Wednesday, January 8, 2025

General RPG Lists: Greatest RPGs

Hi, all!  Before you partake of the fifth, yes that's right this list has been rereleased almost as many times as Skyrim now, version of this rant, let's all huddle up real quick for a little announcement:

I...will be taking 2025 off.

Well, I mean, not ENTIRELY, I guess.  Obviously there's this rant, and I'll be damned if I let an opportunity to showcase more stupid RPG Valentines pass me by, and there'll be an Annual Summary rant for sure.  I might also throw a few others up here and there over the course of this year.  But by and large, I'm gonna take a break from ranting in 2025.

And the reason for that is probably about what you'd think.  After doing this regularly for close to 20 years now, I'm understandably a bit burnt out.  I still like sharing my thoughts with all the Audience Not Founds out there, but coming up with those thoughts is getting harder and harder.  You may have noticed that in the past couple years, only a comparative handful of the rants I've written have been based on RPGs in general or a game that I hadn't played in the last 3 years.  And that was still functional when I had both Shin Megami Tensei 5 and SMT Persona 5 to yap about, as I got a lot of rant mileage out of each of them, but I can't really depend on there to be a game I play each year that happens to stimulate a solid 10-ish rants out of me.  I mean, okay, granted, I'm probably gonna get a good few out of how obscenely awful Tokyo Mirage Sessions #FE is, but still.  With my having said most of what I've got to say about the games I've played in the past, I'm fresh out of rant reserves and need some serious time to build up a few as a cushion once more.

I'm also just older, busier, and less able to focus on tasks than I used to be, and writing is thus something I have less time and effort to put into in general.  Frankly, I'm just not gonna be able to keep up my 3-a-month standard at the pace at which I write now.

So anyways...I'm gonna be largely absent for 2025.  The hope is that I'll be building up a nice, robust reserve of rants to keep me afloat when I come back in 2026.  I'm sorry to anyone who might genuinely be disappointed by this, but this is and always has been a hobby, and for me to keep this hobby going any further in any meaningful way, I'm gonna need a good, proper break from it to rev myself back up again.  I hope you'll at least be able to enjoy the new content being added to today's List, and the bits and pieces that do go up this year.  Thanks for reading, both this and in general.

Now, onto the actual damn rant already!



This was a list of 10.  Then 15.  Later 20.  And then 7 years ago, it was made a list of 25.  But the fact is, I'm still playing RPGs, and I'm getting more and more selective about the games I play (in spite of what you might think of the man who voluntarily experienced Tokyo Mirage Sessions #FE from start to finish last year), which means more and more truly, spectacularly magnificent titles that I'm adding to my resume all the time.  With a current count of 439 RPGs under my belt, over 100 more than I'd played at time of this rant's last update, even a list of 25 of the greatest seems insufficient now, and a normal jump of just 5 more would only be restoring titles to this list that had been pushed off by newcomers like Disco Elysium and Pyre.  So today, we're expanding the list of the Greatest RPGs of all time to a whopping 35 places!

And even then, this list STILL, in accordance to the laws I set down for myself in its last iteration, reflects significantly less than 10% of all the games I've played from this genre.  In spite of being so long, this collection still very much represents the absolute cream of the crop.

So, logically, that means that even if you don’t see your favorite game here, I hope you won't yell at me. Believe me, I know that there’s an absolute TON of great RPGs that didn’t make the cut. You genuinely have no idea how much I hate that I couldn’t get Valkyrie Profile: Covenant of the Plume, Shadowrun: Dragonfall, A Dragon's ReQuest, Horizon: 0 Dawn, and several other games onto this list.  How frustrated I was when I finally admitted to myself that, realistically, there's just never going to be a time when Fallout 1, which is 1 of my absolute favorite RPGs of all time and in no small part defined me as a person, makes it on here.  But it just wasn’t in the cards, no matter how great such titles are. Believe me, I wouldn’t begrudge anyone a spot on their Top 10 or whatever list for, say, Deus Ex 1, or Baldur's Gate 3--it’s just that with all the amazing RPGs I’ve played, even such laudable, excellent works as those can’t quite cut it.

Anyway, I think that's enough yapping and delay.  Without further ado, the 35 greatest RPGs ever created!



35. Shin Megami Tensei: Persona Q1 (Nintendo 3DS)

This is an odd one, particularly to start this list with, because by all rights, SMT Persona Q1 should be way higher on this list, and also, not here at all.  Basically, for something like 3/4ths of the game, Persona Q1 is just a fun, simplistic piece of fanservice-y fluff with the casts of both Persona 3 and 4 bouncing off of each other, interacting with themselves in ways they normally couldn’t (Theo and Elizabeth’s dynamic is damn hilarious), and playing off a couple of likable but largely unremarkable original characters, as they progress through an improved version of an Etrian Odyssey system of dungeons whose connections to one another and to the OC couple are vague and handwave-y enough not to pay too much attention to.  It’s pleasant, but nothing particularly intriguing.

BUT, once you hit the major plot twist revelation at that 75-ish% mark...Persona Q1 becomes an emotionally overwhelming, heartbreaking, impassioned examination of existential fears and the question of what makes a life worth having lived, posing a question so heavy and postulating answers so profound that the experience still lives with me, and likely always will, in ways more significant than even most games on this very list can boast.  I was moved to tears by the tragedy of the truth of Persona Q1, and it wasn’t the last time the game would make me weep--1 of my most fond and embarrassing memories as a gamer will always be that I finished playing this game during a long wait at a car dealership as my vehicle was having some work done.  I was sitting there, in the waiting room--in a corner faced away from the rest of the room, admittedly and thankfully--as tears streamed down my face while the ending played out and taught me a poignant lesson about the human condition.  Seriously.  Just...imagine walking into a dealership, all set and ready to lease a brand new Toyondalet 20Teen Speedster Supreme Plus Deluxe, and the first thing you see as you happen to glance to your left is some dumpy 30-something-year-old sitting in the corner while his airbags are replaced, lacrimating uncontrollably as he snuffles and snorts ugly-cry snot back up his nostrils while staring down at the screen of the same game system on which your little brother plays Mario Kart.  It's wildly amusing to me, in retrospect.

