Tags / story-driven

"story-driven"

39 BuzzVerdicts across PC Games (34), Board Games (1), Mobile Games (4)

Baldur's Gate 3

4.8

2023 · RPG · PC / Steam

Baldur's Gate 3 is the kind of RPG that resets expectations for the entire genre. Larian Studios built a game where player choice actually matters in ways that ripple across dozens of hours, and they did it with a level of polish and ambition that makes most competitors look like they weren't trying. Act 3 performance issues and a few rough edges keep it from perfection, but everything else operates at a level so far above the norm that the flaws barely register. This is the new benchmark for what a story-driven RPG can be, and it's going to take something extraordinary to move the bar again.

Portal 2

4.8

2011 · Puzzle / First-Person · PC / Steam

Portal 2 is Valve at the peak of its creative powers, delivering a puzzle game that's also one of the funniest and best-written games ever made. The single-player campaign is a masterclass in pacing and puzzle design, the co-op campaign is one of the best cooperative experiences in gaming, and the Steam Workshop ensures you'll never run out of new chambers to solve. Puzzles occasionally prioritize spectacle over challenge, and the comedy won't land for everyone, but those are minor complaints against a game that does nearly everything right. Over a decade later, nothing has replaced it.

The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt

4.8

2015 · Action RPG · PC / Steam

The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt is one of those rare games where the story, the world, and the characters all operate at an elite level simultaneously. Combat and movement never quite reach that same tier, and the open world carries its share of forgettable filler, but those are footnotes in a game that gets the big things so right it changed what people expect from the genre. CD Projekt Red built something that still pulls in new players a decade after launch, and the two DLC expansions only cemented its reputation. If you care about narrative in games, this is the one people will measure everything else against for years to come.

Baldur's Gate 2: Shadows of Amn

4.7

2000 · RPG · PC / Steam

Baldur's Gate 2: Shadows of Amn earned its reputation as one of the finest RPGs ever made, and more than two decades later, that reputation holds. The companion writing alone would carry a lesser game, but everything around it, from quest design to the magic system to Irenicus as a villain, operates at a level that most RPGs still haven't matched. Dated pathfinding and some clunky D&D 2nd Edition mechanics are real friction points for modern players, but they're the price of admission for an experience that rewards every hour you put into it. If you care about RPGs at all, this one set the standard.

Hades

4.7

2020 · Action Roguelike · PC / Steam

Hades solved the roguelike genre's biggest problem by making failure feel like progress, and it did it with some of the tightest combat and most charming writing in any game of its era. Supergiant Games built a game where dying sends you back to the start but moves the story forward, turning repetition into something you actually look forward to. The weapon variety, the boon system, and the sheer personality packed into every interaction keep runs feeling fresh for far longer than they should. If you've ever bounced off roguelikes because they felt like a grind, this is the one that might change your mind.

Hades II

4.7

2025 · Action Roguelike · PC / Steam

Hades II is the rare sequel that matches its predecessor while carving out its own identity. Supergiant Games expanded the combat, deepened the progression systems, and built a world that rewards dozens of hours of repeat runs without ever feeling like a grind. Melinoe stands on her own as a protagonist, and the Greek mythology framing remains as rich and well-realized as ever. A few weapons land better than others, and the story's ending hasn't satisfied everyone, but those are minor blemishes on a game that earned its place among the best roguelikes ever made. If the original Hades grabbed you, this one won't let go.

Half-Life: Alyx

4.7

2020 · First-Person Shooter · PC / Steam (VR Only)

Half-Life: Alyx is the game VR needed to prove the technology could carry a full, premium experience. Valve poured the kind of production quality into this that the medium had been waiting for, and the result is a campaign that rivals any traditional first-person shooter in scope and polish. The VR requirement limits who can actually play it, and a few design choices hold it back from the full physical immersion that other VR titles have explored. But for anyone with the hardware, this is the single best argument for strapping on a headset. It set the bar for VR gaming and nothing has cleared it yet.

