

You go around as a vehicle of your choice blasting other cars with your missiles, and special abilities.
Soul nomad and the world eaters fanart series#
Twisted Metal - Remains one of the first series I've ever played, and the original car combat game. The series has good RPG elements and can be entertaining, and I'll always love the nostalgia I have for my favorite Final Fantasy, FF IX.įinal Fantasy IX, my favorite character will always be Quina!ġ2. Final Fantasy does hold a special place in my heart, I've played VII, VIII, IX, X, X-2, XII and XII-2 and I would love to play III, VI, XIII and Type-0 in particular. Final Fantasy - Once again, I'm sure you've heard of the Final Fantasy games before, they are the most popular RPG series in the world, along side titles like Pokemon and Dragon Warrior/Quest.Īlthough I am not the biggest fan of the series, and prefer other series like Chrono Cross, Suikoden, Shadow Hearts etc. I loved playing Pokemon back then, and my favorite Pokemon is Mawile, although a part of a later generation, but I always loved fire types like Charmander and Cyndaquil.ġ3. I believe I started playing Pokemon when I was 12 on the Gameboy Color, I had Silver, and later on Crystal. Poke'mon - As most of you probably know, Pokemon is an anime and video game series about people who capture creatures known as pokemon, that have magic powers and use them to do battles with other pokemon.Īlthough I don't play Pokemon anymore, I loved playing Pokemon as a young teenager. Ty is a fun series and it is a must play for any action adventure game fan! Especially if you love Boomerangs like me!ġ4. The second game becomes more adventurous, and you even get to drive around GTA style, while the third game puts in new battle and game-play mechanics. The two later games bring all of the same characters, but with a new problem. Ty the Tasmanian Tiger - Follows the story of Ty and his friends, running across a fictional Australia to save Ty's family, who are currently stuck in the Dream Time.

Advance because it's for the Game Boy Advance.This is a list of my top 15 most influential video games of all time.ġ5. P.S.: the game is called Final Fantasy Tactics Advance, not " Advanced". I wish they made a " Final Fantasy Tactics A3" someday. For example, how can a skill like Air Render exist? (if I remember correctly, they nerfed it in the sequel).īut anyway, the game is really fun. On top of that, there are serious balance problems, but I was aware of those even when I was a kid. Nowadays, I value a certain level of difficulty in the SRPGs (and RPGs in general). There is no challenge at all in any moment. But honestly, I don't know if it's because I'm much more experienced in the genre now, but I found the difficulty super low. I don't consider that necessary to consider it 100% completed, and anyway there isn't any reward to it.Īfter all these years, I have to say that I still like the game as much as always. However, I didn't learn all the skills, reach the top level or anything like that. So, today, at 74 hours of game time, I finally finished it.įor all purposes it's 100% completed, since there is nothing else to do. I completed the main story, and after that my objective was to complete the 300 missions and the extra epilogue. I was playing other two games at the same time, and this one took over them. I played for two weeks and then dropped it, but a few weeks ago I wanted to resume my save because I really wanted to finish it. Last time I played was many years ago, so past October I wanted to play it again. I've completed it a lot of times in the past, and I consider it one of my favorite games ever. And the author made a set of tools that change the game, such as making units stay dead after battle outside of Jagds, making Judge Points become Job Points and making them able to learn skills (alongside the current AP system), and other neat things. There was a neat hack, Advanced Battle, where quite a lot of the game changes and you're able to capture enemy monsters and use them in your team.because all you have is Marche and Montblanc. That the "Steal Weapon early" trick works is that you get something earlier than normal and can snap the game in half from there. The FF9-styled "equip to use, gain AP to learn permanently" system was kinda neat, though it also meant you were restricted on what abilities you got due to equipment unlocking as you progressed. It was pretty enjoyable, and I really liked that you could see the field before you deployed and change jobs/equipment accordingly.

Restrictive, but the AI actually had to adhere to them too (unless they were dirty card-immune units), so you could cripple the enemy if you had the right laws/anti-laws. I didn't mind the laws as much as others did.