But anyway, that all makes Shin Megami Tensei: Persona Q1 a title that’s baffling to place here.  Going strictly by the quality of its best quarter, and how well it makes meaning and sense of what led up to that moment, SMTPQ1 should probably be much further into this list, up there with absolute RPG titans like Omori and Final Fantasy 7 (and as a side note, what an amazing thing it says about the SMT series and its Persona subseries that this would still not make Persona Q1 the best the series has to offer?).  But then again, no matter how excellent its last quarter, a game that’s 3/4ths enjoyable but largely immaterial fluff probably shouldn’t be here at all!

Well, the Honorable Mentions are all tied up with specialty cases like DLCs and fan mods and whatnot, so I can’t take the coward’s way out and just throw this game down there.  So I guess the best I can do is give Persona Q1 a permanent spot on this list as an opener, because it’s just too extraordinarily wonderful not to be here, and yet too cluttered with filler to be above any other, inarguably deserving title.


34. Final Fantasy 10 (Playstation 2)

FF10 has its share of detractors, but it’s overall quite well-loved, and for damned good reason.  This treasure of the genre boasts an emotionally powerful and intelligent story packed with themes and perspectives on religion, sacrifice, love, and purpose, several excellently dynamic characters, and some of the most moving scenes in any RPG.  Both overtly and subtly, Final Fantasy 10 is enjoyable, touching, and deeply meaningful.


33. Children of Zodiarcs (Personal Computer)

Children of Zodiarcs is a hell of a heavy ride, and it’s not shy about punching you in the heart, again and again, as it tells its story of extreme class divides, the nature and toxicity of hatred, and the manner in which the pains we inflict upon the rest of the world perpetuate themselves unto innocents, again and again, until finally they come back to destroy us, as well.  There’s a lot of wisdom and inspiration to take from Children of Zodiarcs, if you can weather the frank brutality of the world that it showcases and endure the heartbreak it will inflict upon you over the course of its harshly hopeful narrative.


32. Shadow Hearts 2 (PS2)

Ah, Shadow Hearts 2. The uniquely moody, gloomy, yet over-the-top and amusing atmosphere created with Shadow Hearts 1, which perfectly mixes the reality of Europe and Asia in the first half of the 20th century with mysticism, really hits its stride in this sequel, just in time to accompany an interesting plot whose arcs are surprisingly well-connected, given how clearly each part is defined by its setting and villains. Toss in a truly excellent and unique hero, a solid and diverse cast, a love story that’ll have you bawling like a babe, and some moments that are just plain awesome (a battle between a hell demon and Rasputin aboard a flying battleship? Hell YES), and an all-encompassing sense of quirky humor that works surprisingly well with the dark, serious tone of the game, and you have a real winner.


31. Mother 3 (Game Boy Advance)

The sequel to RPG cult favorite Earthbound (Mother 2) was heavily yearned for and anticipated for many years before Nintendo finally bit the bullet and made it. I think everyone hoped that a sequel would do the original game proud, perhaps even be as good as it, but I doubt many people would have ever imagined Mother 3 could surpass its predecessor. Yet it has, and by a lot. Earthbound was a singularly bizarre adventure, defying description with its quirky humor and presentation--it was like playing a piece of abstract art. Mother 3 manages a complete return of this same unusual and appealing style, but manages to throw a huge curveball on it with a huge injection of emotion into a plot that is jaw-dropping in how poignant it is in spite of (perhaps even because of?) all the quirky humor sown into it. And when you look past the creative nature of the game, you find an equally creative plot, too. Mother 3 will make you laugh aloud, it’ll make you think, and it’ll make you sniffle and get teary-eyed. And it’ll do all of these things in the same 5 minutes.


30. Grandia 1 (Playstation 1)

I don’t know what to say, really. I love Grandia 1. The characters are good, the plot is solid, and this game, above every other RPG I’ve ever played, creates a sensation of exploration and adventure, through its great music, strong attention to cultural and natural diversity in its setting, and the enthusiasm of its protagonist. It has a lot of truly excellent moments, such as Sue’s goodbye, and reaching the top of the End of the World, and many of its small aspects are great, too, like the dinner conversations (which became a delightful signature of the series), and one of the few turn-based RPG battle systems that’s actually kind of fun to play. Grandia 1 has great appeal and will always have a special spot in my heart.


29. Quantum Entanglement (PC)

Large Battleship Studios is probably my first or second favorite game developer, and Quantum Entanglement is, to date, the best example of its works, though all have been marvelous and strong contenders for a spot on this list.  QE is many things--a gripping, tightly orchestrated horror game of both the survival and psychological variety, an engagingly witty comedy thanks to its constant and clever banter and monologue, an interesting character-driven study of existence past the limitations of memory, a subtle work on trauma and living with its lingering hold, and an amazingly compelling love story, both between its active main characters--1 of the best I’ve ever seen in an RPG, it should be noted--and one that transpires in higher planes, across time and reality.  Humor is masterfully used as a counterpoint to the tension and the grief, the concept of love and personal qualities of the self that exist beyond the confines of a single existence are played upon, a romance is told with genuine chemistry which is simultaneously developing and deepening realistically and also somehow already and always fully present...in many ways, Quantum Entanglement is a great example of the hallmarks of LBS’s finest qualities, and in many others, it’s a unique entity unto itself.  But on both counts, it’s truly excellent, and well-recommended.


