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The ten greatest years in videogame history

We calculated the best 120 months in gaming - you won't believe the results

Words: GamesRadar US

1998

This is a year that stood out in our minds since the very first discussions of this feature, simply because of three games: Metal Gear Solid, The Legend of Zelda: The Ocarina of Time, and Half-Life. These three games completely rocked the world of gaming in their own way, and each stands among the highest achievements of each platform, PlayStation, Nintendo 64 and PC, respectively. To call them inspirational to games to follow would be an understatement.

But begin to chew on the year, and there is no shortage of amazing games. PC RPG fans were treated to Baldur's Gate and Diablo, while Unreal, Thief and StarCraft all appeared to help lend shape to their own genres.

The Nintendo 64 was in full swing, and Zelda wasn't the only innovator this year. Though we're sick of the series now, Mario Party was something new and incredibly fun back then, and Banjo-Kazooie is arguably the last platformer Rare made before it jumped the shark. Turok 2 is remembered very fondly by any number of N64 shooter fans, still reeling from 1997's GoldenEye 64, as well.


The Saturn, sadly, said its goodbyes this year, but not without releasing three of its most memorable games. Shining Force III yanked the strategy series into 3D and did it superbly. Panzer Dragoon Saga showed us what a cinematic, full-3D RPG could truly be; no one came close to its drama for years. Radiant Silvergun, though technically a Japanese import, was available at EB Games stores for a limited time. It must be mentioned for its incredibly refined 2D shooter gameplay and 3D graphics, which have led only to massive inflation in the following years. Used copies go for well over $100 even now.

The PlayStation wasn't simply the home to Solid Snake. Tekken 3 became the system's biggest fighter hit, while Final Fantasy Tactics showed a level of strategic depth many weren't ready for. Resident Evil 2's innovative dual-disc adventure blew the doors off the original in every possible way, while Silent Hill showed us that video game horror could be creepy and psychological. Fan favorites Klonoa and Einhander may not have made much money, but they endure as the favorites of gaming conisseurs... who were the only ones left at the arcade, playing King of Fighters '98 and Soul Calibur, if they could find it.

[Ed - sharp-eyed folks both inside and outside of the office have noted that both the original GBA Pokemon games and PC adventure masterpiece Grim Fandango should have been on this year's list. Which is absolutely correct, so please consider them added. What a monster year.]


 
7 Comments
Order Comments: Newest First | Oldest First
babo_u_da  - 11 months 6 days ago 
im gonna be gay and just do this FIRST!
(sry people who hate playing first)
Wazoox2  - 11 months 6 days ago 
2nd last paragraph, it says Incredible Hulk: Maximum Destruction.. is it not Ultimate Destruction?
CoD_22  - 11 months 4 days ago 
How can they like star wars battlefront? touch the right analog stick and your crosshair thingy will shoot off a metre or so. its impossible to snipe and its just too easy. the only thing that makes it hard is your teammates because they die and you lose your reinforcements. if it was just you on your own you would own them!
CoD_22  - 11 months 4 days ago 
i realise i may have contradicted myself slightly. its easy because you can run up to people to kill them without losing any health or you can get in tanks and become invincible. and they have no snipers because they have all given up trying as well. and that makes it really boring.
Wolf007  - 11 months 3 days ago 
How about you just put the greatest year of gaming. 1997! You talked about FFVII, is has there ever been a greater game. I think not! By the way, why doesn't it get ported to PS3 and the 360. It would sell like 300 million copies!
mjmont92  - 10 months 15 days ago 
woo for 1997! dark forces II is one of my all time favorite shooters. (much better than Halo 3 imo)
rbrent  - 4 months 12 days ago 
This would be perfect for a timeline of the history of video games that I've been putting together at http://timelines.com/topics/video-games.

It's on a website called http://timelines.com. Anyone is free to contribute to it and enhance it with images, videos, or commentary.

Our idea is to create an interactive historical record of anything and everything, based on specific events that combine to form timelines. We're trying to achieve a sort of user-created multimedia encyclopedia, in which no event is too big and no event is too small, and where each event can contain various types of resources, such as video, images, maps, etc. It's also a good way to direct traffic to your blog because your events will pop up along with anything else that's thematically related. We're also planning on creating an embeddable version of our timelines in the near future.