Outer Wilds

4.7

2019 · Exploration Adventure · PC / Steam

Outer Wilds is one of those rare games that does something no other game has done, and does it so well that you'll wish you could forget it just to experience it again. The knowledge-based progression system is brilliant, the solar system is endlessly fascinating to explore, and the story it tells through environmental discovery is among the best in the medium. Some players will bounce off the time loop or the lack of direction, and the controls can frustrate in tight spaces. But for those who click with what Outer Wilds is doing, it's a once-in-a-lifetime experience. Games this original don't come along often.

Persona 5 Royal

4.7

2019 · JRPG · PC / Steam

Persona 5 Royal is one of those rare 100-hour games that earns nearly every one of those hours. The fusion of dungeon crawling, social simulation, and style-forward presentation creates something no other RPG has managed to replicate. Combat could use more teeth on default settings, and Mementos remains a slog no matter how many quality-of-life improvements get layered on top, but the highs here are extraordinary. Royal's third semester adds a story arc that many consider the best stretch in the entire game. If you have the time and patience for a JRPG that demands your full attention, this one rewards it like few others.

Celeste

4.6

2018 · Precision Platformer · PC / Steam

Celeste is a precision platformer that manages to be both punishingly hard and deeply compassionate. The controls are some of the tightest in the genre, the level design introduces and discards mechanics at a pace that keeps every chapter feeling fresh, and the story about Madeline's climb hits harder than most people expect from a game about jumping. Assist Mode ensures nobody gets locked out, even if the intended experience involves dying thousands of times. It's a short game that leaves a long impression, and the B-side and C-side chapters ensure that players looking for a real challenge will find one waiting.

Red Dead Redemption 2

4.6

2018 · Action-Adventure · PC / Steam

Red Dead Redemption 2 is Rockstar's most ambitious game and a towering achievement in world-building, atmosphere, and narrative storytelling. Arthur Morgan's arc is one of the best character studies in gaming, and the world of 1899 America is realized with a level of detail that still hasn't been matched. Sluggish controls, heavily scripted missions, and a deliberate pace that borders on tedious will test your patience, and the PC version adds a mandatory third-party launcher to that list. But the story and the world it inhabits are good enough to justify every slow animation and clunky menu. Play it for Arthur. Stay for the sunsets.

Planescape: Torment

4.5

1999 · RPG · PC / Steam

Planescape: Torment is one of the finest written RPGs ever made, a game that treats its medium as literature and pulls it off. Its combat drags and its systems can feel opaque, but the writing is so sharp and the world so strange that those problems shrink against everything else. If you want a game that asks hard questions and respects your intelligence enough to let you sit with the answers, this is it. Few RPGs have ever matched its ambition, and fewer still have delivered on it this completely.

Disco Elysium

4.5

2019 · RPG · PC / Steam

Disco Elysium is one of the most original RPGs ever made, a game that strips out combat entirely and replaces it with a dialogue and thought system so deep that you won't miss swinging a sword. The writing is sharp, philosophical, frequently hilarious, and unlike anything else in the genre. Your own personality traits argue with each other inside your head, and the result is a character-building system that's both mechanically inventive and narratively brilliant. It's not for everyone, and the reading-heavy design will bounce players who want action. But for those who connect with it, there's nothing else like it in gaming.

Fallout: New Vegas

4.5

2010 · Action RPG · PC / Steam

Fallout: New Vegas is the RPG that prioritizes player choice above everything else, and it delivers on that promise better than almost any game in the genre. The writing is sharp, the faction system creates real moral tension, and the Mojave Wasteland rewards curiosity with stories worth finding. It looks dated, it shipped with significant technical problems that community patches only partially solved, and the combat never rises above passable. None of that has dented its reputation. Obsidian Entertainment built a game that trusts the player, and the community has repaid that trust with a loyalty that only grows stronger with time.