28. Rakuen (PC)

Rakuen is an earnest, heartfelt game that ties itself to a real-world tragedy while telling its suite of tales about the patients of a hospital and the courses of their lives that brought them there, through the classic analogy of a connected fantasy world both influencing and being influenced by the real world, a la Labyrinth, the Neverending Story, and many others.  It’s a genuinely inspiring story of courage and acceptance in the face of loss, and profoundly moving in its great happinesses and tragedies, all poignantly relatable in their being so anchored in the real world--I daresay that anyone and everyone who plays this game will feel, in its most powerful moments, a sympathy that penetrates deep into their hearts and resonates with griefs and joys they’ve known in their own pasts and presents.  Few games are as emotionally powerful as Rakuen.


27. Pyre (PC)

Pyre is a singularly artistic game that is both signature to the excellence that Supergiant Games is known for, and entirely unlike any of their other titles.  Filled with interesting and well-written characters, it's a great, dignified story of the injustice of corrupt and tyrannical governments and their law, the vital necessity of social revolution, what it is to redeem oneself, loyalty and the heartbreak of farewells, inhumane forms of incarceration, the question of whether a peaceful revolt can succeed (and, indeed, of whether a revolution can truly succeed if it was not peaceful)...all told through an analogy of the unfortunate fact that succeeding at sports is the only way many of the disenfranchised of society can raise themselves in the world.  Yeah, I really would never have expected a sports RPG to be so elegant, intriguing, and artful, but Pyre is a happy surprise.


26. Torment: Tides of Numenera (PC)

There are 2 ways of looking at Torment: Tides of Numenera. Either you can be disappointed that it doesn’t come close to living up to its predecessor, Planescape: Torment...or you can be like me, and recognize that even just being in the same ballpark as Planescape still makes TToN absolutely amazing. The intellectual depth of this title is staggering, daunting, even, a story of purpose and immortality and analysis of the joys and suffering that is the human existence, set against a marvelously intriguing, creative world both wondrous and grotesque, brought to life through countless sidequests and NPCs with more depth than most games’ main characters. It both feels and acts like its predecessor, investigating many of the same ideas and themes, yet in new ways, going in new directions with them, finding new foundations for its concepts that allow for fresh perspectives and conclusions on the same questions and conundrums we thought were reasoned out to completion in Planescape: Torment. This is a truly spectacular work of thought and philosophy.


25. Suikoden 1 (PS1)

Suikoden 1 takes the player through a nation-wide conflict, a civil war of epic proportions that nonetheless never loses sight of the individuals and humanity of the conflict. Good plot, good characters, good ideas, good execution, good themes...this is just a solidly good game in its every aspect.

Note: Steam link put up before the remake's release; I am simply hoping (praying) that this will be a competent remaster which stays strictly true to the source material.


24. Final Fantasy Tactics (PS1)

Ah, FFT. As much or greater a leap in a new direction for the Final Fantasy series as FF7 was, this one looked at the ideas and aspects of medieval times (like most RPGs) and, instead of just throwing a bunch of fantasy cliches together, gave us a game that in many ways realized the nonfiction of medieval Europe--warring countries, vicious slaughter, political intrigue carried out by greedy, power-hungry nobles, and a religious super power that didn't come even close to living up to its supposedly holy, peaceful philosophies (although granted, the church of medieval Europe wasn't quite so bad as to be mistakenly worshiping the Anti-Christ, but still, the core similarity's there). This was a game where the dark, fantastical nature of part of its plot, involving magic stones and hellish demons, actually kinda takes backseat in the player's interest to what would normally be background subplots of political intrigue and backstabbing (metaphorical AND literal).  It's basically everything that Fire Emblem eternally aspires to be.  FFT's plot is terrific, the setting emphasizes it very well, and the cast has several key characters who are very well-created. Its quiet power over the player holds up today as well as it did when it was first released.


23. Pathfinder: Wrath of the Righteous (PC)

With 1 of the most absolutely, awesomely epic fantasy plots of all time, moved by a great cast of unique, multifaceted, well-written personalities (including some really wonderful romances!) and fearsome, interesting villains and conflicts that just keep ramping up, and underscored by an execution that brings the tabletop gaming experience to life in a single-player video game better than any RPG I’ve seen before (aside from its own predecessor), Pathfinder: Wrath of the Righteous is already such an excellent fantasy RPG experience that the conclusion of its first chapter alone feels as high-stakes and epic as most other games’ finales.  Compound that with a ton of directions in which you can take the story’s events according to your alignment and the kind of higher being you most want to be, nuanced consequences to your decisions, actions, and words, an incredibly rewarding and awesome secret true ending (even if it is also the most hidden in gaming history; seriously no one will ever get it without a walkthrough), and a cool, ever-present theme of ascension and transcending limits to be more than you thought possible, and you have an absolutely kickass game!


22. Fallout 4 (PC)

Most of the Fallout series is excellent, and to be honest, it’s kind of difficult to choose one game over the other, because their excellence is very uniform. Fallout 4 is an insightful, subtly deep examination into the essence of the United States: its beliefs, its politics, its history, its culture and pop culture, its ideals, and its people...just like Fallout 1, 2, 3, and New Vegas were. It’s the Fallout series’s thing (76 notwithstanding), and each game does it really damn well. The ambient storytelling in Fallout 4 is especially masterful, even for the standards of the series, and with a strong cast, an interesting plot, and a thoughtfully subtle narrative, Fallout 4 is a remarkable RPG, another fine addition to what may be the greatest RPG series out there, and my personal favorite of the franchise.


