Tags / single player

"single player"

16 BuzzVerdicts across PC Games (13), Mobile Games (3)

Half-Life 2

4.5

2004 · First-Person Shooter · PC / Steam

Half-Life 2 redefined what a first-person shooter could be in 2004, and its influence is still visible across the genre more than two decades later. The physics, the world-building, and the way it tells a story without ever taking the camera away from the player remain gold standards. Some sections drag, the vehicle sequences haven't aged as gracefully as the rest, and first-time players today may not feel the same shock of the new. But as a complete package, it's still one of the most important and well-crafted shooters ever made, and the 20th anniversary update proved Valve still cares about keeping it that way.

Black Myth: Wukong

4.3

2024 · Action RPG · PC / Steam

Black Myth: Wukong delivers some of the most visually spectacular boss fights in the action RPG genre, backed by a combat system that rewards patience and precision. Its adaptation of Journey to the West brings a mythological setting that feels refreshingly distinct in a space crowded with European dark fantasy. Camera struggles during large-scale encounters and inconsistent PC optimization hold it back from true greatness, but the highs are high enough to make it one of 2024's most memorable releases. Game Science's debut is a statement of intent that lands more often than it misses.

Half-Life

4.3

1998 · First-Person Shooter · PC / Steam

Half-Life proved in 1998 that first-person shooters could tell stories through gameplay rather than cutscenes, and that proof changed the entire genre. The seamless scripted sequences, the escalating alien threat, and the way Black Mesa feels like a real place you're fighting through rather than a series of arenas remain impressive decades later. Some sections drag, the platforming has always been divisive, and the final chapters on Xen test patience more than skill. But the journey from the test chamber to the G-Man's offer is one of gaming's most iconic, and the modding community it spawned, including Counter-Strike, reshaped PC gaming entirely.

Neon White

4.3

2022 · Action Platformer · PC / Steam

Neon White is a speedrunning game disguised as a first-person shooter, and it pulls off that fusion with extraordinary confidence. The card-based movement system is brilliantly designed, levels are short enough to replay dozens of times without frustration, and chasing faster times becomes deeply addictive. The visual novel story segments will split the room, and the humor lands better for some than others. But the core loop of sprinting through heaven, discarding weapon cards for movement abilities, and shaving seconds off your best time is among the most satisfying action gameplay on PC in recent years.

Black Mesa

4.3

2020 · FPS · PC / Steam

Black Mesa is the rare fan project that reached professional quality and then kept pushing beyond it. Crowbar Collective took the foundation of a legendary game, rebuilt it with modern tools, and had the ambition to completely reimagine its weakest section into something memorable. The early and middle chapters are a faithful, gorgeous update of a classic. Xen is a bold creative swing that mostly connects. Some sections drag, and the game's Source engine roots show their age in spots, but the overall package stands as one of the best remakes in gaming, fan-made or otherwise.

Prey (2017)

4.3

2017 · Immersive Sim · PC / Steam

Prey is the kind of game that gets better the more freedom you give it. Arkane Austin built one of the most intricately designed spaces in gaming with Talos I, then filled it with systems that reward curiosity and creative thinking at every turn. Combat won't win any awards, and the backtracking can test your patience with its loading screens. But the core loop of exploring, discovering, and improvising your way through problems puts this among the best immersive sims ever made. It sold poorly and never got the attention it deserved, which is a shame, because there's nothing else quite like it.

Wolfenstein: The New Order

4.2

2014 · First-Person Shooter · PC / Steam

Wolfenstein: The New Order pulled off something nobody expected: it made a Wolfenstein game with a genuinely compelling story. MachineGames built a shooter that hits hard in combat and harder in its quieter moments, creating an alternate-history world where the characters matter as much as the gunfights. The dual-wielding system encourages aggressive play that fits the franchise's identity, and the stealth options give every encounter a tactical dimension. Some pacing dips in the middle chapters and occasional technical rough spots don't diminish what is fundamentally one of the best single-player shooters of its generation.

Another Eden: The Cat Beyond Time and Space

4.0

2019 · JRPG

Another Eden is that rare mobile game built as a single-player JRPG first and a gacha game second. There is no PvP, no energy system, no limited-time events, and no pressure to spend money. The story spans hundreds of hours across time periods with writing from the creator of Chrono Trigger, backed by a memorable soundtrack. Grinding gets heavy in the late game, story characters fall behind gacha-obtained ones in combat, and updates can require lengthy downloads. But for anyone who wants a traditional JRPG experience on their phone that respects their time and their wallet more than almost any other free-to-play game on the market, Another Eden delivers.

Alan Wake 2

4.0

2023 · Survival Horror · PC / Epic Games Store

Alan Wake 2 is Remedy Entertainment's most ambitious game, and it largely delivers on that ambition. The atmosphere, visual design, and integration of live-action sequences create something that feels unlike anything else in the genre. Saga's investigative gameplay and the Dark Place's shifting reality offer two distinct flavors of horror that complement each other well. But the pacing asks a lot of patience, combat doesn't evolve enough over the runtime, and the PC version's hardware demands limit who can experience it properly. For players who want a horror game that prioritizes mood and narrative above all else, this is one of the most memorable entries in years.

Lies of P

4.0

2023 · Action RPG · PC / Steam

Lies of P is the strongest non-FromSoftware entry in the soulslike genre, and it earns that distinction through sheer commitment to its own identity. The Belle Epoque steampunk setting is gorgeous, the weapon assembly system adds real creativity to builds, and the boss fights will test even experienced players. Some of those bosses push past challenging into frustrating, and the story doesn't quite stick the landing on every thread it weaves. But Round8 Studio built something that stands next to the games it draws inspiration from without looking like a shadow, and that's an achievement very few studios have managed.

BioShock 2

3.8

2010 · First-Person Shooter · PC / Steam

BioShock 2 is the sequel that time has treated better than its launch window did. The combat is a genuine improvement over the original, with the dual-wielding of plasmids and weapons creating a fluidity that the first game never achieved. The father-daughter narrative at its center provides emotional grounding that gives your choices real weight. It doesn't match its predecessor's power of revelation, the shock of discovering Rapture for the first time can't be replicated, and the story plays it safer than fans hoped. But as a shooter set in one of gaming's most iconic locations, with combat that finally lives up to the setting's potential, it deserves the reassessment it has been receiving.

Wolfenstein II: The New Colossus

3.6

2017 · First-Person Shooter · PC / Steam

Wolfenstein II: The New Colossus has the combat chops and narrative ambition to stand as a worthy sequel, but the balance between story and gameplay tilts too far toward the former. The cutscenes are frequently stunning, with performances and writing that outclass most games in any genre. The shooting is intense and satisfying when you're allowed to do it. But the game spends so much time taking control away from the player that the campaign feels like it's fighting itself, alternating between thrilling gunfights and extended cinematics that test your patience. It's a good shooter wrapped in too much movie.

Wolcen: Lords of Mayhem

3.0

2020 · Action RPG · PC / Steam

Wolcen: Lords of Mayhem is a cautionary tale wrapped in gorgeous packaging. Its visuals remain among the best the ARPG genre has produced, its Gate of Fates passive system is an inventive take on character building, and the voiced campaign shows more ambition than most games in this space attempt. But persistent bugs, balance problems that funnel players into a narrow set of viable endgame builds, and the end of all development and multiplayer support in 2024 leave it as a single-player curiosity rather than a genre contender. There's a good game buried here for those willing to accept its limitations, but the ceiling it could have reached makes its reality sting.