this post was submitted on 20 Nov 2025
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Patient Gamers

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A gaming community free from the hype and oversaturation of current releases, catering to gamers who wait at least 12 months after release to play a game. Whether it's price, waiting for bugs/issues to be patched, DLC to be released, don't meet the system requirements, or just haven't had the time to keep up with the latest releases.

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Assuming the equipment was also saved so you could still play the games, and every game in existence you don’t mention gets permanently destroyed, and no new games are ever to be made.

Inspired by a video by OutsideXbox from a few years ago, I thought it would be a fun idea to see what this community would choose. You can choose to be selfish and pick games you personally want to always play, or try to figure out what games would be best chosen for humanity to save for whatever reason. I’d also love to hear why you chose your games. Do they have a special meaning to you? I want to hear your stories.

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[–] Adderbox76@lemmy.ca 1 points 12 hours ago

FF7 (original) FF8 Fallout NV Crusader Kings 2 (with dlc and mods) Rimworld (with mods)

[–] Professorozone@lemmy.world 2 points 15 hours ago

Well let's see...there's Pong, of course, then Asteroids, Pac Man, Poker and Tic Tac Toe. Yeah, that ought to do.

X-Com, Smash Brothers, Halo, Civilization, StarCraft

[–] starman2112@sh.itjust.works 8 points 22 hours ago* (last edited 22 hours ago)

First place has to be Kerbal space program. I can't think of another game as profoundly educational as this. If you can land a craft on the Mün, then you have a better understanding of orbital mechanics than the average NASA engineer.

Second place goes to Nier: Automata. It's a selfish pick, but I struggle to think of a more flawless game.

I want at least one multiplayer PVE game and one PVP game, so third and fourth places go to Minecraft (version 1.18) and Team Fortress 2.

Lastly, for fear that it will count as a video game and otherwise be deleted, I save Lichess.org from annihilation

[–] Hazzard@lemmy.zip 1 points 14 hours ago

Man.... tough choices.

I'm saving Dark Souls 1. It's a beautiful game, great replay value I've barely begun to tap into, and really cool multiplayer features. Also a game I'd love to introduce more people to.

I'm also saving Hollow Knight. Trying to beat Pantheon of Hallownest, or Steel Soul mode, may just keep me busy until I die single-handedly.

I'm also saving Silksong. Screw it, same reasons as Hollow Knight, selfishly I want em both. I would go just Silksong, but it lacks the updates and endgame content that Hollow Knight has been fleshed out with.

Mario Odyssey? I got really into speedrunning this for a while, and it was a blast. I could get back into that, and push it a lot further with all the free time I'd have now that I'm not playing much else.

There really should be a multiplayer game on this list.... I'm tempted by UFO 50, but that feels like cheating, so... Mario Kart World? The online is kinda trash, because they push the intermission courses too hard, but local multiplayer isn't so affected, and mechanically the rail and wall grinding is deep mechanically, and I could sink a lot more solo playtime time into mastering all the time trials, which I loved dabbling with.

Really, this whole list is defined by games I could speedrun and otherwise try to get thousands of hours of playtime and challenges out of them.

[–] Surp@lemmy.world 4 points 18 hours ago

Elder scrolls Skyrim all expansions dlc

Age of empires 2 with expansions

Halo master chief collection

If it counts World of Warcraft classic as a private server

Baldurs Gate 3

[–] Victoriathecompact@sh.itjust.works 1 points 15 hours ago* (last edited 15 hours ago)
  • Stardew Valley
  • Sims 4
  • Skyrim
  • Sim City 4
  • The Arcana (app)

Can't say Mass Effect cause I would need the trilogy :(

All games for replayability!

Stardew I can play with friends.

Sims 4 and Sim City 4 are about building a life/world, so it's hard to get bored.

Skyrim is Skyrim- as much as i've played it I havent finished all storylines.

