Outlander
Custom Tags Are For Fags.
If by "incline" you mean to relive your childhood experiences while playing the classics, it'll never happen again.
That was meant to happen at a certain time, when the gaming industry wasn't the pile of dung it is today and devs put effort in creative content instead of shiny superficial layers, and us young lads at the time being able to appreciate that. That's done, we'll never 'feel' the same again. Chocolate cake may blow your mind the first time you taste it, but after a few years eating it, yeah you still like it but you sort of get used to it.
Pick any random kid today and make him play Darklands or Wasteland 1: 'lel there's no way I'm playing that old shit!' *goes back to Skyrim*
Of course for us in our 30s there are a few exceptions to the rule like Underrail and AoD, if those games had been released in the 90s I'm sure today they'd be heralded as lauded RPG classics right alongside Fallout and Baldur's Gate, but not today. So I don't think we'll see any other 'mindblowing' RPG ever again. And the problem isn't with the games themselves (talking about AoD, Underrail, D:OS), but with us and how the industry shaped the current video gaming state.
That was meant to happen at a certain time, when the gaming industry wasn't the pile of dung it is today and devs put effort in creative content instead of shiny superficial layers, and us young lads at the time being able to appreciate that. That's done, we'll never 'feel' the same again. Chocolate cake may blow your mind the first time you taste it, but after a few years eating it, yeah you still like it but you sort of get used to it.
Pick any random kid today and make him play Darklands or Wasteland 1: 'lel there's no way I'm playing that old shit!' *goes back to Skyrim*
Of course for us in our 30s there are a few exceptions to the rule like Underrail and AoD, if those games had been released in the 90s I'm sure today they'd be heralded as lauded RPG classics right alongside Fallout and Baldur's Gate, but not today. So I don't think we'll see any other 'mindblowing' RPG ever again. And the problem isn't with the games themselves (talking about AoD, Underrail, D:OS), but with us and how the industry shaped the current video gaming state.