Ghost of Tsushima

4.5

2020 · Action Adventure · PC / Steam

Ghost of Tsushima is the best samurai game available on PC, and one of the most visually striking open worlds ever built. Sucker Punch crafted a combat system that makes sword fighting feel both deadly and elegant, and the wind-guided exploration strips away the clutter that drags down so many games in the genre. It follows the open-world formula closely enough that fatigue sets in during the back half, and the story takes fewer risks than its setting deserves. But the moment-to-moment experience of riding through autumnal forests, cutting down Mongol patrols, and discovering hidden shrines carries a quality that makes the familiar structure feel fresh. The PC port by Nixxes is excellent, making this the definitive way to play.

God of War (2018)

4.5

2018 · Action-Adventure · PC / Steam

God of War reinvented a franchise by slowing down and growing up. The relationship between Kratos and Atreus carries the entire experience, supported by weighty combat, a stunningly realized Norse world, and a single continuous camera shot that never cuts away. Enemy variety and puzzle design don't reach the same heights as the story and combat, and backtracking through previously visited areas wears thin. But the emotional core of a father learning to connect with his son, set against a mythology that mirrors their struggles, makes this one of the most memorable action games on PC.

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.

Mass Effect Legendary Edition

4.5

2021 · Action RPG · PC / Steam

Mass Effect Legendary Edition is the definitive way to experience one of gaming's most celebrated trilogies. BioWare's remaster brings all three games and nearly all their DLC into a single package, with the first game receiving improvements significant enough to make it feel modern again. The third game's ending remains divisive even with the Extended Cut, and the visual upgrades vary in quality across the trilogy, but the core experience of building a Commander Shepard and watching your choices ripple across three full games is still unmatched. This is a trilogy that changed what people expected from narrative in games, and it holds up.

Undertale

4.5

2015 · Indie RPG · PC / Steam

Undertale is a game built on subversion. It looks like a throwback to 16-bit RPGs, but underneath that surface sits one of the most inventive takes on the genre ever made. The combat system rewards patience and curiosity over grinding, the characters stick with you long after the credits roll, and the soundtrack alone justifies the price of admission. It's short, it's deliberately lo-fi, and its gameplay outside of the narrative hook won't satisfy anyone looking for deep mechanical systems. But what it sets out to do, it does better than almost anything else in the medium.

What Remains of Edith Finch

4.5

2017 · Adventure · PC / Steam

What Remains of Edith Finch is a masterclass in interactive storytelling that crams more creativity into two hours than most games manage in twenty. Every vignette finds a new way to connect what you're doing with your hands to what's happening in the story, and that connection is what elevates it beyond a simple walk through a house. It's short, it's not interested in challenging you mechanically, and it won't change your mind about narrative-focused games if you've already decided they're not for you. But if you're open to a game that treats storytelling as its core mechanic, this is one of the best examples of what the medium can do.

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.

BioShock

4.3

2007 · First-Person Shooter · PC / Steam

BioShock built one of gaming's most iconic settings, wrapped it in a story that challenged what players expect from the medium, and delivered a twist that people still talk about nearly two decades later. The combat hasn't aged as well as the world around it, and the final act loses some of the momentum that made everything before it so gripping. But Rapture remains one of those places that sticks with you long after you've left, and the ideas BioShock explores about choice, control, and freedom still hit harder than most games that have tried to follow in its wake.

Cyberpunk 2077

4.3

2020 · Action RPG · PC / Steam

Cyberpunk 2077 is two stories. One is the messy launch that became a cautionary tale for the industry. The other is the game that emerged after years of patches, culminating in the 2.0 update and Phantom Liberty expansion. That second version is a confident, visually stunning action RPG with writing that hits hard and a city that feels like a character in its own right. The open world still struggles with interactivity outside of missions, and the scars of its troubled development never fully disappeared. But the game CD Projekt Red eventually delivered is worth the trip through Night City, even if the journey there was far rougher than it should have been.

Final Fantasy XIV

4.3

2013 · MMORPG · PC / Steam

Final Fantasy XIV is the MMORPG that earned its reputation the hard way, rising from a disastrous 1.0 launch to become one of the most celebrated online games ever made. The story through Shadowbringers and Endwalker represents some of the best narrative work in the Final Fantasy franchise. Dungeon and trial design is excellent, the community is welcoming, and the free trial gives you hundreds of hours before asking for a subscription. The Dawntrail expansion landed with a thud for many players, and the game sits in an uncertain transitional moment. But the core of what makes it special, the story, the fights, and the world, remains intact and still worth experiencing.

