Sly Cooper was easily one of the best games for PS2 or Jak II or III. And there is no way Gears of War was the best for 360, that game was horrible. But the PS2 choices were messed up. Seriously I bet Okami sold around 8 copies.
Damn right soulcalibur was the best game for dreamcast! personally i think Marvel vs Capcom 2 was the second best game. also i kno the megaman X games on the playstation weren't the best but i luv those 2 death.except the 3-D ones...(X7 and X8)they werent very good
The NES was an aged system in 1990 when it released its best game Super Mario 3. In the United Kingdom, more people were playing the Commodore Amiga because there was much greater variety of games from inventive studios (mostly British but a few from America) with much better graphics.
I think that Donkey Kong Country and Super Mario World deserve to be listed as the best SNES games. DKC is timelessly good looking for any console, not just of its generation.
Banjo Kazooie is the top N64 game in my opinion.
Metroid Prime is the top Cube game and number 2 should be the Resident Evil remake to me.
Crash Team Racing is not just easily my favourite PS1 game, it's easily my favourite karting game, my favourite racing game ever and one of my favourite ADVENTURES (it feels like a proper adventure) ever so I would have put that as number 1.
I haven't played very many Dreamcast games but surely Jet Set Radio, Shenmue, Sonic Adventure or one of the Crazy Taxi games sum up Sega brilliance better than a fighting game.
"...rudimentary player chat, and yes, monthly subscriber fees."
Hmm, no? I played the original PSO on Dreamcast for months, and as a poor kid with no credit card at the time and parents that would be damned if they would pay for any video games, I can easily attest that there was no monthly fee associated with PSO. No perhaps if you connected with SegaNet there was, but that would have been an associated cost of connecting to an ISP, something that all of had to pay for (I had a local dial up ISP at the time that I just connected to with the Dreamcast). The following versions ushered in monthly fees, but when the game first began I didn't pay one red cent to Sega after purchasing the title. I wonder how they let that one slip by...