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I think the standout example of this for me is Drakengard (2003). I just love this game so much, i feel like everything that people find atrocious and abhorrent about this game is why it's the most hypnotic kind of flavour to me. Takayuki Aihara's approach on the violent soundtrack that people LOVE to bash is just an amazing soundtrack to me and i have so much favourites in that score and i really appreciate Aihara-san for his work on it. It's a violent, gory, doggedly take on how war actually is,, the soundtrack, gameplay and narrative is so exceptionally fuelled for the intention of the story and what it wants to show you that it has stuck with me vividly for all this time. I will stand with that game to death.
"A world without seals, thrown into chaos. Who fights for whom? Is there an answer?
"We've grown? Nonsense. We remain mere fools."
Other games are Yoshi's Story, Final Fantasy XIII-2, and htoL:NiQ: The Firefly Diary, which kind of ties into my perspective with Drakengard, a lot of the things are exceptionally stressful with its puzzles and mechanics but the mental struggle feels so uniquely tied into the game's narrative i just became an avid lover of that game. It's an interesting, if coincidental design of videogames where the potential anguish you go through and tolerate because it feels compelling for its narrative is so unique and far between, but I love those games more than life itself.
"A world without seals, thrown into chaos. Who fights for whom? Is there an answer?
"We've grown? Nonsense. We remain mere fools."
Other games are Yoshi's Story, Final Fantasy XIII-2, and htoL:NiQ: The Firefly Diary, which kind of ties into my perspective with Drakengard, a lot of the things are exceptionally stressful with its puzzles and mechanics but the mental struggle feels so uniquely tied into the game's narrative i just became an avid lover of that game. It's an interesting, if coincidental design of videogames where the potential anguish you go through and tolerate because it feels compelling for its narrative is so unique and far between, but I love those games more than life itself.