21. Fallout: New Vegas (PC)

It’s a damn close call between which is greater, but even though I personally like Fallout 4 the best, I have to hand it to Fallout: New Vegas: it’s got a plot whose relevance and heft has more for you to take away from it, and connects every so slightly more strongly to the core principle of the series: exploring and understanding ourselves as a nation (for US citizens, at least; though I daresay there’s enough universality that those playing in other countries can still gain much from this series. Even more than Fallout 4, Fallout: New Vegas has all sorts of hidden themes of, references to, and comments on the USA to find and contemplate, and you know me--I love a game that makes me think. Even on the surface, though, Fallout: New Vegas is a very cool game with a compelling cast and cool story, both open-ended, and linear enough that its plot is straightforward and clear.


20. Fallout 3 (PC)

The best of its series, Fallout 3 does all the same things intellectually as its fellows, and generally just as well, but its setting provides it stronger thematic power (if you’re gonna base a game’s themes around the United States of America’s essence, then you’re naturally gonna get the best and most material if you have it take place in the Washington DC area), and the plot both feels more personal and relevant to the protagonist than all of its peers but Fallout 4, and is generally more epic in its scope, purpose, and ambitions. I also have to say that I find the conflicts and characters and villains of Fallout 3 generally more compelling than Fallout: New Vegas’s and Fallout 4’s were, providing great symbolism and meaning. In addition, I think that Fallout 3 more than any other game in the series makes excellent use of the post-apocalyptic setting. That’s not to say that Fallout: New Vegas, or 4, or 1, or 2, were in any way lacking...it’s simply to say that even in a series filled with such excellent titles, Fallout 3 stands out as a masterpiece.


19. Disgaea 1 (PS2)

If anyone ever tells you that a comedy cannot also be deep and meaningful, there are 3 things you should direct their attention to. The first is Futurama. The second is any game by Large Battleship Studios. And the third is Disgaea 1. Nippon Ichi's most famous offering is also, I think, its best (although I DID really like Makai Kingdom), and concrete proof that a humor RPG can still have depth and great emotion. What starts out (and keeps on being) a very funny adventure of adorably maniacal demons and a ditzy, equally adorable angel evolves into a grand tale of friendship's enduring power, and love's irrepressible, redeeming nature. The inherently goofy air to this game is great for grabbing your attention and keeping it, and it amazingly doesn't interfere whatsoever with the story's poignancy, making this game not only the best Humor RPG I've played, but just plain one of the best RPGs I've played, period.


18. Omori (PC)

Mother 3 is great, this much is undeniable.  Well, Omori is basically Mother 3, if Mother 3 were massively upgraded in its writing and thematic effectiveness, had more involved and developed characters, and didn't shy away from directly, knowledgeably, psychologically addressing the pain, suffering, and terror of loss, repression, trauma, and guilt.  Omori is elegant, thorough, expertly assembled, and highly affecting--when this game wants you to feel as its characters do, you absolutely do, whether that be happy and content, or sad, or devastated, or unnerved, or outright terrified.  Its psychological intensity is gripping, and only all the more powerful thanks to the deliberate juxtaposition of the innocent, happy dream world that paces and foreshadows Omori's heavier content.  Omori is definitely 1 of those RPGs that will always stay with you.


17. Final Fantasy 7 (PS1)

Okay, yeah, okay, yes, I know, okay. Yes. Fine. YES, Final Fantasy 7 is perhaps the most overrated, over-hyped RPG of the most overrated, over-hyped RPG series ever. The sheer number of mindless, utterly tasteless fanboys and fangirls of this game, most of whom idolize Sephiroth while being unable to correctly spell his name, defies imagination--it's like Twilight, except that FF7 doesn't destroy brain cells like getting drunk while deeply inhaling gasoline fumes as you shove a blow torch up your nose.

But just because it's not God's gift to Playstation 1 games doesn't mean it's not still a great game. It has an interesting, involved plot that incorporates a lot of ideas that, at the time, were pretty new and creative (some still are, really), and it also has a pretty good cast of characters to enact the plot, too--sure, the villains are all boring and empty, and Vincent and Yuffie barely have enough characterization between the two of them to qualify as NPCs, but the rest of the cast have at least a fair amount of good development, particularly Tifa and Cloud. Tifa's character has a lot of depth and realism, but in a subtle way that requires some consideration to recognize. Cloud, on the other hand, has his character development right in the spotlight--and it's pretty impressive. Before Cloud, there weren't all that many RPG heroes with real, solid personalities and depth of character, and he seemed to more or less pioneer the idea of an interesting, quality hero who draws a lot of his character from his shortcomings and spiritual inadequacies--we've had plenty of fairly mentally imbalanced heroes since, as well as ones who agonize over the limitations of what they can do and the mistakes they've made in the past, but Cloud was one of the first and best to do stuff like that. Hell, he's still probably the most mentally screwed-up RPG protagonist I've seen who wasn't either a villain himself and/or got proper characterization.

In addition, FF7 sold its atmosphere with its music and setting, creating a world to draw you in far better than most other games, which complemented the plot and brought everything together. Regardless of how many stupid people happen by unfortunate chance to share my opinion, and how hard SquareEnix works to retroactively cheapen this game with every lackluster time-waster sequel/prequel that they foist on us, FF7 will always be a true classic.


