Publisher

Other publishers that came close to being a runner-up for this award included Chorus Worldwide Games (A Space for the Unbound, Coffee Talk Episode 2: Hibiscus & Butterfly) and Capcom (The Mega Man Battle Network Legacy Collection games and Ghost Trick: Phantom Detective).

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My Top 10 Most-Played Games of 2023

I should note that Disgaea 7 would have taken the number 4 spot if this list counted hours through to the end of the year, as I played at least 19 hours of that game.

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That’s all for today! to keep up with all of the eShopperReviews 2023 Game Awards, be sure to check back at the Awards’ Start Page, which I’ll be updating throughout the week!

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6 responses to “eShopperReviews 2023 Game Awards Day 1: Specialty Awards”

  1. johnwinchestersolent Avatar

    Really enjoyed reading this! Have used it in past years to target games I may have passed over reading about. Having put a fair bit of time into your Free-to-Play previous winners, Hexceed & Guardian Tales, I am definitely interested in giving Palia and a few of these a go.

    Also interested in a number of games you have highlighted here that I wasn’t previously aware of. Chained Echoes in particular sounds amazing, but as someone who hasn’t played any JRPG’s it sounds like it wouldn’t be the best place to start for that genre? Do you have any recommendations for the Switch in this regard?

    Currently going through the Quake II campaigns so was pleased to see it get a lot of love in your awards! Looking forward to the rest of the awards!

    Like

    1. eShopperReviews Avatar

      If you want good JRPGs to start with on Nintendo Switch, probably your best starting point is going to be **Dragon Quest XI** (https://eshopperreviews.com/2023/08/16/dragon-quest-xi-s-echoes-of-an-elusive-age-definitive-edition-for-nintendo-switch-review/). It’s not my absolute favorite game in the genre, but it’s very good, visually-gorgeous, mechanically-simple, has a plot that doesn’t rely on you having played other games, and there’s a massive demo on the eShop to try out the game and see how you feel about it. And if you decide to get the game after playing the demo, the save file from the demo transfers to the game.

      My absolute favorite JRPG, Chrono Trigger, is not yet on Nintendo Switch (it’s sequel/spin-off game, Chrono Cross, is on the eShop, but it’s nowhere near as good as the original). However, if you’re looking for good JRPG games to play following Dragon Quest XI, my recommendations are **Final Fantasy X/X-2 Remastered**, **Final Fantasy IX**, the **Octopath Traveler** games, **Chained Echoes**, and **Sea of Stars**.

      I should mention that one of the most iconic games in the genre, **Final Fantasy VII**, is on the Nintendo Switch, but I do not believe it has aged well. **Final Fantasy VI**, another true classic, is also on the Nintendo Switch, but I’m not sure how you feel about older 16-bit games. I hear the **Super Mario RPG** remake is excellent, but I haven’t played it yet. And the original **Paper Mario** is on the Nintendo 64 app if you already pay for the Nintendo Switch Online Expansion Pack.

      That should be plenty to get you started! 🙂

      Like

      1. JW Avatar

        Wow thank you so much for your detailed reply!

        Without knowing much about JRPG’s I was leaning towards a Final Fantasy game (as a safe bet) so it’s great to see there are other games out there that are just as easy/easier to get used to the genre. Dragon Quest sounds great, especially after reading your full review and with the demo you mentioned.

        Will definitely do more research into the others you mentioned. Thanks again!

        Also sorry about the multiple comments initially. The first time I posted it said there was an error so I tried again. Feel free to delete the other comment if able.

        Like

        1. eShopperReviews Avatar

          Sure thing!

          My thoughts on the Final Fantasy series:

          First, know that each numbered Final Fantasy game contains a completely separate story that has nothing to do with other numbered entries in the series apart from some thematic elements, enemy types, spell and item types, and fantasy races. In other words, they all take place in separate worlds with separate characters, but in almost all of them you’ll see ostrich-like Chocobo and teddy bear-like Moogles, you’ll fight against creatures like cactaurs, flans, and ahrimans, and you’ll cast spells like fira and thundaga.

          Now, I say each numbered entry is separate because a few numbered entries do have direct sequels. prequels, and spin-offs. Final Fantasy X has a direct sequel, Final Fantasy X-2, Final Fantasy IV has a sequel, Final Fantasy IV: The After Years, and Final Fantasy VII has a ton of sequels, spin-offs, a movie, and two remake games (one coming later this year). However, if you start with numbered entries, you’ll always get a self-contained story, and after that you can choose to branch out into related content.

          Another important thing to note is that prior to Final Fantasy VII, the series’ numbering is… weird. Squaresoft (before they merged with Enix) didn’t originally localize Final Fantasy II, III, or V to Western regions, and so to try to avoid confusion, they renumbered IV to be Final Fantasy II, and VI to be Final Fantasy III. They finally stopped this when they released Final Fantasy VII and just gave the games the same number in both regions, and these days people refer to all games by their original numbers, but older players may still refer to Final Fantasy IV and VI by their Western numbering of II and III.

          As for the games themselves, I haven’t played some of these in a while, but here are my thoughts:

          Final Fantasy – Haven’t played, but as I understand it, this one has aged poorly.

          Final Fantasy II – Haven’t played.

          Final Fantasy III – Haven’t played.

          Final Fantasy IV – This game is beloved by some, and many have a fondness for the creative liberties of its English localization (the Square employee in charge of localization, Ted Woolsey, made a name for himself with silly expressions like “You spoony bard!”), but I think this one hasn’t aged especially well, being pretty linear, and with characters jumping into and out of your party with high frequency.

          Final Fantasy V – This game’s job class system is outstanding, and influenced many of the later games in the series. Apart from that, I can’t say that I found anything else about the game especially memorable.

