• Obi@sopuli.xyz
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    7 days ago

    Not one mention of WoW anywhere in this article or this thread, I find that at least somewhat surprising!

  • makeshiftreaper@lemmy.world
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    9 days ago

    There’s a lot of good arguments out there. Pong for being the “first”, Pac-Man for making arcades insane and bringing in big money, Tetris for its wide appeal, Mario 64 for convincing everyone 3d games work, Doom for popularizing the fps, Wii Sports for its ubiquity, Farmville for starting what would become mobile games (which as much as gamers hate to admit, they make more money than every other platform combined). It’d take a pretty convincing argument for me to fully believe any of them but of mine I’d make an argument for Pac-Man, but my heart wants it to be Tetris

    • Broadfern@lemmy.world
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      9 days ago

      The beautiful tapestry of video game history is not woven from a single thread alone. Each person will have their favorites, naturally, but every delightful (and sometimes not delightful) digital block has contributed to where we are today.

      That is, to say, I agree with you. They should break it down into categories tbcf

    • Coldmoon@sh.itjust.works
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      9 days ago

      Correct - it’s Doom and it’s not even close. They’re still making Doom levels and doom clones.

      • Dudewitbow@lemmy.zip
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        9 days ago

        and i dont even say doom because of doom the game itself. theres one factor that doom has that almost all the others dont, which is how relevant doom was for creating a game engine, which would evolve into other game engines.

        doom engine is basically responsible for quake, goldsrc, id tech, IW, source, all of which had many defining games.

        the fact that games still being released till this day, has roots on an engine developed over 30 years ago

  • kbal@fedia.io
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    9 days ago

    Rogue. You’ve heard of Roguelikes? It influenced more than just them. Probably every action RPG owes it something.

    • mindbleach@sh.itjust.works
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      8 days ago

      Hard to argue with this. I’m going to, anyway, and give a doubly contrarian answer - the most influential video game of all time is Dungeons & Dragons.

      There is not a single element of CRPGs that wasn’t nailed down by 1976, on various mainframes. All those teenage dorks were ripping off the freshly-released tabletop RPG and adding first-person dungeon crawling, random map generation, and everything else that Akalabeth popularized but did not invent. Some of them had real-time multiplayer. Because mainframes.

      Rogue was only the best of an entire spate of games just like it - a popular and well-built point of reference more than a surprising innovator. The continuing explosion of CRPGs was surely less about deliberately saying “let’s make a game like Rogue” and more about other people seeing your broader-zeitgeist dungeon-crawler and saying “oh, it’s like Rogue.”

      By contrast, Doom is a clear inflection point. “Doom clones” were absolutely trying to clone Doom. id themselves wound up cloning Doom. But I’m not sure Rogue, arriving in 1980, was anything more than an excellent example of the wider genre it came from.

      In fact, for direct contrast, damn near every JRPG traces back to Wizardry. That game’s creators explicitly namedrop earlier mainframe titles. The Japanese did not have the same tabletop game trend. The PC-8801 port of Wizardry came out of fucking nowhere, for them, and apparently blew their dicks off.

      • Björn Tantau@swg-empire.de
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        8 days ago

        Doom was also born out of D&D sessions. And the What genre is Doom? video argues pretty well for RPG.

        Almost every game nowadays has some kind of story. Pure abstract games like Tetris, however long lasting and multigenerational they are, are the vast minority. Even in something like Pong you play the role of a tennis player.

        So, yeah, almost every game is an RPG.

        • Hoimo@ani.social
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          7 days ago

          If Pong is an RPG, then tennis is an RPG. When I use reflexes to move the paddles, I’m not playing the role of a tennis player, I am playing tennis (some form of it at least).

  • biofaust@lemmy.world
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    8 days ago

    Half-life. Maybe it didn’t innovate specifically anything, but it’s the first real maturely designed game, with incredible attention to detail and focused on conveying a cinematic story in fully interactive environments.

    And don’t get me started on HL2.

  • jacksilver@lemmy.world
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    8 days ago

    I think naming a single game is hard, but most influencial franchise in gaming would have to be Mario. Between the platformers, smash, kart and the music it is just so widely recognizable.

    • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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      8 days ago

      Eh, Super Mario Bros was super influential, and kicked off the Mario franchise. So I’d probably pick that.

      Or maybe Pong, which normalized digital gaming. Or maybe Space Invaders.

      • jacksilver@lemmy.world
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        7 days ago

        I think those are both valid picks. If you can only pick one game it’s going to have to be one that changed how the world looked at video games.

  • taladar@sh.itjust.works
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    8 days ago

    Minecraft might be a good contender in terms of spawning the survival genre and also having so many mods used to pioneer entirely new game modes and even having a major part in machinima and Let’s Plays and such things on Youtube.

          • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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            8 days ago

            Well, pretty much everything in Ultima was either innovated or popularized there. It came out in 1980, there really wasn’t a lot before it with any kind of complexity.

              • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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                7 days ago

                Mostly the open world.

                III was a bit more influential with:

                • tiled graphics
                • party combat (Wizardry also had it)
                • time travel

                But each game from the Ultima series was additive, and Ultima also pulled from Akalabeth, so it’s hard to pick a specific game to be “most influential.” Is it Ultima I because it started the series that largely standardized CRPGs? Or is it Akalabeth because its success led to Ultima?

                • RowRowRowYourBot@sh.itjust.works
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                  7 days ago

                  And that’s why I had a problem with this from the start as Ultima 1 really wasn’t that ground breaking compared to others but by 4 you have an unspoken karmic system that tracks level advancement that blew my mind as a kid once I realized that was a thing.

                  Ultima absolutely pushed significant boundaries but I have a hard time saying it was more influential than tetris.

  • starman2112@sh.itjust.works
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    7 days ago

    Many other games have “defined” their genres, but few have done so quite as completely as Doom (1993). And on top of birthing the entire FPS genre, the practice of making Doom run on any electronic device with a screen and a CPU has long been a fantastic exercise in programming and hacking. The possibility of implementing Doom in everything from calculators to pregnancy tests to Captcha in a browser window has kept the game in the public consciousness for decades, and will continue to do so for decades to come.

    Of course the real answer is Clash of Clans, because it popularized mobile gaming and skyrocketed that platform’s revenue to the point that it outpaces every other gaming platform combined, but I’ll boycott BAFTA if something riddled with microtransactions gets any recognition

  • Coelacanth@feddit.nu
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    9 days ago

    I genuinely think FarmVille is a contender, as I said in the other thread, but realistically gaming has existed long enough that picking just one is kind of impossible. There have been several shifts and revolutions. With how much of the revenue in gaming currently flows through mobile games, gacha games and live service games etc I really do believe FarmVille might be the strongest influence on the current landscape of gaming. But historically, it’s possible Doom was more important for its development. Or even Super Mario Bros for putting home consoles on the map. I could even see an argument for Minecraft - it’s completely ubiquitous and an absolutely global phenomenon.

    Gaming is already big enough and has existed long enough that the question is fairly unanswerable. It’s like picking the most influential movie. Is it Birth of a Nation for inventing cinematic language? The Jazz Singer for popularising “talkies”? Is it Workers Leaving the Lumière Factory in Lyon for being the “first”? Is it The Wizard of Oz? Is it just Citizen Kane? The truth is, it’s none of them. It’s all of them.