16. Mass Effect 1 (PC)

Lemme ask you something: did you ever watch a science-fiction show or movie, or read a science-fiction book, or something like that, and just feel completely entranced by its size, scope, and creativity? You watch/read/whatever it, and you just have this feeling that you've been taken to a place or time that has more or less infinite possibility for adventure, excitement, and general cool new experiences? Like the thing that you're watching/reading/whatevering is just the tip of the iceberg (or maybe Star Destroyer's a better term here), and there's just so much else that can be seen and explored in this sci-fi galaxy, universe, time, or whatever?

It's the feeling I got when I watched the Star Wars trilogy, played the games, and read the books during my youth--just that you could go anywhere in this entire imaginary galaxy, at practically any time in its history, and be caught up in something really cool and interesting. From watching the deathblow to an evil, galaxy-spanning Empire to just reading the random tales of a no-name bounty hunter in that same galaxy, Star Wars has always held my attention and impressed me.*

Well, when I played Mass Effect 1, that feeling swept over me for a second time. The makers of this game invested a tremendous amount of thought and care into this setting, going far beyond most sci-fi media's first offerings by not only inventing species, events, technologies, mysterious stuff, and so on, but going into huge detail on it all, as well. Just about every really cool, unique part of the Mass Effect universe is detailed for you in journal entries, should you care to know more of the imaginative science fiction all around you as you play. The game also captures the awe-inspiring feel and concept of space exploration, to me, better than anything else I've ever encountered. You know how when you were a kid, you went through a phase (or entered one and never got out of it) where you were really into real-world space exploration? Just feeling a sense of excitement and awe at the idea of exploring the infinite cosmos? Well, maybe you did and maybe you didn't, but I did, and when the map screen comes up in ME1 and begins playing that calming, yet somehow exciting music of exploration, I feel like a little kid again, looking at all these planets and stars with detailed descriptions like you'd find in an astronomy museum exhibit.

Of course, it's not just the atmosphere of the game that makes it so great. It's got about as cool a sci-fi plot as I've ever seen outside a book by Asimov, the characters are very good, the villains are decent (although Saren was a lot more interesting before I read the ME1 prequel book, honestly...but I guess that's neither here nor there), the presentation is good all around, and everything's pretty darned epic. I really love this game.


15. Shin Megami Tensei 1 + 2 (Super Nintendo Entertainment System)

These games really have to be counted as 2 parts of a whole.  They tell the same overall story in 2 parts, they have the same premise, and they're both brilliant in the same ways.

These games, more than even Earthbound, lends credence to my belief that an RPG's true worth is independent from graphics and gameplay, relying only upon its plot, characters, and any other writing-related aspects. SMT1 + 2 are annoying to play and ugly to look at, with crude 1st-Person dungeons almost no more advanced than those of Phantasy Star 1 on the Sega Master System, and with an annoying level of difficulty that inspires far more frustration than sense of challenge.

But man, the plot of these games? The general ideas? Magnificent. I stand firm in my believe that SMT1 and 2 are some of the most brilliant RPGs I've come across, closer to classic literature than they are to a Final Fantasy or other game of their genre. I did a rant on this before, so I'll be brief--SMT1 brings you to, through, and past apocalypse on Earth, to a world of warring deities and mythological creatures of every culture's legends, where you choose whether to ally yourself with God, Lucifer, or to deny both and stand for humanity alone. The game puts forth insightful ideas and philosophies on Christianity, humanity as a whole, belief, and logic vs. emotion, all while featuring a myriad group of mythological individuals that you can fight against or ally with, depending on whether you agree with the ideals of the game's take on God or Lucifer, or disagree with them entirely. Like many truly great works (heck, like most truly great works on the same subject of Christian mythology), this title is a chore to get through, but very worthwhile and intelligent.

SMT2 does pretty much everything SMT1 does, often better, while improving the character development (which was admittedly slight in the first game) and raising the stakes--while the first game's events decided whether the forces of God, Humanity, or Lucifer gained authority over the last nation of humanity, this game determines for good whether the future of the world will be based upon chaotic emotion, lawful divinity, or neutral self-determination, and you actually meet the two individuals calling each side's shots this time. There's really nothing more to say here; SMT2 is simply a logical step up in quality and scope from the already impressive SMT1, and together, both games represent incredible creativity, philosophical insight, and writing in general.


14. Tales of Berseria (PC)

This, my friends, is why the Tales of series has been chugging along these past 20+ years: so that it could, one day, put aside its mediocre Zestirias and Eternias, its subpar Phantasias and Destinies, and its outright crappy Symphonias and Vesperias, and produce something truly spectacular. Tales of Berseria is a game that flies in the face of its own genre, having the ambition to argue that these negative feelings of humanity that are so decried in countless RPGs are, in fact, not only an intrinsic part of what makes us human, but also valuable. And it has the audacity to argue that idea excellently, through an engaging story filled with poignant, personal twists and which elegantly circles back again and again to 1 family's tragedy, as well as a villain great for the cloak of salvation that he dons, a memorable and excellently-crafted cast that embody the "vices" of humanity in sympathetic and likable ways, and a unique, amazing protagonist whose tragedy, triumphs, hatred, nurturing nature, and passion bring her story to life as no one else possibly could. Tales of Berseria is thoughtful, complex, and emotionally gripping, and it takes all the best storytelling conventions of its franchise while avoiding the pitfalls that so many of its predecessors suffered. Superlative stuff, all around.