          Final Fantasy Mystic Quest – Haven’t played. This was a game created expressly for Western gamers to try to ease them into JRPGs (which were not popular here yet), and as a result many complain that it plays like “Baby’s first JRPG”. It is generally not well-liked.

          Final Fantasy VI – This is still to this day a game that many will point to as one of the greatest RPGs of all-time, and it is an absolutely quintessential 16-bit JRPG. The story here was a huge improvement over all previous games in the series (either despite or because of Ted Woolsey), the huge cast of characters were likeable and highly memorable, the esper system found a great balance between character customizability and character specialization, and the music is some of the best music in any videogame ever. If someone wanted to try a Final Fantasy game from the era before the series went into polygonal 3D, this is the one to go for.

          Final Fantasy VII – This is the most popular, most iconic game in the entire series, the one that truly make Final Fantasy a major name with gamers who previously never played an RPG. It has also (hot take) aged pretty poorly. The mix of polygonal graphics and FMV cutscenes was absolutely revolutionary at the time, but looks pretty bad today. Protagonist Cloud seemed cool and edgy to many, but personally I think he’s a jerk. I don’t think this game is *bad*, but I definitely think it’s overrated. Oh, and be aware that Final Fantasy VII Remake is in many ways a completely different game, with different gameplay, and a plot that diverges from the original game in some substantial ways.

          Final Fantasy VIII – I both love and hate this game. On the one hand, I think it has a great soundtrack, an interesting plot, some clever combat mechanics, and the collectible card game minigame, Triple Triad, is really fun. On the other hand, it features another jerkwad protagonist, it’s extremely grindy, and the powerful summon animations take foooooooreeeeeeeeveeeeeer. Definitely a mixed bag.

          Final Fantasy IX – This game wasn’t originally going to be a numbered Final Fantasy game, but a tribute to the series, with all kinds of references to games throughout the series up until this point. However, it worked out to be a solid game in its own right, with a good mix of mechanics from prior games, and some likeable characters for a change. If you want to try out a Final Fantasy game from the PlayStation One era, this is the one I would argue for.

          Final Fantasy Tactics (Not on Nintendo Switch yet) – This was a collaboration with the creators of the game Tactics Ogre, and along with that game, this is often seen as the originator of the “Tactics-style” Strategy-RPG subgenre (best known these days for games like Triangle Strategy and the Disgaea series). The localization is infamous for being one of the worst in the history of videogames (Picture trying to feed a Game of Thrones-style plot through Google Translate), but the soundtrack is outstanding, the combat is great, and the use of Final Fantasy V’s job system makes the character progression here absolutely delightful.

          Final Fantasy X – If you’re looking for one game that’s the best place to enter the series, I would argue this is it. Fun and interesting combat, great character progression with the Sphere Grid system, a good soundtrack, graphics that hold up pretty well to this day (especially if you’re playing the remaster that’s on Nintendo Switch), excellent characters, a great plot, solid voice acting (if you discount the cringey “laughing scene”. Also, this is the first game in the series to feature voice acting). I feel like this game does pretty much everything right.

          Final Fantasy X-2 – This is a… interesting… way to approach a sequel to Final Fantasy X. However, I don’t think it quite works. It’s tonally quite different from Final Fantasy X, the new job class system is interesting but not especially compelling, and… yeah, I didn’t think very highly of this game.

          Final Fantasy XI – Haven’t played it. Not on Nintendo Switch. This is an MMO. Apparently still running.

          Final Fantasy XII – This game features a Game of Thrones-style plot, excellent voice acting, and an interesting pseudo real-time combat system. I think a lot of people were put off this game due to its onerous “license system” that required you to not only get spells and equipment you wanted to use, but earn the right to actually equip it. I think this is a good game, but not for everyone.

          And… after this point, my experience with the series mostly ends. I heard Final Fantasy XIII and its sequel, Lightning Returns: Final Fantasy XIII, were seen by many as a disappointment, Final Fantasy XIV was another MMO, people generally seemed to like Final Fantasy XV and XVI… but none of those games are on Nintendo Switch. There were also a bunch of spin-offs and sequel games I didn’t play… that are also not on Nintendo Switch (save for Final Fantasy XV: Pocket Edition, which is okay but clearly a heavily-downgraded version of a much bigger game, and Crisis Core: Final Fantasy VII, which I have not played yet).

          Anyway… yeah, I would say that your best points for entry to the series are going to be Final Fantasy X, Final Fantasy IX, and Final Fantasy VI, depending on which era you feel the most interested in. And yeah, I should also mention Final Fantasy VII – that game is so iconic, many will tell you it’s the most must-play game in the series. I disagree with those people, but to each their own.

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  2. JW Avatar

    Wow this is an incredible amount of detail and very kind for you to do so. Thank you for your honest thoughts on all of these games. Without any insight I may have fallen into the trap of going for FF VII based on hype rather than what is the best entry point, maybe down the line if I enjoy some of the other games you have recommended.

    I’ve added them to my list & have also downloaded the Dragon Quest demo to have a look at this weekend. Really appreciate your time to answer my questions!

    Incidentally I enjoyed reading this round up of Final Fantasy and which games you recommend (or don’t) from the series, would definitely enjoy reading if you ever decided doing this for other game series.

    Thanks again!

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  3. Jared Avatar

    I should already have expected this based on how thorough your write-ups are through the rest of the year, but these yearly awards take the cake! Somehow they seem even more substantial here on the website than they used to on Reddit. Surely, you must keep notes or half-finished lists as you play games throughout the year to keep this all on track, right?

    Also, I’m with the other comments saying these lists are great ways to tune me in to other releases or reviews I’ve skipped over. Alekon looks particularly fun to try and it’s got a demo on the eShop to boot!

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