Games you underestimated?

Splinter Cell series. I thought I wouldn't like it, then I played one and it became one of my favorite game series.

Snap. Tried the first game one day out of boredom, it introduced me to true stealth & ended up becoming one of my favourite games of all time. Playing through it again now actually.
 
It's hard to say exactly why it's so enjoyable to play, but I'm guessing it has to do with the fact there really is no stress involved when playing it. There's no clock to beat, no boss battles or complex puzzles and while that may sound boring from a gaming standpoint, it has its merits when everything outside of gaming just seems to pile stress on you.
Although I do not play that game, I can understand that. Sometimes it's nice just to play something easy again after having so many challenging games.

Things like that are why I like NFS Undercover on the PS2, I like how easy it is because it's a nice change from all the other NFS games they had done prior and it's like a nice stroll through the park.
The first black ops campaign was my favorite out of the entire cod series. Great game.
Black Ops is actually my favorite game for zombies out of all the others. I got to thinking, I am sure the campaign is good, but it's just not for me. I never really cared for anything outside of zombies in COD for some reason and I don't know why, it just never interested me.
 
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Test Drive Off-Road 2.
So I grew up playing Test Drive 5 a lot and was quite a fan of the game as a kid. That said, I noticed inside the case, it showed the cover of Test Drive Off-Road 2, which depicted a yellow Hummer driving through a river and kicking up water. Okay, not only did I love Hummers as a kid, but the simple idea of going offroad, being able to drive through a flowing river was something that fascinated me back then (heck, it still does :dopey:) and the fact it was Test Drive was another. At a young age, I really wanted the game and a lot of wild fantasies as to what it would be like and thought it would be fantastic, but I didn't have an easy way to get it for a long time and never saw it anywhere.

Fast forward to 2015, many years later, I finally found it in a game store for like $2 and some change. While I was happy to find it, I didn't get my hopes up too high because I had gotten some games I wanted as a kid, namely 007 Racing and Twisted Metal 2, and ended up not caring too much for them. I didn't necessarily think it was going to be bad, it's just I had got older and I deemed a lot of what I had expected it to be as a kid as unrealistic expectations based games I had gotten in the past and didn't think it would be as good as I originally anticipated.

I was so wrong. The game was every bit as good I had originally anticipated as a kid, perhaps even better and I thoroughly enjoyed playing it. Theirs a lot I could say, but the vehicle selection was interesting and had ones I had never heard of. The tracks were a total blast to drive on, especially since driving through water was required on some of them. The AI was not as absurdly overpowered as Test Drive 5 and actually felt beatable, unlike the others I played. So, not only did it live up to my childhood expectations, but it exceeded them! So much so, it completely overtook Test Drive 5 as my favorite Test Drive game even with nostalgia included. It's easily the 2nd best PS1 game I have ever bought and is somewhere in my top 5 list of games I bought in the 2010s. Years later, I still find myself wanting to play it at random times rather often and it's become a staple of my PS1 library now.
 
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A Plague Tale: innocence.

"Oh here is another mediocre free ps plus game I've never heard of, suppose I'll give it a quick go... " were my first thoughts then I started playing it and wow, my game of the year for 2021 (I know it was released before).

Loved the setting, the story and the gameplay mechanics. The sequel is now one of my most anticipated games.
 
Wreckfest.
Having played Destruction Derby in recent years and liking it and generally being a dirty driver ever since I started gaming, it was natural I would eventually take an interest in Wreckfest. When I first saw it, I was quite pleased with what I was looking at and eventually considered buying it. While I didn't expect it to be "bad", my expectations were not too high and I had a feeling it would be one of those games I would probably try for a bit and not touch again for a long time since that's how I often reacted to newer games.

However, this could not have been further from the truth. Upon playing it for the first time, it connected with me on a personal level and I quickly became addicted to it, something that rarely happens. It looked good, it ran good, the car list was great, the damage was the best I've ever seen and it normalized pretty much every bad driving habit I've ever had in gaming and it just felt more "me" than most games I had played. The first 2 days I had it, I played it until my thumb hurt and the last time I did that, was back when I beat Need for Speed Carbon in early 2007. This game quickly became a huge favorite of mine and was easily one of the best racing games I had played in many years. So much so, it made my list of top 10 favorite racing games only months after getting the game, when the other games had years' worth of time before being listed, but it really didn't need it to make the list because Wreckfest was just that good!

