this post was submitted on 31 Jan 2025
49 points (100.0% liked)

Gaming

20443 readers
63 users here now

Sub for any gaming related content!

Rules:

founded 5 years ago
MODERATORS
 

I'll start by saying I had a bit of trouble wording the title but I'll try to elaborate on it. I find it can be a bit daunting at times figuring out what a decent entry point is in a series of video games without searching online first. Sometimes there will be ten games released across three different generation of consoles with reboots, prequels, and remasters and you can feel a bit left out of the loop if you start with the most recent release.

I'm wondering where people would recommend starting in other popular series like Nier, Final Fantasy, Armored Core, Ace Combat, Assassins Creed, Metal Gear, Metroid, Resident Evil, and so on.

It might make for a fun bit of Friday discussion and encourage some people to try out some new games.


Here's my example:

With the Fallout series I'd say you could easily start with any game because you have a new protagonist each time and a lot of the lore is reintroduced. The exception being Fallout 2 because it feels a bit more like a direct sequel to the original.

I would probably recommend Fallout New Vegas as a starting point because it's the fan favorite, has a few quality of life upgrades over Fallout 3, Fallout 4 adds a lot of extra mechanics to the game so going backwards in the series if you wanted more Fallout could feel a tad awkward and take some readjusting if you are accustomed to them, and the classic Fallout games can be a bit of a challenge if you aren't used to old school RPGs.

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Very few game sequels are that tied in to it's predecessor narratively that this is an issue. I would say the vast majority of games are designed to be picked up from anywhere in the series.

Even Mass Effect, where you play as the same character throughout a multi game story arc, still has each game giving the player an on ramp, and each game having it's own miniature arc to play through.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Mass Effect is one that while every game is independent enough, I'd still say it's best experienced as the trilogy. You will miss out on stuff in later games

Spoiler for a game old enough to voteWrex apparently dies on Virmire if you don't. My partner started at 2, that was her experience. She played me1 shortly after and yeah, was upset she'd missed out even though he's not a companion in 2 or 3 outside of Citadel DLC.

Wrex is a solid character, Krogan story just wouldn't be the same without him. If I recall he's a part of the reason Mordin changes his view on the Genophage. If you betray the Krogan and pretend to cure it (which I've never done, nor will, there's a limit to how I'll play renegade), Wrex will see through the deceit, his brother won't.

There's also a small misc quest with a certain recurring character in 3 that has an ending idk I've ever seen before that requires you to have done certain things in ME1 and not got that person killed in ME2.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 18 hours ago

There's a point in the third game that determines the fate of 2 different species that can play out very differently based upon actions you've made across the series. And the "best" version depends on your completing the loyalty quests of multiple characters in ME2 before a certain trigger point.