13. Knights of the Old Republic 2 (PC)

Yeah, it may be buggy as hell, and yes, it may seem like it's only 90% complete (because it basically is)...but Knights of the Old Republic 2 still manages to be spectacular. The game's great characters and plot not only entertain and have deep messages of humanity to convey, but also tie in very strongly to the source material, using the old and giving new perspectives on it (without just retelling a story you've already seen/read; I hate it when outside-media RPGs do that). KotOR2 has oodles of exquisite intellectual and philosophical content to tickle your brain with, particularly through the mouth of its main villain, and stays entertaining to the end, while never losing its origins' themes, settings, and atmosphere. This game may be the greatest expression of the soul of Star Wars ever made...and what an involving, nuanced soul it turns out to be.

And it only gets better with the restored content mod!


12. Nier: Automata (PC)

Nier: Automata is 1 of the most philosophical games ever created. It's a good story on its surface level, to be sure, creative, complex, and exciting, with memorable characters and singular aesthetics...but where it really shines is in its smart, thoughtful approach to the questions, concepts, and conflicts of existentialism. It builds upon the great thinkers of the past who have grappled with this subject, referencing, considering, and even at times arguing with the words of famed philosophers like Nietzsche, Marx, and Jean-Paul Sartre, to name only a few...but as it does this, Nier: Automata also uses the mechanics and audience's preconceptions of the video game, a new medium of expression that no previous philosopher has had a chance to utilize, to illustrate its points on existentialism as they never have been before, and even to forge ahead and discover new ground on the matter. Yoko Taro may very well be the next name that we recognize and add to the list of great philosophers who have explored the meaning of human existence, and Nier: Automata is the flagship work that will put him there.


11. Shin Megami Tensei: Persona 3 (PS2)

Persona 3 is a refreshingly different, incredibly complex and layered story taking place in modern day Japan, all the while using the ideas and details of the Tarot Cards to provide the themes, events, and insights of the game's plot and characters. The main story is great, and the sidequest stories, known as Social Links, are even better. What I love about this game the most, though, and what really elevates it to this list, is how deep it really is when you start to look at its every aspect from the Tarot angle--there's always another level of meaning to the game's events, characters, ideas, and even gameplay to be found that goes back to connecting with the themes and insights of the Tarot deck, letting them provide ideas and meaning to the game and having the game's interpretation and employment of the cards in turn analyze and thoughtfully dissect the nature of Tarot cards and readings with the same level of depth and intelligence that other SMT titles do with more "mainstream" forms of spiritual belief. All that, AND it's still a beautiful, excellent story with some fantastic characters even at its surface level.


10. Shin Megami Tensei: Persona 5 (Nintendo Switch)

SMT Persona 5 is an engaging, fun, earnest, passionate game with great ambitions, sharp writing, memorable characters with marvelous chemistry, realistically loathsome villains, and a creative, well-plotted, and excellent story.  The tale it tells is a rich and rewarding one, which represents the well-meaning rebellion of the adolescent beautifully, and contains 1 of the best-constructed, most awesome pivotal moments I’ve seen in the genre.

More than that, Persona 5 is a compelling, direct sounding of the alarm against the failings of Japan’s society and the unhealthy attitudes of its culture, as it makes an adamant, uncompromising defense for those who are different from the norm and utters a harsh indictment of collectivism.  And yet even in the midst of its harshest rebuke against its nation’s societal ills, the game never errs from a clear and present celebration of Tokyo and its people--at every moment it’s clear that Persona 5 is no scornful condemnation, but a hopeful call to arms to a nation and people that it loves and knows can do better for themselves.

And frankly, from children with unaddressed counseling needs to the short attention span for serious issues that social media has created, and from sexual predators whose misconduct is overlooked because they’re professionally successful to CEOs who ruin the lives of countless human beings in the pursuit of their own insatiable greed, there’s more than enough crossover of social injustices and real-world villains between Japan and western countries that Persona 5 can and should be as inspiring a tale of social revolution and justice for we overseas audiences, too!

It’s flashy, it’s fun, it’s thematic and showy about it, and it’s intelligent and passionate in equal measure.  Shin Megami Tensei: Persona 5 is a fantastic RPG!


9. Shin Megami Tensei: Digital Devil Saga 1 + 2 (PS2)


As with SMT1 + 2, I honestly cannot split these two games apart to give them credit; to take either game for itself only and not count its virtues in comparison to its sequel or predecessor is to deny the game praise it deserves. SMTDDS1 + 2 share a single plot that uses concepts of Hinduism and Buddhism for its foundation, taking the religions' ideas, beliefs, and mythology and using them to tell a story that is not only a very good adventure in its own right, but is an extremely creative and brilliantly insightful look into the Buddhism and Hinduism’s tenets. These are games that you can contemplate and debate for hours at a time, over and over again for as long as you like. I think the way that SMTDDS1 + 2's creators crafted their plot and characters to work with, analyze, espouse and harmonize the fascinating concepts of Hindu and Buddhist religious thought can honestly only be called genius, easily comparable to the way the games above, Shin Megami Tensei 1 + 2, do with Christianity. But while SMTDDS1 + 2's genius and intelligence are equal to SMT1 + 2's, the story this duo tells is, to me, more moving and inspiring, and its cast more interesting in their own right, so it's Digital Devil Saga that edges the original pair out, albeit just barely.


8. Undertale (PC)

Undertale is a magnificent combination of heartwarming joy, great humor, Earthbound-styled surreal fun, sharp deconstruction and critique of RPGs and their players, poignant emotion, creeping terror, a study of consequences, and insight into the dangers of combining godhood and boredom. With terrific characters you'll love, heartwarming scenes that'll put a tear in your eyes, creativity up the wazoo, and a unique and terrifying villain, Undertale is definitely 1 of the greatest games I've ever played. Anyone who scoffs at the idea that crowdfunded Indie RPGs can have comparable quality to what the rest of the gaming industry can produce has clearly never experienced Undertale.