NieR: Automata

4.3

2017 · Action RPG · PC / Steam

NieR: Automata is a game that uses its medium in ways few others have attempted, weaving philosophical questions about consciousness and purpose into its structure rather than just its dialogue. PlatinumGames delivered combat that feels great moment to moment, and the soundtrack alone justifies the purchase for many players. The requirement to play through the game multiple times will test your patience, and the open world never matches the quality of what fills it. But the payoff for seeing it through to the true ending is something that sticks with people long after the credits roll, and that's not something most games can claim.

SOMA

4.3

2015 · Survival Horror · PC / Steam

SOMA is Frictional Games at the height of their storytelling powers. The underwater setting, the philosophical questions about identity and consciousness, and the relationship between its two lead characters create a narrative that sticks with you long after the credits roll. The monster encounters are the weakest link, and the Safe Mode update essentially acknowledged that by letting players bypass them, but the story they're wrapped around is one of the best the genre has produced. Horror games that make you think this hard about what it means to be human don't come along often. This one is worth the dive.

Baldur's Gate

4.2

1998 · RPG · PC / Steam

Baldur's Gate is the game that brought CRPGs back from the dead and launched BioWare into the studio that would define Western RPGs for the next decade. The Sword Coast is a vast, open world that rewards exploration with genuine surprises, and the companion writing laid the groundwork for everything BioWare would become famous for. Combat using Advanced Dungeons & Dragons 2nd Edition rules is faithful to the tabletop but punishing and opaque for players unfamiliar with that system. The Enhanced Edition smooths out the roughest technical edges, but this is still a 1998 game that demands patience. What it offers in return is a sense of discovery and freedom that established the template an entire genre would follow.

Sleeping Gods

4.2

2021 · 1-4 Players · 60-120 min · Cooperative / Campaign

Sleeping Gods is the closest any board game has come to delivering a true open-world experience. Its atlas-based exploration gives players genuine freedom to chart their own course, and the branching narrative rewards curiosity with stories that feel handcrafted rather than procedural. Combat can wear thin over long sessions, and the icon density creates a steep initial learning curve, but for players who prioritize narrative and discovery over mechanical crunch, this is one of the most memorable campaign experiences available. Ryan Laukat created something special here.

Pillars of Eternity II: Deadfire

4.1

2018 · RPG · PC / Steam

Pillars of Eternity II: Deadfire is a richly crafted CRPG that trades the corridor structure of its predecessor for an open archipelago that rewards curiosity and faction diplomacy alike. The multiclass system opens up build experimentation on a scale few RPGs attempt, and the writing carries Obsidian's trademark ability to make dialogue choices feel like they matter. Ship combat and some undercooked stretches of ocean exploration keep it from reaching the heights it clearly aimed for, but the freedom to chart your own path through warring factions and morally complex questlines makes this one of the stronger entries in the modern CRPG revival.

Warhammer 40,000: Rogue Trader

4.0

2023 · RPG · PC / Steam

Warhammer 40,000: Rogue Trader is the first CRPG to tackle the Warhammer 40K universe with the depth and ambition the setting deserves. Owlcat Games built a game where the grim darkness of the far future feels fully realized and lived-in, with companions whose loyalty shifts based on your philosophical alignment and combat that rewards tactical thinking across sprawling turn-based encounters. Bugs at launch and a final act that overstays its welcome are real issues, and the sheer length demands a level of commitment not every player can offer. But for those willing to invest the time, this is one of the most atmospheric and choice-driven CRPGs of its generation, carried by writing that understands its source material completely.

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.