The Arcana has so many dating options with 2 different routes for each. The art is amazing.

[–] Mnemnosyne@sh.itjust.works 4 points 20 hours ago (1 children)

Well, I think games that have the greatest possibility between them make the best choices. So...

Stellaris. - I want a 4x and grand strategy and this one is a bit of both. Also considering how much it's changed since 1.0, the various versions of it provide a lot of variety in themselves. Also it's got great mod support. Its core systems have also been rebuilt a couple times, so I know it has a good deal of potential and isn't locked too hard into certain mechanics.

Conan Exiles. - This is a really weird choice cause the game isn't amazing in and of itself, or even all that good, and it's pretty buggy, but it's one of the most customizable, mod supported multiplayer games I know of. Maybe there's a better choice and if I had time to research it I'd pick that one. I know there's a multiplayer mod for Skyrim, for example, but I'm not technical enough to know if that has better possibilities than Conan.

Elite: Dangerous. - This is another choice I'd like to research a better option for. The thing is I want a flight/space game, but I don't know enough about the genre, and this is the only one that immediately comes to mind. Its kind of my one mostly unselfish pick cause I haven't played this type of game in a long time.

Baldur's Gate 3. - It's not actually my favorite rpg or even my favorite Baldur's Gate, but Larian designed it with good mod support and tools. Also it can support multiplayer very easily. Like the others on this list, it's here for future adaptability; if we're never getting new games, mods of these 5 have to be as much like new games as possible.

An MMO. - This is the toughest one to answer myself cause I don't know enough about the back end of them. The trick is choosing the one with the most broadly applicable technical side. I want as much possibility in future development as I can get, and I'd really like one that isn't inextricably linked to the target based gameplay we currently know from most of them. If required to pick without research, I would reluctantly choose Guild Wars 2, cause it at least isn't tied to tab targeting, but I have no idea if it's good with my other criteria.

Now, you'll notice I didn't pick any games without multiplayer, and that's cause if these are going to be the only 5 games left until the end of time they should all support multiplayer. No single player only need apply.

[–] Vupware@lemmy.zip 1 points 13 hours ago

Hah, I picked Elite Dangerous too. You made the right choice — as someone who started off in the genre with Elite Dangerous and has been searching for something to match it for literally a decade I feel qualified to say there is no better option.

[–] christopher@lemmy.ca 8 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Superman for the N64, E.T. for Atari, Plumbers Don't Wear Ties, Desert Bus and Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing

[–] MystValkyrie@lemmy.blahaj.zone 9 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

It's impossible to pick out just five of the most important games ever, but I'd try to pick games that have important historical significance, have some degree of genre diversity, all while still being fun and thought-provoking games you'll always want to pick back up.

  1. Ultima IV.

    spoilerThe first RPG that wasn't a giant dungeon-crawling grindfest where you slay a wizard at the end. It has a big open world, fun NPC interactions, and fun tactical RPG gameplay for the time. Has a really good philosophical storyline that is integrated with the game mechanics, and it shows how creativity can form under constraints. Another good option would have skipped to the SNES era with Final Fantasy VI, which is slightly less retro but is more approachable and has an equally compelling story with stronger replay value and tons of mods/romhacks.

  2. Resident Evil 2.

    spoilerOne of the problems with choosing only five of the most important games is that the horror genre and the point-and-click adventure genre both are important in the history of gaming, but there isn't room for both. Resident Evil 2 blends both genres exquisitely in a really compelling, but also endearing B-movie story with lovable characters. The Walking Dead would have been another option, but it doesn't really have gameplay and it strays far enough away from the adventure genre that it doesn't serve as a good example.