7. Final Fantasy 9 (PS1)

FF9, the best game of the RPG genre's poster series. A neat and imaginative plot combines with a great cast of deep and memorable characters to deliver an experience both new and old to any fan of the series--meant to be a nostalgic throw-back to the earlier games in the series, yet holding much of the play style and general plot progression of the (then) newer games, as well. Funny thing is, the game meant to serve as a reminder, a remix of sorts, turned out to be so well-constructed and well-written that it stands on its own better than the rest of the series does.


6. Wild Arms 3 (PS2)

Wild Arms 3. What is there to say, but that it is simply magnificent? You get a terrific protagonist by any counts who completely reworks RPG protagonist gender differences, a rival who is actually the most appealing character in the game instead of the least (and who actually has decent character depth, too!), a supporting cast that's solidly appealing and never just forgotten and pushed aside for the main people to get more development time, a long and really imaginative plot, an actual attempt by the Wild Arms series to deliver on their promise of a Wild West-themed setting (for the first and still last time!), several really interesting villains, and a never-ending sense of purpose, direction, and effort with the game's progression--no one ever just stops being developed. You get gripping characters, particularly in the case of the protagonist, to the end. I fucking LOVE Wild Arms 3, and can't recommend it enough.


5. Chrono Trigger (SNES) 

For the better part of a decade, it was unthinkable to me that CT would ever be anything less than the best RPG ever made. While it was, eventually, ousted from the top spot beyond all expectations, this game remains, in my opinion, the ultimate classic RPG, a truly perfect expression of originality and fun. If you want a great set of characters that you'll remember forever having an exciting and creative adventure involving a fairly simple, adequately well-reasoned time-travel plot**, or just the best RPG the older generation of games has to offer, Chrono Trigger is it.

Note: I'm not linking to the Steam version.  Play it on an SNES emulator and watch the in-story cutscenes on Youtube.  Any version that ties itself in even the mildest way to the embarrassing disaster that is Chrono Cross should be avoided.


4. Suikoden 2 (PS1)

There are a few games from the PS1 whose copies can be sold for over $100, sometimes over $200--or, if you’re looking for an unopened copy, even 500 fucking dollars on Amazon. Suikoden 2, though, is the only one that I can say, with no personal doubt whatever, is 100% worth that price.*** This game's superb characters and epic plot pull at your emotions, give you cause to think and contemplate, and, really, probably leave you at the end a better, more understanding person than you were at its beginning. Suikoden 2 is the kind of game where if you’re not shedding tears multiple times over its course, you might just have to get someone to box you up and send you in for repairs, because your Human Imitation Program is clearly malfunctioning.

Note: Steam link put up before the remake's release; I am simply hoping (praying) that this will be a competent remaster which stays strictly true to the source material.


3. Planescape: Torment (PC)

To play Planescape: Torment is to be amazed. There were times in this game where the masterful writing just left me stunned. And I mean that. Stunned as in sitting in my chair, staring at the screen, unmoving, utterly blown away by what I had just read, seen, contemplated, felt. This plot-heavy RPG wonder is insightful, creative, clever, entertaining, and moving, using the cool, expansive setting of the Dungeons and Dragons planes (and you KNOW you've got a cool game when a demonic war that spans across a twisted rope of connected realities for all time is just the background to the game's focus) to tell a story of a man that can't die, and his search for answers and identity through a complex world of truth and lies, magic and technology, reality and the formless, examining the essence of mortality, the power of torment, and asking the question infamous of this game: What can change the nature of a man? Well, Planescape: Torment is so amazing and engrossing, that you may very well find that your answer to that question is "This game."


2. Disco Elysium (PC)


To even describe Disco Elysium is a daunting task.  I mean, okay, surface-level, it's easy: it's a 70s cop show RPG in which an amnesiac detective solves a murder mystery.  But what Disco Elysium actually is, is a ferociously creative work of hauntingly insightful, beautiful, and gripping philosophy and prose that speaks of the nature of beautiful impermanence, a treatise on the past and the ways both grandiose and subtle that it completely overtakes our present when we least expect it, and an insightful examination and tribute to the concept of failure.  Every facet of its lore and interactions are nuanced and heavy, its every NPC better characterized and more human than most RPG main cast members.  The writing of this tale of humanity's hope and entropy, is both artful and excellent to an almost unparalleled degree on every level.  If you had but 1 work to put forth as a depiction of what it is to be human, what human culture and society and history and individualism and existence is all about, I think you could be very confident in choosing Disco Elysium to be your representative.


1. Grandia 2 (PS2)

Grandia 2, to me, is to the next generation of RPGs what Chrono Trigger was to the older one. The game has an involving plot that goes from average to seriously interesting quickly but subtly, sneaking up on you with its quality and several really interesting, creative plot twists that you honestly will not see coming. It also has one of the greatest RPG casts ever assembled--not a single member of Grandia 2 is bland or badly-developed, each of them has a lot of characterization to go through, and most of them redefine their character archetype to be something new, original, and deep. Grandia 2 is not just an exceptionally fine game, it's also one that reminds you of the power of subtle creativity--so many aspects of this game's plot and characters are the kind of stuff you see in all kinds of other games, shows, animes, etc; yet Grandia 2 takes each one's cliched foundation and builds something new, different, and excellent with it that both interests you and refreshes your interest in the old cliches and what can still be done with them. It is, ultimately, the epitome of the best of the classic JRPG, and the ultimate specimen of the bread-and-butter RPG that defines this genre.  Give this game a chance, and you'll love it to pieces. I don't know if I'll ever encounter a better game than this one, but if I don't, I can be well-satisfied with what I've got.