I had many reasons for getting an Xbox Series X, one of them was to play Forza Horizon 4 and while I did give it a try, Wreckfest stole the spotlight for me and I never even played FH4 much at all afterward simply because I'd rather play Wreckfest. I played the game every day for about 6 months straight and that is very unnatural for me because most games never last that long, but it did and it was fun! Nearly a year and a half since I got it and it's still a game I find myself wanting to play fairly often. Been surprised before, but this one was like no other.
 
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Prey (the one from 2017) by Arkane Studios Austin.

Was eager to see what this game was about and played the demo before it launched but the demo didn't really sell me on it so I passed. Year or so later I bought it on sale and turns out I was very wrong about the game and it is now one of my favorite games ever, probably top 10. Maybe demos aren't always a good thing at demonstrating the final product...

Hurts that studio which made the game was just closed last month and we will probably never see a sequel.
 
Currently? Immortals of Aveum. Being a new PC player, I downloaded the demo out of curiosity and to see how my new rig measured. The experience was a bit rough then, so I moved on. But having recently launched on Game Pass, I gave it another chance in console and PC, and thanks to many enhancements (FSR 3.1 and frame generation) it ran much better, and I got deeper into the game mechanics specially, and is so much fun.
 
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Here’s a rather left-field one, New Super Lucky’s Tale. I do love a good 3D platformer and so does my four year old, so when I saw this on Game Pass I gave it a try and initially thought it was just another slightly generic Mario clone, a bit of a **** game but I’d download it because my son would like it. Like the Paw Patrol games, which utterly suck but he liked them so I don’t mind downloading them. But he didn’t just like Lucky, he loved it, adored it, and the more I played it I started to. It’s just a very nice platformer, not the hardest (although some of the boss battles take a few attempts) but charming and varied, each world feels really different and it’s got a really nice atmosphere and, yeah, it’s charming. I prefer it to an awful lot of so-called AAA efforts and while it’s not Mario Odyssey, it’s a very good and overlooked game, the kind of Game Pass find that really makes the subscription worthwhile.
 
Mine would probably be NASCAR Heat 4
NASCAR Heat 3 was a terrible looking, terrible sounding Unity asset flip with physics that feel more like trying to drive a giant rock than a (Admittedly very heavy) purpose-built race car, and I assumed Heat 4 would be more of the same.
I was very wrong.

The career isn’t really that different from NH3 (Although the drivers reacting to your on-track actions through legally not X™️ was a nice touch), but the physics, graphics and AI were such a massive step up from the last game that I found it hard to believe they were made by the same group of people. The sounds were pretty good too, especially the sound of the cars reverberating off the walls. It’s a shame that NASCAR 21 Ignition didn’t even come close to matching that experience, and although I am interested in seeing how iRacing’s upcoming official NASCAR game fares, I’m not sure if I’ll enjoy it as much if it ends up being much more of a sim experience, as NH4 is a very accessible game once you learn the oddities of how a NASCAR car works.
 
Le Mans Ultimate

Given how MSG was operating behind the scenes after the disaster of NASCAR 21 and fumbling the Indycar and BTCC licenses, I was absolutely prepared to hate LMU as another broken and buggy dumpster fire.

Turns out the driving is solid and quite enjoyable. Car sounds are very good, especially the hybrid systems in the ACO hypercars. Tweak the AI difficulty to a decent level and single player races can be a lot of fun. It is still rough being an early access game but it seems like S397 and MSG are genuinely trying to turn things around now.
 
Another great thread by @Sonygamer455, the person contributing most to the conversation of games in general on this forum - thank you!

Tacoma is probably the game that has stuck in my memory most as one I underestimated, when I first tried it I probably forced myself to play it thinking I'd get anything like an informed opinion of it, I played about 15 minutes then swore I'd never play such a tedious and uninteresting game ever again.

Then in 2020, I played Scanner Sombre on a whim and asked r/patientgamers for similar recommendations and Tacoma was mentioned by a few people, so I gave it a shot and actually loved it, it's up there with What Remains of Edith Finch for me, just an excellent story in the clothes of a short, simple first person exploration game.

If you want to play it yourself, I recommend watching Moon first to get in the mood. I mean it's a completely different story, but there are a couple of common themes.
 
Mine would probably be NASCAR Heat 4
NASCAR Heat 3 was a terrible looking, terrible sounding Unity asset flip with physics that feel more like trying to drive a giant rock than a (Admittedly very heavy) purpose-built race car, and I assumed Heat 4 would be more of the same.
I was very wrong.