  3. Flower.

    spoilerThe Indie Revolution was an important era of gaming history, and motion controls were really big back then. Beautiful, subtle story about overcoming depression. Roger Ebert was wrong and video games could be art. Any indie game during the Indie Revolution golden era (August 2008-September 2015) would fit here, but I picked Flower because, at the time, it challenged what people's expectations of what a video game was supposed to be. Games don't have to be challenging or about fighting to be legitimate. Doesn't have a ton of replay value, but it's the sort of game you'll always come back to during hard times. Barely beat out Stardew Valley, which is longer and has more replay value but isn't an "art game," which was very much the zeitgeist of the era, and Celeste which, in addition to having a beautiful ludonarrative story like Flower, would have also been a good mascot for speedrunning communities, but was created post-indiepocalypse and therefore isn't a good example of the era.

  4. Nier Automata.

    spoilerA really engaging action-focused game with a good story and tons of replay value. Bloodborne and Bayonetta would have also been good choices, but I ultimately went this one because you'll spend more time on it, and there's a co-op mod. It does make this list RPG-heavy, but it's hard to find a pure action game with as much replay value and attention to the plot. It's still a skills-based game and none of the RPG mechanics will save you on the hardest difficulty.

  5. Baldur's Gate III.

    spoilerI would put an open-world, choice-based game here. Even though BG3 is not a true open-world game, it has many the sandbox features open-world players like short of a fun physics system. It's the third entry in the series, but the game doesn't expect you to have played the first two games. Great mod support. I didn't choose other popular open-world/open-zone games because many have paper-thin quests that lack player agency (Daggerfall, half of Oblivion, Skyrim, Dragon Age: Inquisition, Breath of the Wild), don't work as a standalone experience (any of the Mass Effect Trilogy, the Witcher 3), are amazing but too small in scale to be good representatives (KOTOR, Dragon Age: Origins, Deus Ex), are too controversial (Grand Theft Auto, which railroads you into being a bad guy) or have a strong open world and player choices but terrible gameplay (Morrowind). I gave BG3 the edge over Cyberpunk and Fallout: New Vegas due to built-in co-op and endless replay value that would last a lifetime.

If this were a top 10 list, I would add Fallout: New Vegas (for a purer open-world sandbox experience), Super Mario Galaxy (a 3D platformer in a well-known franchise with a strong story), Celeste(the pinnacle of 2D platformers and speedrunners love it), Minecraft(an important social game with constructive cooperative mechanics), and Stardew Valley (best cozy game representative).

[–] Venus_Ziegenfalle@feddit.org 12 points 1 day ago (3 children)

Roblox, Fifa 19, Chinese malware mobile game, Fifa 23, E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial for the Atari 2600.

Pure evil in human form

[–] starman2112@sh.itjust.works 3 points 22 hours ago

Too many fans of Roblox would be happy with this. Replace Roblox with Kingdom Hearts: 358/2 Days and the list is perfect

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[–] SCmSTR@lemmy.blahaj.zone 4 points 22 hours ago (1 children)

Do I get the mods, too (because, realistically, who plays games only unmodded? Children? Console gamers?)?

So, if yes, half life and half life 2.

If not....

  1. Minecraft - this feels like a no brainer. Also needs to have some mod packs. I would choose some fat as fuck packs. But if I only was allowed to choose one, I would choose one of the biggest mod packs that has the most mods in it.

  2. Counter-Strike: Source - has to have all custom maps currently available. There's nearly an infinite amount of content there. But even without custom content, I still think a core pvp FPS is necessary to this list.

  3. Some kind of an mmo. One that has instances of large quantity of player content that can be saved. Social games are incredibly important, to at least me. I don't love WoW. I don't really play MMOs, either, except for one, and it's largely because my partner loves it. So, maybe Guild Wars 2.

  4. A co-op dungeon crawler that can be used for role playing. So, maybe like.... Neverwinter Nights? Or maybe Phantasy Star online...2? Diablo.....?nahhh... PoE maybe.

  5. Some kind of very simmy racing game with simulation physics. Beam.Ng?

The "no new games will ever be made" is a hard one, because I instinctually want to save games that could be used as inspirational "seed" games for people to use as ideas to make new games.