Honorable Mention 1: Mass Effect 3, with MEHEM or AHEM Installed (PC)

If not for the ending, Mass Effect 3 would have been on the main list above, as it is the greatest entry in the amazing trilogy, even outclassing the original Mass Effect! Full of unparalleled emotion, a terrific cast, an engaging plot, poignant and epic moments, and a ton of really interesting ideas, Mass Effect 3 is a masterpiece...except that it ends so unimaginably badly, as I have noted countless times before, that it actually physically sickens me to think about. You never know just how horrible an ending can be, just how much it can damage your happiness and the quality of an entire series, until you play Mass Effect 3.

However, with the Mass Effect Happy Ending Mod installed, you can play Mass Effect 3 with the confidence of knowing that you're headed for a well-made, appropriate, strong ending to the series. I've done a rant on this mod's virtues, but suffice to say, it has restored ME3 to its rightful place of excellence and now I can actually put it on this list. Since it requires outside intervention to correct it and make it a real Mass Effect, I'll keep ME3 as an Honorable Mention, instead of giving it an actual place on the list, but it sure as hell is never losing its spot here. And if you're interested, I'd say Mass Effect 3 with MEHEM would qualify for 10th place here, right between Shin Megami Tensei: Persona 5 and SMT Digital Devil Saga.


Honorable Mention 2: Neverwinter Nights 2: Mask of the Betrayer Expansion (PC)

On its own, Neverwinter Nights 2 is no more than passable, an acceptable but largely unremarkable Dungeons and Dragons venture that ranks somewhere between the original, bland Neverwinter Nights 1, and the moderately okay Baldur’s Gate 1. I couldn’t figure out, playing through it, why everyone praised it so damn much.

Then I finished the main campaign and moved onto its sequel-expansion, Mask of the Betrayer.

You know how I have this perpetual hard-on for Chris Avellone’s works? Hell, 4 RPGs with which he’s had significant involvement occupy spots in this rant already. Except that it’s now 5, because the Mask of the Betrayer expansion for Neverwinter Nights 2 is goddamn fucking incredible. Deep, meaningful, insightful, intensely creative, Mask of the Betrayer is the reason to play Neverwinter Nights 2, make no mistake. This expansion is more fiercely thoughtful and intelligent than most of the RPGs I mention above, approaching grand ideas and concepts of humanity and our connection to one another with the same level of excellence and care that you see in Knights of the Old Republic 2, and even Planescape: Torment. It also has a great cast to help bring its weighty thoughts and themes to life.

Mask of the Betrayer isn’t a game in its own right (and it requires you to have played the lengthy, somewhat humdrum main campaign for you to appreciate it to its fullest), so it doesn’t exactly qualify for a space on the main list itself. Nonetheless, it is far too excellent not to be mentioned here in some capacity, so I’m giving it an Honorable Mention. And if you’re interested, I would say that, if I were to count this as its own game and put it on the list proper, Neverwinter Nights 2: Mask of the Betrayer would qualify for the 14th place here, between Knights of the Old Republic 2 and Nier: Automata.


Honorable Mention 3: Shadowrun: Hong Kong: Calfree in Chains Mod (PC)

With these honorable mentions, we've given applause to an RPG that's amazing just so long as you mod out its 1 self-destructive moment, and an expansion that is by itself the entire reason to own its game and an adventure of nearly unparalleled intellectual virtue...let's do 1 final Greatest RPG Honorable Mention, then, for 1 final category that isn't quite right in the official list, but is too good not to pay homage to within this rant: fan-created campaign mods.

The Calfree Trilogy mods for the Shadowrun games as a whole are utterly amazing, and are arguably the best part of owning the PC Shadowrun games. Of the Calfree Trilogy, though, the final game in the series, Calfree in Chains, is the best. I did a whole rant on the trilogy that covers most of my points here, so let me just summarize: if you're a huge Shadowrun fan who wants to see more of the universe's history explored, enjoying the classic Shadowrun thrills of runs, heists, and socio-political commentary, then you NEED to play this mod. But if you're just a gamer who wants to play a story of great emotional depth, high quality of substance, with a great and memorable cast you can meaningfully engage with and shape, gut-wrenching and unexpected twists, beautiful romance, and masterful narrative style that adeptly uses themes and foreshadowing, then you NEED to play this mod. It's just a truly excellent product overall, and if it were on this list, it would occupy the 27th spot, between Pyre and Torment: Tides of Numenera.



...I swear one of these days I'm gonna have a small list rant that is faster to write than a long regular rant. It's gonna happen. Really.













* Er, most of the time. The prequels were garbage, and the animated stuff that went with them was at best so-so. But most everything else is good!


** Sure, there are some fair paradoxes, but, y'know, not much that doesn't come up with any other time-travel story. And frankly, RPG-wise, CT's about as good a time-travel plot as you're gonna get--most, I've noticed, are either silly and pointless (Dark Cloud 2, Final Fantasy 8, Robotrek), have the time travel stuff only be plot twists rather than serious parts of the story (Dark Cloud 1, Kingdom Hearts 2, Rogue Galaxy), or they strand the cast in the past for at least 3/4ths of the game so that the time travel aspect doesn't even seem to be present (Star Ocean 1, Tales of Phantasia). Chrono Trigger's one of the few who do a good job with it in a major way.


*** Not that you shouldn't seek out a means to pay substantially less to play it, if possible. I'm just saying that if the only option were to pay that much for it, it'd be 1 of the few games actually worth it.