Reverse: 1999

4.0

2023 · Turn-Based RPG

Reverse: 1999 stands apart in the gacha landscape through its commitment to literary storytelling and a combat system that rewards thoughtful play over brute force. The writing is ambitious and often brilliant, the voice acting is exceptional across multiple languages, and the art direction creates something visually distinct. Resource grinding hits harder than it should, the narrative pacing can test your patience, and the gacha rates demand careful planning. But for players who value story and atmosphere in their mobile RPGs, Reverse: 1999 offers something remarkably rare.

Oxenfree

4.0

2016 · Narrative Adventure · PC / Steam

Oxenfree is a masterclass in interactive dialogue, wrapped in a supernatural mystery that's creepy, human, and surprisingly moving. Its real-time conversation system makes every interaction feel natural in a way that most narrative games don't even attempt. The characters talk like actual teenagers, the radio mechanic adds a tactile layer to the supernatural elements, and the branching paths give you real reasons to play through more than once. Gameplay beyond the dialogue is limited, and some players will find the pacing too leisurely. But as a narrative experience that trusts its writing and respects its characters, Oxenfree punches well above its weight.

Pillars of Eternity

4.0

2015 · RPG · PC / Steam

Pillars of Eternity accomplished something that seemed impossible in 2015: it brought the classic CRPG back from the dead. Obsidian built a world with genuine depth, a magic system rooted in philosophy rather than just fireballs, and a campaign that rewards patience with ideas that stick with you long after the credits. Combat and companion writing don't quite reach the heights of the best the genre has produced, and the early hours test your willingness to absorb dense lore. But for players willing to meet it halfway, this is a rich, intelligent RPG that earned its place in the revival it started.

Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order

3.8

2019 · Action-Adventure · PC / Steam

Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order is a satisfying action-adventure that successfully blends souls-like combat with metroidvania exploration in a Star Wars setting. The story gives players a compelling protagonist in Cal Kestis, the level design rewards curiosity, and the lightsaber combat, while not as precise as its inspirations, captures the fantasy of being a Jedi better than most games have managed. Technical performance issues on PC and a reward structure that leans too heavily on cosmetics hold it back from the top tier. But as a singleplayer Star Wars experience focused on exploration and combat rather than microtransactions, it delivered exactly what fans had been asking for.

Limbus Company

3.8

2023 · Turn-Based Strategy RPG

Limbus Company is a gacha game that puts story and generosity ahead of predatory monetization, and the community has rewarded it with fierce loyalty. The writing, music, and strategic combat form a deeply compelling package for players willing to push through a rough onboarding period and tolerate repetitive weekly farming. It won't convert anyone who hates gacha games, but for fans of narrative-driven RPGs who don't mind the model, this is one of the best options on mobile.

NieR Re[in]carnation

3.5

2021 · RPG

NieR Re[in]carnation delivered Yoko Taro's signature melancholic storytelling and Keiichi Okabe's haunting soundtrack in a mobile format that faithfully captured the series' atmosphere. The narrative, art direction, and music stood among the best available on mobile devices. The turn-based combat was barebones, the gacha rates were punishing, and the game ended worldwide service in April 2024, making it a beautiful but flawed experience that ultimately couldn't sustain itself.

BioShock Infinite

3.5

2013 · First-Person Shooter · PC / Steam

BioShock Infinite is a game of extraordinary highs and frustrating lows. Columbia is one of the most memorable settings in gaming, Elizabeth is a companion character that others are still measured against, and the story swings for the fences in ways that few big-budget games dare to attempt. The combat underneath all of that never reaches the same level, and the narrative ambitions outpace the story's ability to hold together under scrutiny. It's a game people are still arguing about more than a decade later, which is either its greatest achievement or its most telling flaw, depending on where you land.

Death Stranding

3.5

2019 · Action Adventure · PC / Steam

Death Stranding is one of the most divisive big-budget games ever released, and that's exactly what makes it interesting. The opening hours test patience in ways few AAA titles dare, and the story veers between brilliance and self-indulgence with little warning. But the traversal systems, the infrastructure building, and the asynchronous connections with other players create something no other game has replicated. Those who connect with Kojima's vision tend to connect deeply. Those who don't will wonder what all the fuss is about. Both responses are completely valid.