My instinct is to treat this as a "all games are dying. What games would you take to restart?" But in reality, this is "what are your favorite games?" There's a lot of nuance between those two questions, and the lists would be extremely different. So, my list is kind of trying to merge those two concepts.

[–] lka1988@sh.itjust.works 4 points 16 hours ago

because, realistically, who plays games only unmodded? Children? Console gamers?

A lot of people...

[–] Gelik@feddit.dk 3 points 23 hours ago* (last edited 22 hours ago)
  • Garry’s Mod (general sandbox)
  • Arma ~~3~~ Reforger (war and life sim sandbox)
  • GTA V (VI if we buy enough time)
  • ~~Skyrim (heavily mod-able medieval RPG)~~ Kingdom Come Deliverance 2
  • ~~Luanti (voxel foss sandbox with potential)~~ No Man’s Sky 2025

Edit: The focus here was on replayability and modding. Garry's Mod, Arma 3 and GTA cover car racing, shooting, partying and roleplaying. KCD is for history and single-player. I can't wait to play it! No sports games made it into my list. Maybe people can rebuild Wii Sports or something in Garry's Mod, I don't know. Last minuted, I switched to No Man's Sky 2025 over Luanti. Go explore the vast universe y'all! It's a completely different experience compared to my other picks. I've heard it's good now, so I'll go for it blindly.

[–] Mutterwitz@discuss.tchncs.de 2 points 21 hours ago* (last edited 21 hours ago) (1 children)

Skyrim

Fallout 4

Ratchet & Clank

Morrowind

The Witcher 3

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[–] justmercury@lemmy.blahaj.zone 6 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

Selfishly?

Golden Sun 2: One of my favorite game series's growing up, and the first time I experienced a "good" plot twist.

Knights of the Old Republic: Talk about good plot twists, I rented this game from blockbuster once and spent years thinking it was a fever dream.

Pokemon Emerald: Pokemon Crystal is the first game that let me play as a girl, but ruby/sapphire is really my generation.

Baldur's Gate 3: Met my gf playing this, 1000 hours in, all coop with her.

Monster Hunter World: Met my best friend here, 2000 hours in, and basically infinitely replayable in a way that Elden Ring isn't

[–] sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com 8 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

TitanFall 2: Its the Portal 2 engine, but better. Also runs on almost anything these days, looks good, could easily be a basis for a ton of different kind of multiplayer shooters via modding. You could basically rebuild any Source game/mod between 2000 and 2015 ish in it.

Deus Ex (the original): Lower fidelity but that means it can run on more things, is also highly moddable, also has a working multiplayer framework that it's had since almost day one that I guess everyone forgot about, could also be modded into nearly anything, including lower fidelity than TF|2 multiplayer games of basically any kind.

VintageStory: Minecraft, but better. Also highly moddable. Also networkable.

Fallout Online (2/3): Assuming the likely near apocalyptic setting accompanying this hypothetical, we're gonna want a 2.5D turn based tactics platform, FOnline is highly detailed and highly moddable, and is networked. You could also basically rebuild nearly any 2D JRPG in this, yes, even Pokemon, if you can handle 2.5D isometric sprites.

(I was originally going to say either Xenonauts 1 or 2, but then realized you could basically build X1 or X2 in Fallout Online, and FOnline is already networked.)

No Mans Sky: Beyond being essentially the most advanced procedural generation game that I am aware of, in breadth and depth, you're going to want to have all that code to be able to decompile parts of it and thus be able to rebuild other or new digital worlds with it.


I reject the concept that no new games will ever be built.

I've been using and making mods since the 90s.

There will be new games, apocalypse be damned.


Also, as much as I love some Bethesda games, their engine is a heap of broken garbage.

Rebuild FONV or Skyrim in TF|2 or Deus Ex instead.

They are entirely capable of being modded into that.