The career isn’t really that different from NH3 (Although the drivers reacting to your on-track actions through legally not X™️ was a nice touch), but the physics, graphics and AI were such a massive step up from the last game that I found it hard to believe they were made by the same group of people. The sounds were pretty good too, especially the sound of the cars reverberating off the walls. It’s a shame that NASCAR 21 Ignition didn’t even come close to matching that experience, and although I am interested in seeing how iRacing’s upcoming official NASCAR game fares, I’m not sure if I’ll enjoy it as much if it ends up being much more of a sim experience, as NH4 is a very accessible game once you learn the oddities of how a NASCAR car works.
Totally agreed. NH4 is genuinely a good game, very accessible but quite convincing too as a recreation of the real life sport - easily the peak of that series I think given how much better it is than 3 and how Heat 5 was just Copy+Paste+AddNewBugs.
 
Grand Theft Auto

I'd been aware of the first two games but their concept never really appealed. By 1999/2000 we had Gran Turismo and Gran Turismo 2. We also had Driver, which felt like a proper third-person, 3D version of the then top-down GTA's which although they were well rated, at that time felt like old-fashioned 16 or 8-bit gaming. A friend of mine told me about how good the then new GTAIII was so i eventually, and probaby reluctantly, ended up renting it from Blockbuster one weekend and was instantly hooked.
 
Need For Speed Most Wanted (2012)

Frankly speaking, I hated this game until the other day.

It was a copy of Burnout that borrowed the name of a greatest NFS. That alone was enough to make me hate it.

But I found this game on Steam for cheap, so I bought it and played it.
In the end, this game was Burnout Paradise with the name Need For Speed.

So what? It's the gooooood game.

Great music, B2D but exhilarating handling. The fun of destroying all the police cars chasing me and acting like Taz.
It's been a long time since I've had a game that made me smile. It's fun. I should have let go of my prejudices sooner.
 
For it Sleeping Dogs. I bought because it was on sale but it is great underrated game. I am surprised that Square Enix & United Front Games didn't do a sequel. I haven't finished it but I have fun whenever I play
 
The entire Sniper Elite series.

I know it sounds stupid to have underestimated such a big name in the genre but I had always had a "FPS or nothing" attitude when it came to shooters, coming from old school Medal Of Honor and Call Of Duty background, and initially wrote SE off simply because of it third person view. Eventually a friend managed to talk me into trying SE4, it turned out to be great, and we've now co-opped through 4, 3 and 5 in that order. Now I have nearly 400 hours on them combined so it's safe to say my initial impression had been totally off.
 
Spyro 2.
Just recently I decided to go on a playthrough of the original Spyro games starting with Spyro 3 since it was my introduction to the series and then I proceeded to play 1 and 2 after. To my disappointment, I didn't have as much fun with Spyro 3 as I expected and Spyro 1, despite playing through the entire game for the first time, didn't quite do it for me for various reasons. Seeing as revisiting the game that made me like the series in the first place failed to entertain me like it always had and doing my first ever complete playthrough of the first game didn't do much for me either, I honestly was starting to think my age was finally catching up with me and I was losing interest in Spyro. That said, while I was more optimistic about Spyro 2 than Spyro 1, I didn't get my hopes up too for the very reason I just mentioned.

This feeling quickly changed after I started playing Spyro 2 for the first time. Not even 30 minutes in and I was already having a lot more fun than I ever did with Spyro 1. The game appealed to me a lot more because it played similarly to Spyro 3, which is what I had been used to for the past 20 years, and it generally was more familiar to me. Not only that, but it had some things I really liked that never even made it to the 3rd game, so it gave me a new vibe while still being what I had been used to. It felt kind of like an expansion pack of the 3rd game for me and this was a great feeling! Did it frustrate me at times? Yes, lord knows Fracture Hils and Magma Cone did, but my experience overall was a very wholesome one, and it was the most fun I have had with a video game since I got Wreckfest. So much so, I poured more time into gaming than I usually would each day for the sake of playing it and had no regrets doing it.

Looking back now, I think the reasons why I didn't enjoy the other 2 was because in 3's case, I had played it a million times over the years and was just retreading old ground again and the 1st didn't appeal to me much because it wasn't what I was used to. (and that's putting it very bluntly) While I don't blame myself for tempering my expectations, Spyro 2 undoubtedly exceeded them and reminded me again of why I liked the series. I am pretty enthusiastic about revisiting it again in the future and I am especially eager to see how it's remake is when I am ready! :)
 
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