I'm just saving Planescape: Torment 5 times.

[–] teft@piefed.social 9 points 1 day ago

Fallout 4

Baldur’s Gate 3

Sekiro

Super Mario World

Kingdom Come Deliverance 2

[–] Oka@sopuli.xyz 29 points 1 day ago (5 children)
  • Minecraft (It's a sandbox)
  • Garry's Mod (It's a sandbox)
  • Roblox (It's a sandbox)
  • Skyrim (It's a heavily mod-able medieval RPG)
  • Portal 2 (It's literally anything at this point: a web server, a game engine, a fucking computer, a lot is possible when the right people crack it open)
[–] Gelik@feddit.dk 3 points 23 hours ago (1 children)

Nothing personal but what if we save either GTA V (or VI), TF2, Arma 3 or Foxhole and let Roblox be destroyed?

[–] Oka@sopuli.xyz 2 points 18 hours ago

Gta 5 would be fine. Its got some unique gamemodes with FiveM, and like 992526737373773 empty RP servers.

[–] BurntWits@sh.itjust.works 26 points 1 day ago (2 children)

I clearly don’t know enough about Portal 2, care to explain more? I’m definitely out of the loop.

[–] Quicky@piefed.social 33 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I got you. It’s an entry in the Portal franchise, with the “2” indicating that it is the second in the series.

[–] BurntWits@sh.itjust.works 13 points 1 day ago

Oh shit I had no idea, thanks for clearing things up.

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[–] Elextra@literature.cafe 6 points 1 day ago (2 children)

Burnout Revenge- Its my comfort game. I love it.

Left 4 Dead 2- Favorite multiplayer game

Witcher 3

Diablo 2

Ages of Empires 2

[–] WALLACE@feddit.uk 3 points 22 hours ago

Burnout Revenge was the ultimate party game. Anyone could jump right in and cause chaos without needing to be an experienced gamer. The soundtrack was colossal too.

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[–] 48954246@lemmy.world 25 points 1 day ago (11 children)

Factorio. Not sure I'd need anything else

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[–] xpey@piefed.social 5 points 1 day ago

Skewed towards my taste in gaming, but still trying to think about humanity:

  • UNDERTALE. My favorite videogame OAT, amazing storytelling, characters and soundtrack. This is my least replayable pick, but one that I would not want to lose
  • The Binding of Isaac. Contender for the best Rougelike ever made, with an absurd level of replayability and great modding community
  • Minecraft. Even though i don't care about Minecraft that much, the things that this game has accomplished is crazy. I would not want to lose Redstone or the amazing modding community it has. Tons of ways to play and, it's the most purchased game in history, I think it's worth perserving.
  • Geometry Dash. I would not want to leave the "rithym game" (debatable) community with nothing. GD is also a game I'm super in love with. The community is great and at this point it's close to being its own gaming engine, so I think it fits here.
  • Skyrim. This game I haven't played ever, but I know what it means to a lot of people. Considering the rest of my cartoony and slightly niche picks, I think having one, extremely moddable medieval single player helps to have variety.
[–] 9point6@lemmy.world 10 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (1 children)

Hmm, tough one. I'm going to maximise replayability and this assumes all DLC too

  • RimWorld
  • Factorio
  • Balatro
  • FTL or Slay the Spire
  • Civ 6 or Cities Skylines

Honourable mention to several JRPGs from Squaresoft

Edit: I'm now reading the thread and second guessing everything. But gonna keep my original list

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[–] SlartyBartFast@sh.itjust.works 5 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

OpenMW

MineCraft

GZDoom

DevilutionX

Wargus

[–] natecox@programming.dev 17 points 1 day ago (1 children)
  • Chrono Trigger
  • Castlevania: Symphony of the Night
  • Pokémon Red
  • Stardew Valley

Think I’m good with those 4.

Throw in Math Blaster so I can pretend to value humanity or something.

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